louismarlowe.com
   

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER INDEX

CHAPTER 9

   
 

THE DOUBLE

CHAPTER 1

CHAPTER 2

CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 4

CHAPTER 5

CHAPTER 6

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER 8

CHAPTER 9

CHAPTER 10

CHAPTER 11

CHAPTER 12

CHAPTER 13

DOPPLEGANGER

William Wilson

Edgar Allan Poe

The Double

Foydor Dostoevsky

Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

Robert Louis Stephenson

THEORY

Dada Manifesto

Hugo Ball, 1916

Tristan Tzara, 1918

Surrealist Manifesto

Andre Breton, 1924

Andre Breton, 1925

Andre Breton, 1934

POETRY

My God

Nah Nah Nah

Themes of the Unknown

The Abstract & the Ambiguous

Drunken

RELIGION

Profits of Religion

Upton Sinclair

Young Goodman Brown

Nathaniel Hawthorne

The Blithedale Romance

Nathaniel Hawthorne

LOUISMARLOWE.COM

Chapter VIII

Mr. Golyadkin woke up next morning at eight o'clock as
usual; as soon as he was awake he recalled all the adventures
of the previous evening - and frowned as he recalled them.
"Ugh, I did play the fool last night!" he thought, sitting up
and glancing at his visitor's bed.  But what was his
amazement when he saw in the room no trace, not only of his
visitor, but even of the bed on which his visitor had slept!
    "What does it mean?" Mr. Golyadkin almost shrieked.
"What can it be?  What does this new circumstance portend?"
    While Mr. Golyadkin was gazing in open-mouthed
bewilderment at the empty spot, the door creaked and
Petrushka came in with the tea-tray.
    "Where, where?" our hero said in a voice hardly audible,
pointing to the place which had ben occupied by his visitor
the night before.
    At first Petrushka made no answer and did not look at his
master, but fixed his eyes upon the corner to the right till Mr.
Golyadkin felt compelled to look into that corner too.  After
a brief silence, however, Petrushka in a rude and husky voice
answered that his master was not at home.
    "You idiot; why I'm your master, Petrushka!" said Mr.
Golyadkin in a breaking voice, looking open-eyed a his
servant.
    Petrushka made no reply, but he gave Mr. Golyadkin such
a look that the latter crimsoned to his ears - looked at hm
with an insulting reproachfulness almost equivalent to open
abuse.  Mr. Golyadkin was utterly flabbergasted, as the
saying is.  At last Petrushka explained that the 'other one' had
gone away an hour and a half ago, and would not wait.  His
answer, of course, sounded truthful and probable; it was
evident that Petrushka was not lying; that his insulting look
and the phrase the 'other one' employed by him were only the
result of the disgusting circumstance with which he was
already familiar, but still he understood, though dimly, that
something was wrong, and that destiny had some other
surprise, not altogether a pleasant one, in store for him.
    "All right, we shall see," he thought to himself.  "We shall
see in due time; we'll get to the bottom of all this . . . Oh,
Lord, have mercy upon us!" he moaned in conclusion, in
quite a different voice.  "And why did I invite him to what
end did I do all that?  Why, I am thrusting my head into their
thievish noose myself; I am tying the noose with my own
hands.  Ach, you fool, you fool!  You can't resist babbling
like some silly boy, some chancery clerk, some wretched
creature of no class at all, some rag, some rotten dishcloth;
you're a gossip, an old woman! . . . Oh, all ye saints!  And he
wrote verses, the rogue, and expressed his love for me!  How
could . . . How can I show him the door in a polite way if he
turns up again, the rogue?  Of course, there are all sorts of
ways and means.  I can say this is how it is, my salary being
so limited . . . Or scare him off in some way saying that,
taking this and that into consideration, I am forced to make
clear . . . that he would have to pay an equal share of the cost
of board and lodging, and pay the money in advance.  H'm!
No, damn it all, no!  That would be degrading to me.  It's not
quite delicate!  Couldn't I do something like this: suggest to
Petrushka that he should annoy him in some way, should be
disrespectful, be rude, and get rid of him in that way.  Set
them at each other in some way. . . . No, damn it all, no!  It's
dangerous and again, if one looks at it from that point of
view - it's not the right thing at all!  Not the right thing at all!
