登陆注册
19620400000042

第42章 THE CEMETERY(5)

Thereafter had followed a bout of choice abuse between his neighbour and his " niece,"while Virubov himself, framed in the wicket-gate, and listening to the contest, had smacked his lips as he gazed at the pair, and particularly at Madame Ezhov. At the beginning of the bout Dikanka had screeched:

"It is my opinion, it is my opinion, that--"

"Don't treat me to any of YOUR slop!" the long-fanged Pavla had interrupted for the benefit of the street in general. And thus had the affair continued....

Lieutenant Khorvat blew the fag-end of his cigarette from his mouthpiece, glanced at me, and said with seemingly, a not over-civil, twitch of his bushy moustache:

"Of what are you thinking, if I might inquire?"

"I am trying to understand you."

"You ought not to find that difficult," was his rejoinder as again he doffed his hat, and fanned his face with it. "The whole thing may be summed up in two words. It is that we lack respect both for ourselves and for our fellow men. Do you follow me NOW?"

His eyes had grown once more young and clear, and, seizing my hand in his strong and agreeably warm fingers, he continued:

"Why so? For the very simple reason that I cannot respect myself when I can learn nothing, simply nothing, about my fellows."

Moving nearer to me, he added in a mysterious undertone:

"In this Russia of ours none of us really knows why he has come into existence. True, each of us knows that he was born, and that he is alive, and that one day he will die; but which of us knows the reason why all that is so?"

Through renewed excitement, its colour had come back to the Lieutenant's face, and his gestures became so rapid as to cause the ring on his finger to flash through the air like the link of a chain. Also, I was able to detect the fact that on the small, neat wrist under his left cuff, there was a bracelet finished with a medallion.

"All this, my good sir, is because (partially through the fact that men forget the point, and partially through the fact that that point fails to be understood aright) the WORK done by a man is concealed from our knowledge. For my own part, I have an idea, a scheme--yes, a scheme--in two words, a, a--"

"N-n-o-u, n-n-o-u!" the bell of the monastery tolled over the tombs in languid, chilly accents.

"--a scheme that every town and every village, in fact, every unit of homogeneous population, should keep a record of the particular unit's affairs, a, so to speak, 'book of life.' This 'book of life' should be more than a list of the results of the unit's labour; it should also be a living narrative of the workaday activities accomplished by each member of the unit. Eh?

And, of course, the record to be compiled without official interference--solely by the town council or district administration, or by a special 'board, of life and works' or some such body, provided only that the task be not carried out by nominees of the GOVERNMENT. And in that record there should be entered everything--that is to say, everything of a nature which ought to be made public concerning every man who has lived among us, and has since gone from our midst."

Here the Lieutenant stretched out his hand again in the direction of the tombs.

"My right it is," he added, "to know how those folk there spent their lives. For it is by their labours and their thoughts, and even on the product of their bones, that I myself am now subsisting. You agree, do you not?"

In silence I nodded; whereupon he cried triumphantly:

"Ah! You see, do you? Yes, an indispensable point is it, that whatsoever a man may have done, whether good or evil, should be recorded. For example, suppose he has manufactured a stove specially good for heating purposes; record the fact. Or suppose he has killed a mad dog; record the fact. Or suppose he has built a school, or cleansed a dirty street, or been a pioneer in the teaching of sound farming, or striven, by word and deed, his life long, to combat official irregularities... record the fact. Again, suppose a woman has borne ten, or fifteen, healthy children; record the fact. Yes, and this last with particular care, since the conferment of healthy children upon the country is a work of absolute importance."

Further, pointing to a grey headstone with a worn inscription, he shouted (or almost did so):

"Under that stone lies buried the body of a man who never in his life loved but one woman, but ONE woman. Now, THAT is a fact which ought to have been recorded about him for it is not merely a string of names that is wanted, but a narrative of deeds. Yes, I have not only a desire, but a RIGHT, to know the lives which men have lived, and the works which they have performed; and whenever a man leaves our midst we ought to inscribe over his tomb full particulars of the 'cross and burden' which he bore, as particulars ever to be held in remembrance, and inscribed there both for my benefit and for the benefit of life in general, as constituting a clear and circumstantial record of the given career. Why did that man live? To the question write down, always, the answer in large and conspicuous characters. Eh?"

"Most certainly."

This led the Lieutenant's enthusiasm to increase still more as, for the third time waving his hand in the direction of the tombs, and mouthing each word, he continued:

"The folk of that town are liars pure and simple, for of set purpose they conceal the particulars of careers that they may depreciate those careers in our eyes, and, while showing us the insignificance of the dead, fill the living with a sense of similar insignificance, since insignificant folk are the easiest to manage. Yes, it is a scheme thought out with diabolical ingenuity. Yet, for myself--well, try and make me do what I don't intend to do!"

To which, with his face wrinkled with disgust, he added in a tone like a shot from a pistol:

"Machines are we! Yes, machines, and nothing else!"

