
- 570 pages
- English
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Petersburg
About this book
After enlisting in a revolutionary terrorist organization, the university student Nikolai Apollonovich Ableukhov is entrusted with a highly dangerous mission: to plant a bomb and assassinate a major government figure. But the real central character of the novel is the city of Petersburg at the beginning of the twentieth century, caught in the grip of political agitation and social unrest. Intertwining the worlds of history and myth, and parading a cast of unforgettable characters, Petersburg is a story of apocalypse and redemption played out through family dysfunction, conspiracy and murder.
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CHAPTER ONE
In which is told of a certain worthy person, his cerebral play and ephemerality of being.
Once there was a dreadful time.
The memory of it is not stale.
It is of this, my friends, that I
Will now commence for you my taleā
A sad one will my story be.
A Pushkin
Apollon Apollonovich Ableukhov
APOLLON APOLLONOVICH ABLEUKHOV was of exceedingly venerable stock: he had Adam for his ancestor. And that is not the main thing: incomparably more important here is the fact that a high-born ancestor of his was Shem, that is to say, the very progenitor of the Semitic, Hessitic and red-skinned peoples.
Here we shall make a transition to ancestors of less distant times.
These ancestors (so it appears) had their dwelling in the Kirgiz-Kaisak Horde, from where, in the reign of Empress Anna Ioannovna, Mirza Ab-Lai, the senatorās great-great-grandfather, valiantly entered the service of Russia, receiving at his baptism the Christian name Andrei and the sobriquet Ukhov. Thus the Armorial of the Russian Empire discourses upon this descendant scion of the Mongol race. For the sake of brevity Ablai-Ukhov was later turned into simply Ableukhov.
This great-great-grandfather, it is said, proved to be the source of the line.
A grey, gold-braided servant was dusting the writing desk with a feather duster; a cookās cap peeped in at the open door.
āThe masterās up, you know ā¦ā
āHeās rubbing himself with eau de cologne, soon be down for coffee ā¦ā
āThe postman this morning said there was a letter for the masterāfrom Spain: with a Spanish stamp on.ā
āLet me tell you something: you shouldnāt be sticking your nose into letters so much ā¦ā
āI suppose Anna Petrovna ā¦ā
āYou suppose, do you ā¦ā
āI was just saying ⦠Whatās it to do with me ā¦ā
The cookās head suddenly vanished. Apollon Apollonovich Ableukhov strode through into the study.
A pencil lying on the desk seized Apollon Apollonovichās attention. Apollon Apollonovich conceived the intention of giving the pencilās point acuteness of form. Swiftly he walked up to the desk and grasped ⦠a paperweight, which he twisted around in deep thought for a long time, before realizing that in his hands was a paperweight, and not a pencil.
His absent-mindedness arose from the fact that at that moment he had been struck by a profound idea; and at once, at this inopportune time, it extended into a far-reaching train of thought (Apollon Apollonovich was hurrying to the Establishment). His Diary, which was to appear in the periodical press in the year of his death, became longer by a page.
Apollon Apollonovich quickly wrote down his extended train of thought: once it was written down, he thought: āItās time to go to the office.ā And he passed through into the dining room to take his coffee.
Before doing so he set about interrogating his old valet with a certain unpleasant persistence:
āIs Nikolai Apollonovich up yet?ā
āNo, indeed, sir: he hasnāt got up yet ā¦ā
Apollon Apollonovich rubbed the bridge of his nose in displeasure:
āHmm ⦠tell me: when doesātell meāNikolai Apollonovich, as it were ā¦ā
āHe gets up quite late, sir ā¦ā
āWell, how late?ā
And at once, without waiting for a reply, he strode through for his coffee, with a glance at his watch.
It was precisely half-past-nine.
At ten oāclock he, an old man, would leave for the Establishment. Nikolai Apollonovich, a young man, would rise from his bedāa couple of hours later. Every morning the senator inquired about the hour of his waking. And every morning he frowned.
Nikolai Apollonovich was the senatorās son.
In short, he was the head of a certain Establishment
Apollon Apollonovich Ableukhov had distinguished himself by acts of valour; more than one star had fallen on to his gold-embroidered breast; the stars of Stanislav and Anna: even the White Eagle.
The ribbon he wore was a blue ribbon.
And recently from a red lacquered box the rays of bejewelled insignia had come to gleam on this receptacle of patriotic feelings, that is to say, the insignia of the Order of Alexander Nevskii.
What then was the social station of this person who has arisen from non-existence?
I think that is a somewhat unseemly question: the whole of Russia knew Ableukhov from the exquisite prolixity of the speeches he uttered; these speeches glittered without exploding and soundlessly spread poisons over the opposing party, as a result of which that partyās proposal was rejected in the appropriate place. Since Ableukhov had been installed in that responsible post the ninth department had been inactive. Apollon Apollonovich had conducted relentless hostilities with that department by means of papers and, where necessary, of speeches, facilitating the import into Russia of American reaping-machines (the ninth department was not in favour of their import). The senatorās speeches flew round all the regions and provinces, some of which in spatial terms yield nothing to Germany.