But there, even if he doesn't come, it will be a bad look-out,
too!  I babbled to him last night! . . . Ach, it's a bad look-out,
a bad look-out!  Ach, we're in a bad way!  Oh, I'm a cursed
fool, a cursed fool!  you can't train yourself to behave as you
ought, you can't conduct yourself reasonably.  Well, what if
he comes and refuses.  And God grant he may come!  I
should be very glad if he did come. . . ."
    Such were Mr. Golyadkin's reflections as he swallowed his
tea and glanced continually at the clock on the wall.
    "It's a quarter to nine; it's time to go.  And something will
happen!  What will there be there?  I should like to know
what exactly lies hidden in this - that is, the object, the aim,
and the various intrigues.  It would be a good thing to find
out what all these people are plotting, and what will be their
first step. . . ."
    Mr. Golyadkin could endure it no longer.  He threw down
his unfinished pipe, dressed and set off for the office, anxious
to ward off the danger if possible and to reassure himself
about everything by his presence in person.  There was
danger: he knew himself that there was danger.
    "We . . . will get to the bottom of it," said Mr. Golyadkin,
taking off his coat and goloshes in the entry.  "We'll go into
all these matters immediately."
    Making up his mind to act in this way, out hero put
himself to rights, assumed a correct and official air, and was
just about to pass into the adjoining room, when suddenly, in
the very doorway, he jostled against his acquaintance of the
day before, his friend and companion.  Mr. Golyadkin junior
seemed not to notice Mr. Golyadkin senior, though they met
almost nose to nose.  Mr. Golyadkin junior seemed to be
busy, to be hastening somewhere, was breathless; he had
such an official, such a business-like air that it seemed as
though any one could read his face: 'Entrusted with a special
commission.' . . .
    "Oh, it's you, Yakov Petrovitch!" said our hero, clutching
the hand of his last night's visitor.
    "Presently, presently, excuse me, tell me about it
afterwards," cried Mr. Golyadkin junior, dashing on.
    "But, excuse me; I believe, Yakov Petrovitch, you wanted
. . ."
    "What is it?  Make haste and explain."
    At this point his visitor of the previous night halted as
though reluctantly and against his will, and put his ear almost
to Mr. Golyadkin's nose.
    "I must tell you, Yakov Petrovitch, that I am surprised at
your behaviour . . . behaviour which seemingly I could not
have expected at all."
    "There's a proper form for everything.  Go to his
Excellency's secretary and then appeal in the proper way to
the directors of the office.  Have you got your petition?"
    "You . . . I really don't know Yakov Petrovitch!  You
simply amaze me, Yakov Petrovitch!  You certainly don't
recognize me or, with characteristic gaiety, you are joking."
    "Oh, it's you," said Mr. Golyadkin junior, seeming only
now to recognize Mr. Golyadkin senior.  "So, it's you?  Well,
have you had a good night?"
    Then smiling a little - a formal an conventional smile, by
no means the sort of smile that was befitting (for, after all, he
owed a debt of gratitude to Mr. Golyadkin senior) - smiling
this formal and conventional smile, Mr. Golyadkin junior
added that he was very glad Mr. Golyadkin senior had had a
good night; then he made a slight bow and shuffling a little
with his feet, looked to the right, and to the left, then dropped
his eyes to the floor, made for the side door and muttering in
a hurried whisper that he had a special commission, dashed
into the next room.  He vanished like an apparition.
    "Well, this is queer!" muttered our hero, petrified for a
moment; "this is queer!  This is a strange circumstance."
    At this point Mr. Golyadkin felt as though he had pins and
needles all over him.
    "However," he went on to himself, as he made his way to
his department, "however, I spoke long ago of such a
circumstance: I had a presentiment long ago that he had a
special commission.  Why, I said yesterday that the man must
certainly be employed on some special commission."
    "Have you finished copying out the document you had
yesterday, Yakov Petrovitch," Anton Antonovitch
Syetotchkin asked Mr. Golyadkin, when the latter was seated
beside him.  "Have you got it here?"
    "Yes," murmured Mr. Golyadkin, looking at the head clerk
