Chapter III
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Saying good-bye to the princess, Sergey
Ivanovitch was joined by Katavasov; together they got into a
carriage full to overflowing, and the train started.
At Tsaritsino station the train was met by a chorus
of young men singing “Hail to Thee!” Again the volunteers bowed and
poked their heads out, but Sergey Ivanovitch paid no attention to
them. He had had so much to do with the volunteers that the type
was familiar to him and did not interest him. Katavasov, whose
scientific work had prevented his having a chance of observing them
hitherto, was very much interested in them and questioned Sergey
Ivanovitch.
Sergey Ivanovitch advised him to go into the
second-class and talk to them himself. At the next station
Katavasov acted on this suggestion.
At the first stop he moved into the second-class
and made the acquaintance of the volunteers. They were sitting in a
corner of the carriage, talking loudly and obviously aware that the
attention of the passengers and Katavasov as he got in was
concentrated upon them. More loudly than all talked the tall,
hollow-chested young man. He was unmistakably tipsy, and was
relating some story that had occurred at his school. Facing him sat
a middle-aged officer in the Austrian military jacket of the Guards
uniform. He was listening with a smile to the hollow-chested youth,
and occasionally pulling him up. The third, in an artillery
uniform, was sitting on a box beside them. A fourth was
asleep.
Entering into conversation with the youth,
Katavasov learned that he was a wealthy Moscow merchant who had run
through a large fortune before he was two-and-twenty. Katavasov did
not like him, because he was unmanly and effeminate and sickly. He
was obviously convinced, especially now after drinking, that he was
performing a heroic action, and he bragged of it in the most
unpleasant way.
The second, the retired officer, made an unpleasant
impression too upon Katavasov. He was, it seemed, a man who had
tried everything. He had been on a railway, had been a
land-steward, and had started factories, and he talked, quite
without necessity, of all he had done, and used learned expressions
quite inappropriately.
The third, the artilleryman, on the contrary,
struck Katavasov very favorably. He was a quiet, modest fellow,
unmistakably impressed by the knowledge of the officer and the
heroic self-sacrifice of the merchant and saying nothing about
himself. When Katavasov asked him what had impelled him to go to
Servia, he answered modestly:
“Oh, well, every one’s going. The Servians want
help, too. I’m sorry for them.”
“Yes, you artillerymen especially are scarce
there,” said Katavasov.
“Oh, I wasn’t long in the artillery; maybe they’ll
put me into the infantry or the cavalry.”
“Into the infantry when they need artillery more
than anything?” said Katavasov, fancying from the artilleryman’s
apparent age that he must have reached a fairly high grade.
“I wasn’t long in the artillery; I’m a cadet
retired,” he said, and he began to explain how he had failed in his
examination.
All of this together made a disagreeable impression
on Katavasov, and when the volunteers got out at a station for a
drink, Katavasov would have liked to compare his unfavorable
impression in conversation with some one. There was an old man in
the carriage, wearing a military overcoat, who had been listening
all the while to Katavasov’s conversation with the volunteers. When
they were left alone, Katavasov addressed him.
“What different positions they come from, all those
fellows who are going off there,” Katavasov said vaguely, not
wishing to express his own opinion, and at the same time anxious to
find out the old man’s views.
The old man was an officer who had served on two
campaigns. He knew what makes a soldier, and judging by the
appearance and the talk of those persons, by the swagger with which
they had recourse to the bottle on the journey, he considered them
poor soldiers. Moreover, he lived in a district town, and he was
longing to tell how one soldier had volunteered from his town, a
drunkard and a thief whom no one would employ as a laborer. But
knowing by experience that in the present condition of the public
temper it was dangerous to express an opinion opposed to the
general one, and especially to criticize the volunteers
unfavorably, he too watched Katavasov without committing
himself.
“Well, men are wanted there,” he said, laughing
with his eyes. And they fell to talking of the last war news, and
each concealed from the other his perplexity as to the engagement
expected next day, since the Turks had been beaten, according to
the latest news, at all points. And so they parted, neither giving
expression to his opinion.
Katavasov went back to his own carriage, and with
reluctant hypocrisy reported to Sergey Ivanovitch his observations
of the volunteers, from which it would appear that they were
capital fellows.
At a big station at a town the volunteers were
again greeted with shouts and singing, again men and women with
collecting-boxes appeared, and provincial ladies brought bouquets
to the volunteers and followed them into the refreshment-room; but
all this was on a much smaller and feebler scale than in
Moscow.