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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVII </h2>
<p>As soon as Raisky reached St. Petersburg he hurried off to find Kirilov.
He felt an impulse to touch his friend to assure himself that Kirilov
really stood before him, and that he had not started on the journey
without him. He repeated to him his ardent confidence that his artistic
future lay in sculpture.</p>
<p>“What new fancy is this?” asked Kirilov, frowning and plainly expressing
his mistrust. “When I got your letter I thought you were mad. You have one
talent already; why do you want to follow a sidetrack. Take your pencil,
go to the Academy, and buy this,” he said, showing him a thick book of
lithographed anatomical drawings. “What do you want with sculpture? It is
too late.”</p>
<p>“I feel I have the right touch here,” he said, rubbing his fingers one
against the other.</p>
<p>“Whether you have the right touch or not, it is too late.”</p>
<p>“Why too late? There is an ensign I know who wields the chisel with great
success.”</p>
<p>“An ensign, yes! But you, with your grey hair....” Kirilov emphasised his
remarks with a vigorous shake of the head.</p>
<p>Raisky would wrangle with him no longer. He spent three weeks in the
studio of a sculptor, and made acquaintance with the students there. At
home he worked zealously; visited with the sculptor and his students the
Isaac Cathedral, where he stood in admiration before the work of Vitali;
and he spent many hours in the galleries of the Hermitage. Overwhelmed
with enthusiasm he urged Kirilov to start at once for Italy and Rome.</p>
<p>He had not forgotten Leonti’s commission, and sought out Juliana Andreevna
in her lodgings. When he entered the corridor he heard the strains of a
waltz and, he thought, the voice of Koslov’s wife. He sent in his name and
with it Leonti’s letter. After a time the servant, with an air of
embarrassment, came to tell him that Juliana Andreevna had gone with a
party of friends to Zarskoe-Selo, and would travel direct from there to
Moscow. Raisky did not think it necessary to mention this incident to
Leonti.</p>
<p>His former guardian had sent him a considerable sum raised by the mortgage
of his estate, and with this in hand he set out with Kirilov at the
beginning of January for Dresden. He spent many hours of every day in the
gallery, and paid an occasional visit to the theatre. Raisky pressed his
fellow-traveller to go farther afield; he wanted to go to Holland, to
England, to Paris.</p>
<p>“What should I do in England?” asked Kirilov. “There, all the
art-treasures are in private galleries to which we have no access, and the
public museums are not rich in great works of art. If you are determined
to go, you must go by yourself from Holland. I will wait for you in
Paris.”</p>
<p>Raisky agreed to this proposition. He only stayed a fortnight in England,
however, and was very much impressed by the mighty sea of social life.
Then he hastened back to his eager study of the rich art treasures of
Paris; but he could not possess his soul in the confusion and noisy
merriment, in the incessant entertainments of Paris.</p>
<p>In the early spring the friends crossed the Alps. Even while he abandoned
himself to the new impressions which nature, art, and a different race
made on his mind, Raisky found that the dearest and nearest ties still
connected him with Tatiana Markovna, Vera and Marfinka. When he watched
the towering crests of the waves at sea or the snow-clad mountain tops his
imagination brought before him his aunt’s noble grey head; her eyes looked
at him from the portraits of Velasquez and Gerard Dow, just as Murillo’s
women reminded him of Vera, and he recalled Marfinka’s charming face as he
looked at the masterpieces of Greuze, or even at the women of Raphael.
Vera’s form flitted before him on the mountain side; he saw once more
before him the precipice overlooking the narrow plain of the Volga, and
fought over again the despairing struggle from which he had emerged. In
the flowery valleys Vera beckoned to him under another aspect, offering
her hand with her affectionate smile. So his memories followed him even as
he contemplated the mighty figures of Nature, Art and History as they were
revealed in the mountains and the plains of Italy.</p>
<p>He gave himself up to these varied emotions with a passionate absorption
which shook the foundations of his physical strength. In Rome he
established himself in a studio which he shared with Kirilov, and spent
much of his time in visiting the museums and the monuments of antiquity.
Sometimes he felt he had suddenly lost his appreciation of natural beauty,
and then he would shut himself up and work for days together. Another time
he was absorbed in the crowded life of the city, which appeared to him as
a great, crude, moving picture in which the life of bygone centuries was
reflected as in a mirror.</p>
<p>Through all the manifestations of this rich and glowing existence he
remained faithful to his own family, and he was never more than a guest on
the foreign soil. In his leisure hours his thoughts were turned homewards;
he would have liked to absorb the eternal beauty of nature and art, to
saturate himself with the history revealed in the monuments of Rome in
order that he might take his spiritual and artistic gains back to
Malinovka.</p>
<p>The three figures of Vera, Marfinka, and his “little mother” Tatiana
Markovna, stretched out beckoning hands to him; and calling him to herself
with even greater insistence than these, was another, mightier figure, the
“great mother,” Russia herself.</p>
<h3> THE END </h3>
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