with a rather helpless glance.
    "That's right!  I mention it because Andrey Filippovitch
has asked for it twice.  I'll be bound his Excellency wants it.
. . ."
    "Yes, it's finished. . ."
    "Well, that's all right then."
    "I believe, Anton Antonovitch, I have always performed
my duties properly.  I'm always scrupulous over the work
entrusted to me by my superiors, and I attend to it
conscientiously."
    "Yes.  Why, what do you mean by that?"
    "I mean nothing, Anton Antonovitch.  I only want to
explain, Anton Antonovitch, that I . . . that is, I meant to
express that spite and malice sometimes spare no person
whatever in their search for their daily and revolting food. .
. ."
    "Excuse me, I don't quite understand you.  What person
are you alluding to?"
    "I only meant to say, Anton Antonovitch, that I'm seeking
the straight path and I scorn going to work in a roundabout
way.  That I am not one to intrigue, and that, if I may be
allowed to say so, I may very justly be proud of it. . . ."
    "Yes.  That's quite so, and to the best of my
comprehension I thoroughly endorse your remarks; but allow
me to tell you, Yakov Petrovitch, that personalities are not
quite permissible in good society, that I, for instance, am
ready to put up with anything behind my back - for every
one's abused behind his back - but to my face, if you please,
my good sir, I don't allow any one to be impudent.  I've
grown grey in the government service, sir, and I don't allow
any one to be impudent to me in my old age. . . ."
    "No, Anton Antonovitch . . . you see, Anton Antonovitch
. . . you haven't quite caught my meaning.  To be sure, Anton
Antonovitch, I for my part could only thing it an honour . . ."
    "Well, then, I ask pardon too.  We've been brought up in
the old school.  And it's too late for us to learn your
new-fangled ways.  I believe we've had understanding
enough for the service of our country up to now.  As you are
aware, sir, I have an order of merit for twenty-five years'
irreproachable service. . . ."
    "I feel it, Anton Antonovitch, on my side, too, I quite feel
all that.  But I didn't mean that, I am speaking of a mask,
Anton Antonovitch. . . ."
    "A mask?"
    "Again you . . . I am apprehensive that you are taking this,
too, in a wrong sense, that is the sense of my remarks, as you
say yourself, Anton Antonovitch.  I am simply enunciating
a theory, that is, I am advancing the idea, Anton
Antonovitch, that persons who wear a mask have become far
from uncommon, and that nowadays it is hard to recognize
the man beneath the mask . . ."
    "Well, do you know, it's not altogether so hard.
Sometimes it's fairly easy.  Sometimes one need not go far to
look for it."
    "No, you know, Anton Antonovitch, I say, I say of myself,
that I, for instance, do not put on a mask except when there
is need of it; that is simply at carnival time or at some festive
gathering, speaking in the literal sense; but that I do not wear
a mask before people in daily life, speaking in another less
obvious sense.  That's what I meant to say, Anton
Antonovitch."
    "Oh, well, but we must drop all this, for now I've no time
to spare," said Anton Antonovitch, getting up from his seat
and collecting some papers in order to report upon them to
his Excellency.  "Your business, as I imagine, will be
explained in due course without delay.  You will see for
yourself whom you should censure and whom you should
blame, and thereupon I humbly beg you to spare me from
further explanations and arguments which interfere with my
work. . . ."
    "No, Anton Antonovitch," Mr. Golyadkin, turning a little
pale, began to the retreating figure of Anton Antonovitch; "I
had no intention of the kind."
    "What does it mean?" our hero went on to himself, when
he was left alone; "what quarter is the wind in now, and what
is one to make of this new turn?"
    At the very time when our bewildered and half-crushed
hero was setting himself to solve this new question, there was
a sound of movement and bustle in the next room, the door
opened and Andrey Filippovitch, who had been on some
business in his Excellency's study, appeared breathless in the
doorway, and called to Mr. Golyadkin.  Knowing what was
wanted and anxious not to keep Andrey Filippovitch waiting,
Mr. Golyadkin leapt up from his seat, and as was fitting
immediately bustled for all he was worth getting the