Curious was it to watch the old man's excitement as one listened to the strong bass voice amid the stillness of the cemetery.

同类推荐
  • 天妃娘妈传

    天妃娘妈传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 千山剩人禅师语录

    千山剩人禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蕲黄四十八砦纪事

    蕲黄四十八砦纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华阳陶隐居集

    华阳陶隐居集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 何仙姑宝卷

    何仙姑宝卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 安徒恩之死

    安徒恩之死

    故事只是游戏的缩影,相信只要用心在玩的玩家都能发现乐趣……如果你没有玩过地下城,可以去玩一玩,很好的游戏……
  • 大明春色

    大明春色

    大明初年风云激荡,注定要身败名裂、被活活烧死的王,必须要走上叛天之路。恩怨爱恨,功过成败,一切将会如何重演?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 霸爱成虐:邪魅总裁别碰我

    霸爱成虐:邪魅总裁别碰我

    【http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/460199/【卧底情人:恋上你的床】,小歌新作,期待朋友们的支持哈~1511059026这是我的Q哦,喜欢本文的读者加我吧?嘻嘻~爱你们哦!】【她、守了十八年的玉|体,一夜间被人索取豪夺?居然是自己男友出卖,丢了初|夜又怀种?恨成了她的口头禅,无厘头、是她最绝的杀手锏——她无意相许,却偏偏还是逃不开,他的猛追缠锁——他、俊冷霸道,玩女人从不失手,感情泛滥成灾,却也会作茧自缚?她笨拙傻气,令人头疼也令人爱惜,她不善玩耍心机,却也虐心虐己?他真不知道这个丫头是真傻还是装傻?初|夜被人夺走了,也可以还吗?一场情债几个人的争斗,可初|夜到底该怎么还?看结局谁主沉浮?】
  • 轮回镜缘

    轮回镜缘

    神劫将至,而我想通过这个故事来讲诉一些人:肩负家族使命忍辱负重三百年却功亏一篑的青帝!纵横妖界横扫冥王殿的帝级妖兽黎凡!单纯善良却被仇恨缠身火凰传人的上官燕!同父异母却走上相反道路的君辰与君钰!以及风华绝代,手摘星辰的星帝!…………总之,这是一段有关爱的故事,也是一段天地人三界共抗神劫的热血故事。
  • 婚姻之殇

    婚姻之殇

    妻子彻夜不归为了什么?是为了工作和事业,还是另有其他?面对妻子的各种难以启齿的行为,他为什么选择坚守婚姻?这其中隐藏着怎样的秘密?作为心理咨询医生,面对风韵犹在的富婆以及青春美丽的少女,他会有怎样的举动?一切交织而往,室息感、罪恶感,他该何去何从?
  • 腹黑老公别乱来

    腹黑老公别乱来

    重生的她聪明、腹黑、天赋高,修炼三天就能抵得上别人修炼十年。却因抵御强敌,伤重失忆,变成一个看起来天真烂漫的小女孩,一心想着要翘家。幸好找到个“妻奴”相公,对她无限宠溺,她捣蛋,他收拾烂摊。
  • 宠妻上瘾:失忆娇妻不好惹

    宠妻上瘾:失忆娇妻不好惹

    很好,这女人敢忘了他,他需要做点什么让她想起来。
  • 为什么有人能接住天上的馅饼,有人却掉进地上的陷阱

    为什么有人能接住天上的馅饼,有人却掉进地上的陷阱

    天上掉馅饼不是天方夜谭,事实上,天上掉馅饼的事每天每分每秒都在我们身边发生着。机遇对于每个人来说都是公平的,可现实是,馅饼似乎只往某些人身上掉,抓住机遇的似乎总是极少数人;机遇似乎也喜欢回头客,幸运的人总是那么幸运,而有些人却终其一生都看不见天上掉馅饼是一种什么样的场景,平凡且继续平凡着。
  • 三国之仁义江山

    三国之仁义江山

    三国之仁义江山是一本在三国演义基础上写的小说,主要写的是三国演义没有写清楚或者写的不完整的部分,经过重新演义而成。不篡改,不穿越,没有情爱,没有宫廷,风格依旧义字当头。以为作者认为小说本身而言,经典的就是最好的。在这本书里将同样以黄巾起义开头,一直讲到三国归晋。作为补充肯定就不会与原著雷同,当然三大战役是必不可少的,还有一些悬疑如:张角的天书,郭嘉之死,孙策之死,庞统之死,关羽,诸葛亮之死将是本书重点部分。第一次写手生,只是心中有一些好玩的想法,写出来给大家分享,还有小说就是小说,历史问题留给历史学家和考古专家去做就行了,如有不足之处请多指教!
  • 重生之升级之路

    重生之升级之路

    一个宅男因出去超市买东西不料却遭遇车祸,但他醒来后却发现自己身在异世,获得神秘传承,获得龙族密宝,踏上修真之路!