Apollon Apollonovich was the head of an Establishment: you know ⦠that one ⦠whatās it called?
In short, he was head of an Establishment with which you are certainly familiar.
If one were to compare the emaciated, utterly unimpressive figure of my venerable statesman with the immeasurable immensity of the mechanisms he directed, one might well surrender to a long bout of naĆÆve wonderment; but thenāabsolutely everyone did wonder at the explosion of mental forces that issued from this cranium in defiance of the whole of Russia, in defiance of the majority of departments, with the exception of one: but it was nearly two years now since the head of that department had by the will of fate fallen silent beneath his tombstone.
My senator had just reached the age of sixty-eight; and his face was redolent in its pallor both of a grey paperweight (in solemn moments)āand of papier-mĆ¢chĆ© (in leisure hours); the senatorās stony eyes, surrounded by a green-black cavity, seemed in moments of fatigue to be yet bluer and more huge.
On our own account we will add: Apollon Apollonovich was not in the least discomposed by the contemplation of his own ears, completely green, magnified to immensity, on the bloody background of a burning Russia. That was how he had recently been depicted: on the title page of a humorous little gutter-rag, one of those yid magazines, whose blood-red covers in those days were multiplying with astounding speed on the city Prospects that teemed with folk.
North-East
In the oak-panelled dining room the wheezing of a clock could be heard; with a bow and a hiss a little grey cuckoo cuckooed; at that signal from the antique cuckoo Apollon Apollonovich took his seat before his porcelain cup and broke off warm crusts of white bread. And at his coffee Apollon Apollonovich recalled his past years; and at his coffee he wouldāeven, evenāmake jokes:
āWho, Semyonych, do people defer to most?ā
āI presume, Apollon Apollonovich, that people defer most of all to an Actual Privy Councillor.ā
Apollon Apollonovich smiled with his lips only.
āYou presume wrongly: people defer most of all to a chimneysweep ā¦ā
The valet already knew how the joke ended: but out of deference he kept quiet about it.
āWhy, if I may be so bold as to ask, sir, does a chimney-sweep enjoy such honour?ā
āPeople stand aside, Semyonych, for an Actual Privy Councillor ā¦ā
āI presume so, your Excellency ā¦ā
āBut a chimney-sweep ⦠Even an Actual Privy Councillor will stand aside for him, because: the chimney-sweep will dirty him.ā
āSo thatās how it is, sir,ā the valet interposed deferentially ā¦
āThatās it: only there is one profession people defer to even more ā¦ā
And he immediately added:
āA lavatory attendant ā¦ā
āUgh! ā¦ā
āA chimney-sweep will stand aside for him, not only an Actual Privy Councillor ā¦ā
Andāa sip of coffee. But let us note: Apollon Apollonovich was himself an Actual Privy Councillor.
āThere was another thing, Apollon Apollonovich, sir: Anna Petrovna used to say to me ā¦ā
But at the words āAnna Petrovnaā the grey-haired valet stopped short.
āThe grey coat, sir?ā
āThe grey coat ā¦ā
āThe grey gloves, too, sir, I presume?ā
āNo, Iāll have the suede gloves ā¦ā
āIf you would be so good as to wait a moment, your Excellency; the gloves are in the chiffonier: shelf BāNorth-East.ā
Only once had Apollon Apollonovich entered into the trivia of life: one day he had conducted a review of his inventory; his inventory had been sequentially catalogued and a nomenclature established for all the shelves, large and small; shelves had appeared by letter: A, B, C; and the four sides of the shelves had assumed the designation of the four points of the compass.
When he put his spectacles away, Apollon Apollonovich would note in his register in fine, minute handwriting: spectacles, shelf B and NE, that is to say, North-East: a copy of the register was also received by the valet, who memorised the compass-bearings of the appurtenances of the inestimable toilet; sometimes during insomnia he would recite these compass-bearings unerringly by heart.
In the lacquered house the storms of life took their course quietly; nevertheless the storms of life here took their course calamitously: they did not thunder with events; they did not shine a cleansing light into the inhabitantsā hearts with arrows of lightning; but from a hoarse throat they wrung the air in a torrent of poisonous fluids; and in the consciousness of the inhabitants cerebral games swirled round, like dense gases in hermetically sealed jars.
Grocer, grow, sir
A cold long-legged bronze sculpture rose up from the table: the lampshade did not gleam with its delicate decoration of a purple-pink hue: the nineteenth century had lost the secret of that colour; the glass had darkened with time; the delicate decoration had darkened with time too.
On all sides the gold pier glasses between the windows swallowed the drawing room into the green-hued surfaces of their mirrors; there one was crowned by the wing of a golden-cheeked cupid; and over there the laurels and roses of a golden wreath were pierc...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- Map
- PROLOGUE
- CHAPTER ONE
- CHAPTER TWO
- CHAPTER THREE
- CHAPTER FOUR
- CHAPTER FIVE
- CHAPTER SIX
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- EPILOGUE
- TRANSLATORāS AFTERWORD
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- Copyright
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