manuscript that was required finally neat and ready and
preparing to follow the manuscript and Andrey Filippovitch
into his Excellency's study.  Suddenly, almost slipping under
the arm of Andrey Filippovitch, who was standing right in
the doorway, Mr. Golyadkin junior darted into the room in
breathless haste and bustle, with a solemn and resolutely
official air; he bounded straight up to Mr. Golyadkin senior,
who was expecting nothing less than such a visitation.
    "The papers, Yakov Petrovitch, the papers . . . his
Excellency has been pleased to ask for them; have you got
them ready?" Mr. Golyadkin senior's friend whispered in a
hurried undertone.  "Andrey Filippovitch is waiting for you.
. . ."
    "I know he is waiting without your telling me," said Mr.
Golyadkin senior, also in a hurried whisper.
    "No, Yakov Petrovitch, I did not mean that; I did not mean
that at all, Yakov Petrovitch, not that at all; I sympathise with
you, Yakov Petrovitch, and am humbly moved by genuine
interest."
    "Which I most humbly beg you to spare me.  Allow me,
allow me . . ."
    "You'll put it in an envelope, of course, Yakov Petrovitch,
and you'll put a mark in the third page; allow me, Yakov
Petrovitch. . . ."
    "You allow me, if you please . . ."
    "But, I say, there's a blot here, Yakov Petrovitch; did you
know there was a blot here? . . ."
    At this point Andrey Filippovitch called Yakov Petrovitch
a second time.
    "One moment, Andrey Filippovitch, I'm only just . . . Do
you understand Russian, sir?"
    "It would be best to take it out with a penknife, Yakov
Petrovitch.  You had better rely upon me; you had better not
touch it yourself, Yakov Petrovitch, rely upon me - I'll do it
with a penknife . . ."
    Andrey Filippovitch called Mr. Golyadkin a third time.
    "But, allow me, where's the blot?  I don't think there's a
blot at all."
    "It's a huge blot.  Here it is!  Here, allow me, I saw it here
. . . you just let me, Yakov Petrovitch, I'll just touch it with
the penknife, I'll scratch it out with the penknife from
true-hearted sympathy.  There, life this; see, it's done."
    At this point, and quite unexpectedly, Mr. Golyadkin
junior overpowered Mr. Golyadkin senior in the momentary
struggle that had arisen between them, and so, entirely
against the latter's will, suddenly, without rhyme or reason,
took possession of the document required by the authorities,
and instead of scratching it out with the penknife in
true-hearted sympathy as he had perfidiously promised Mr.
Golyadkin senior, hurriedly rolled it up, put it under his arm,
in two bounds was beside Andrey Filippovitch, who noticed
none of his manoeuvres, and flew with the latter into the
Director's room.  Mr. Golyadkin remained as though rivetted
to the spot, holding the penknife in his hand and apparently
on the point of scratching something out with it . . .
    Our hero could not yet grasp his new position.  He could
not at once recover himself.  He felt the blow, but thought
that it was somehow all right.  In terrible, indescribable
misery he tore himself at last from his seat, rushed straight to
the Director's room, imploring heaven on the way that it
would be all right . . . In the furthest most room, which
adjoined the Director's private room, he ran straight upon
Andrey Filippovitch in company with his namesake.  Both of
them moved aside.  Andrey Filippovitch was talking with a
good-humoured smile, Mr. Golyadkin senior's namesake was
smiling, too, fawning upon Andrey Filippovitch and tripping
about at a respectful distance from him, and was whispering
something in his ear with a delighted air, to which Andrey
Filippovitch assented with a gracious nod.  In a flash our
hero grasped the whole position.  The fact was that the work
had surpassed his Excellency's expectations (as he learnt
afterwards) and was finished punctually by the time it was
needed.  He Excellency was extremely pleased with it.  It
was even said that his excellency had said "Thank you" to
Mr. Golyadkin junior, had thanked him warmly, had said that
he would remember it on occasion and would never forget it.
. . . Of course, the first thing Mr. Golyadkin did was to
protest, to protest with the utmost vigour of which he was
capable.  Pale as death, and hardly knowing what he was
doing, he rushed up to Andrey Filippovitch.  But the latter,
hearing that Mr. Golyadkin's business was a private matter,
