CHAPTER XIV. THE RETRIBUTION
Instantly, I began to feel a strong
contempt for the female sex in general and Sonetchka
in particular. I began to think that there was
nothing at all amusing in these games that
they were only fit for girls, and felt as though I
should like to make a great noise, or to do something
of such extraordinary boldness that every one would
be forced to admire it. The opportunity soon
arrived. St. Jerome said something to Mimi, and
then left the room, I could hear his footsteps ascending
the staircase, and then passing across the schoolroom,
and the idea occurred to me that Mimi must have told
him her story about my being found on the landing,
and thereupon he had gone to look at the register.
(In those days, it must be remembered, I believed
that St. Jerome’s whole aim in life was to annoy
me.) Some where I have read that, not infrequently,
children of from twelve to fourteen years of age that
is to say, children just passing from childhood to
adolescence are addicted to incendiarism,
or even to murder. As I look back upon my childhood,
and particularly upon the mood in which I was on that
(for myself) most unlucky day, I can quite understand
the possibility of such terrible crimes being committed
by children without any real aim in view without
any real wish to do wrong, but merely out of curiosity
or under the influence of an unconscious necessity
for action. There are moments when the human
being sees the future in such lurid colours that he
shrinks from fixing his mental eye upon it, puts a
check upon all his intellectual activity, and tries
to feel convinced that the future will never be, and
that the past has never been. At such moments moments
when thought does not shrink from manifestations of
will, and the carnal instincts alone constitute the
springs of life I can understand that want
of experience (which is a particularly predisposing
factor in this connection) might very possibly lead
a child, aye, without fear or hesitation, but rather
with a smile of curiosity on its face, to set fire
to the house in which its parents and brothers and
sisters (beings whom it tenderly loves) are lying
asleep. It would be under the same influence
of momentary absence of thought almost absence
of mind that a peasant boy of seventeen
might catch sight of the edge of a newly-sharpened
axe reposing near the bench on which his aged father
was lying asleep, face downwards, and suddenly raise
the implement in order to observe with unconscious
curiosity how the blood would come spurting out upon
the floor if he made a wound in the sleeper’s
neck. It is under the same influence the
same absence of thought, the same instinctive curiosity that
a man finds delight in standing on the brink of an
abyss and thinking to himself, “How if I were
to throw myself down?” or in holding to his
brow a loaded pistol and wondering, “What if
I were to pull the trigger?” or in feeling,
when he catches sight of some universally respected
personage, that he would like to go up to him, pull
his nose hard, and say, “How do you do, old boy?”
Under the spell, then, of this instinctive
agitation and lack of reflection I was moved to put
out my tongue, and to say that I would not move, when
St. Jerome came down and told me that I had behaved
so badly that day, as well as done my lessons so ill,
that I had no right to be where I was, and must go
upstairs directly.
At first, from astonishment and anger,
he could not utter a word.
“C’est bien!”
he exclaimed eventually as he darted towards me.
“Several times have I promised to punish you,
and you have been saved from it by your Grandmamma,
but now I see that nothing but the cane will teach
you obedience, and you shall therefore taste it.”
This was said loud enough for every
one to hear. The blood rushed to my heart with
such vehemence that I could feel that organ beating
violently could feel the colour rising to
my cheeks and my lips trembling. Probably I looked
horrible at that moment, for, avoiding my eye, St.
Jerome stepped forward and caught me by the hand.
Hardly feeling his touch, I pulled away my hand in
blind fury, and with all my childish might struck
him.
“What are you doing?”
said Woloda, who had seen my behaviour, and now approached
me in alarm and astonishment.
“Let me alone!” I exclaimed,
the tears flowing fast. “Not a single one
of you loves me or understands how miserable I am!
You are all of you odious and disgusting!” I
added bluntly, turning to the company at large.
At this moment St. Jerome his
face pale, but determined approached me
again, and, with a movement too quick to admit of any
defence, seized my hands as with a pair of tongs,
and dragged me away. My head swam with excitement,
and I can only remember that, so long as I had strength
to do it, I fought with head and legs; that my nose
several times collided with a pair of knees; that
my teeth tore some one’s coat; that all around
me I could hear the shuffling of feet; and that I could
smell dust and the scent of violets with which St.
Jerome used to perfume himself.
Five minutes later the door of the
store-room closed behind me.
“Basil,” said a triumphant
but detestable voice, “bring me the cane.”