refused to listen, observing firmly that he had not a minute to
spare for his own affairs.
    The curtness of his tone and his refusal struck Mr.
Golyadkin.
    "I had better, perhaps, try in another quarter . . . I had
better appeal to Anton Antonovitch."
    But to his disappointment Anton Antonovitch was not
available either: he, too, was busy over something
somewhere!
    "Ah, it was not without design that he asked me to spare
him explanation and discussion!" thought our hero.  "This
was what the old rogue had in his mind!  In that case I shall
simply make bold to approach his Excellency."
    Still pale and feeling that his brain was in a complete
ferment, greatly perplexed as to what he ought to decide to
do, Mr. Golyadkin sat down on the edge of the chair.  "It
would have been a great deal better if it had all been just
nothing," he kept incessantly thinking to himself.  "Indeed,
such a mysterious business was utterly improbable.  In the
first place, it was nonsense, and secondly it could not happen.
Most likely it was imagination, or something else happened,
and not what really did happen; or perhaps I went myself . .
. and somehow mistook myself for some one else . . . in
short, it's an utterly impossible thing."
    Mr. Golyadkin had no sooner made up his mind that it was
an utterly impossible thing that Mr. Golyadkin junior flew
into the room with papers in both hands as well as under his
arm.  Saying two or three words about business to Andrey
Filippovitch as he passed, exchanging remarks with one,
polite greetings with another, and familiarities with a third,
Mr. Golyadkin junior, having apparently no time to waste,
seemed on the point of leaving the room, but luckily for Mr.
Golyadkin senior he stopped near the door to say a few
words as he passed two or three clerks who were at work
there.  Mr. Golyadkin senior rushed straight at him.  As soon
as Mr. Golyadkin junior saw Mr. Golyadkin senior's
movement he began immediately, with great uneasiness,
looking about him to make his escape.  but our hero already
held his last night's guest by the sleeve.  The clerks
surrounding the two titular councillors stepped back and
waited with curiosity to see what would happen.  The senior
titular councillor realized that public opinion was not on his
side, he realized that they were intriguing against him: which
made it all the more necessary to hold his own now.  The
moment was a decisive one.
    "Well!" said Mr. Golyadkin junior, looking rather
impatiently at Mr. Golyadkin senior.
    The latter could hardly breathe.
    "I don't know," he began, "in what way to make plain to
you the strangeness of your behaviour, sir."
    "Well.  Go on."  At this point Mr. Golyadkin junior turned
round and winked to the clerks standing round, as though to
give them to understand that a comedy was beginning.
    "The impudence and shamelessness of your manners with
me, sir, in the present case, unmasks your true character . . .
better than any words of mine could do.  Don't rely on your
trickery: it is worthless. . . ."
    "Come, Yakov Petrovitch, tell me now, how did you spend
the night?" answered Mr. Golyadkin junior, looking Mr.
Golyadkin senior straight in the eye.
    "You forget yourself, sir," said the titular councillor,
completely flabbergasted, hardly able to feel the floor under
his feet.  "I trust that you will take a different tone. . . ."
    "My darling!" exclaimed Mr. Golyadkin junior, making a
rather unseemly grimace at Mr. Golyadkin senior, and
suddenly, quite unexpectedly, under the pretence of caressing
him, he pinched his chubby cheek with two fingers.
    Our hero grew as hot as fire . . . As soon as Mr. Golyadkin
junior noticed that his opponent, quivering in every limb,
speechless with rage, as red as a lobster, and exasperated
beyond all endurance, might actually be driven to attack him,
he promptly and in the most shameless way hastened to be
beforehand with his victim.  Patting him two or three times
on the cheek, tickling him two or three times, playing with
him for a few seconds in this way while his victim stood
rigid and beside himself with fury to the no little diversion of
the young men standing round, Mr. Golyadkin junior ended
with a most revolting shamelessness by giving Mr.
Golyadkin senior a poke in his rather prominent stomach,
and with a most venomous and suggestive smile said to him:
"You're mischievous brother Yakov, you are mischievous!
We'll be sly, you and I, Yakov Petrovitch, we'll be sly."
    Then, and before our hero could gradually come to himself
after the last attack, Mr. Golyadkin junior (with a little smile
beforehand to the spectators standing round) suddenly
assumed a most businesslike, busy and official air, dropped
his eyes to the floor and, drawing himself in, shrinking
together, and pronouncing rapidly "on a special commission"
he cut a caper with his short leg, and darted away into the
next room.  Our hero could not believe his eyes and was still
unable to pull himself together. . .
    At last he roused himself.  Recognizing in a flash that he
was ruined, in a sense annihilated, that he had disgraced
himself and sullied his reputation, that he had been turned
into ridicule and treated with contempt in the presence of
spectators, that he had been treacherously insulted, by one
whom he had looked on only the day before as his greatest
and most trustworthy friend, that he had been put to utter
confusion, Mr. Golyadkin senior rushed in pursuit of his
enemy.  At the moment he would not even think of the
witnesses of his ignominy.
    "They're all in a conspiracy together," he said to himself;
"they stand by each other and set each other on to attack me."
After taking a dozen steps, however, our perceived clearly
that all pursuit would be vain and useless, and so he turned
back.  "You won't get away," he thought, "you will get
caught on day; the wolf will have to pay for the sheep's
tears."
    With ferocious composure and the most resolute
determination Mr. Golyadkin went up to his chair and sat
down upon it.  "You won't escape," he said again.
    Now it was not a question of passive resistance: there was
determination and pugnacity in the air, and any one who had
seen how Mr. Golyadkin at that moment, flushed and
scarcely able to restrain his excitement, stabbed his pen into
the inkstand and with what fury he began scribbling on the
paper, could be certain beforehand that the that the matter
would not pass off like this, and could not end in a simple,
womanish way.  In the depth of his soul he formed a
resolution, and in the depth of his heart swore to carry it out.
To tell the truth he still did not quite know how to act, or
rather did not know at all, but never mind, that did not
matter!
    "Imposture and shamelessness do not pay nowadays, sir.
Imposture and shamelessness, sir, lead to no good, but lead
to the halter.  Grishka Otrepyov was the only one, sir, who
gained by imposture, deceiving the blind people and even
that not for long."
    In spite of this last circumstance Mr. Golyadkin proposed
to wait til such time as the mask should fall from certain
persons and something should be made manifest.  For this it
was necessary, in the first place, that office hours should be
over as soon as possible, and till then our hero proposed to
take no step.  He knew then how he must act after taking that
step, how to arrange his whole plan of action, to abase the
horn of arrogance and crush the snake gnawing the dust in
contemptible impotence.  To allow himself to be treated like
a rag used for wiping dirty boots, Mr. Golyadkin could not.
He could not consent to that, especially in the present case.
Had it not been for that last insult, our hero might have,
perhaps, brought himself to control his anger; he might,
perhaps, have been silent, have submitted and not have
protested too obstinately; he would just have disputed a little,
have made a slight complaint, have proved that he was in the
right, then he would have given way a little, then, perhaps, he
would have given way a little more, then he would have
come round altogether, then, especially when the opposing
party solemnly admitted that he was right, perhaps, he would
have overlooked it completely, would even have been a little
touched, there might even, perhaps - who could tell - spring
up a new, close, warm friendship, on an even broader basis
than the friendship of last night, so that this friendship might,
in the end, completely eclipse the unpleasantness of the
rather unseemly resemblance of the two individuals, so that
both the titular councillors might be highly delighted, and
might go on living till they were a hundred, and so on.  To
tell the whole truth, Mr. Golyadkin began to regret a little
that he had stood up for himself and his rights, and had at
once come in for unpleasantness in consequence.
    "Should he give in," thought Mr. Golyadkin, "say he was
joking, I would forgive him.  I would forgive him even more
if he would acknowledge it aloud.  but I won't let myself be
treated like a rag.  And I have not allowed even persons very
different from him to treat me so, still less will I permit a
depraved person to attempt it.  I am not a rag.  I am not a rag,
sir!"
    In short, our hero made up his mind "You're in fault
yourself, sir!" he thought.  He made up his mind to protest
with all his might to the very last.  That was the sort of man
he was!  He could not consent to allow himself to be insulted,
still less to allow himself to be treated as a rag, and, above
all, to allow a thoroughly vicious man to treat him so.  No
quarrelling, however, no quarrelling!  Possibly if some one
wanted, if some one, for instance, actually insisted on turning
Mr. Golyadkin into rag, he might have done so, might have
might have done so without opposition or punishment (Mr.
Golyadkin was himself conscious of this at times), and he
would have been a rag and not Golyadkin - yes, a nasty,
filthy rag; but that rag would not have been a simple rag, it
would have been a rag possessed of dignity, it would have
been a rag possessed of feelings and sentiments, even though
dignity was defenceless and feelings could not assert
themselves, and lay hidden deep down in the filthy folds of
the rag, still thee feelings were there . . .
    The hours dragged on incredibly slowly; at last it struck
four.  Soon after, all got up and, following the head of the
department, moved each on his homeward way.  Mr.
Golyadkin mingled with the crowd; he kept a vigilant look
out, and did not lose sight of the man he wanted.  At last our
hero saw hat his friend ran up to the office attendants who
handed the clerks their overcoats, and hung about near them
waiting for his in his usual nasty way.  The minute was a
decisive one.  Mr. Golyadkin forced his way somehow
through the crowd and, anxious not to be left behind, he, too,
began fussing about his overcoat.  But Mr. Golyadkin's
friend and companion was given his overcoat first because on
this occasion, too, he had succeeded, as he always did, in
making up to them, whispering something to them, cringing
upon them and getting round them.
    After putting on his overcoat, Mr. Golyadkin junior
glanced ironically at Mr. Golyadkin senior, acting in this way
openly and defiantly, looked about him with his
characteristic insolence, finally he tripped to and fro among
the other clerks - no doubt in order to leave a good
impression on them - said a word to one, whispered
something to another, respectfully accosted a third, directed
a smile at a fourth, gave his hand to a fifth, and gaily darted
downstairs.  Mr. Golyadkin senior flew after him, and to his
inexpressible delight overtook him on the last step, and
seized him by the collar of his overcoat.  It seemed as though
Mr. Golyadkin junior was a little disconcerted, and he looked
about him with a helpless air.
    "What do you mean by this?" he whispered to Mr.
Golyadkin at last, in a weak voice.
    "Sir, if you are a gentleman, I trust that you remember our
friendly relations yesterday," said out hero.
    "Ah, yes!  Well?  Did you sleep well?"
    Fury rendered Mr. Golyadkin senior speechless for a
moment.
    "I slept well, sir . . . but allow me to tell you, sir, that you
are playing a very complicated game . . ."
    "Who says so?  My enemies say that," answered abruptly
the man who called himself Mr. Golyadkin, and saying this,
he unexpectedly freed himself from the feeble hand of the
real Mr. Golyadkin.  As soon as he was free he rushed away
from the stairs, looked around him, saw a cab, ran up to it,
got in, and in one moment vanished from Mr. Golyadkin
senior's sight.  The despairing titular councillor, abandoned
by all, gazed about him, but there was no other cab.  He tried
to run, but his legs gave way under him.  With a look of
open-mouthed astonishment on his countenance, feeling
crushed and shrivelled up, he leaned helplessly against a
lamp post, and remained so for some minutes in the middle
of the pavement.  It seemed as though all were over for Mr.
Golyadkin.

CHAPTER 9

 

   
   

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER INDEX

CHAPTER 9

   
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