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<h2> Chapter XXVI </h2>
<p>|'Yes,’ thought Olenin, as he walked home. ‘I need only
slacken the reins a bit and I might fall desperately in love with this
Cossack girl.’ He went to bed with these thoughts, but expected it
all to blow over and that he would continue to live as before.</p>
<p>But the old life did not return. His relations to Maryanka were changed.
The wall that had separated them was broken down. Olenin now greeted her
every time they met.</p>
<p>The master of the house having returned to collect the rent, on hearing of
Olenin’s wealth and generosity invited him to his hut. The old woman
received him kindly, and from the day of the party onwards Olenin often
went in of an evening and sat with them till late at night. He seemed to
be living in the village just as he used to, but within him everything had
changed. He spent his days in the forest, and towards eight o’clock,
when it began to grow dusk, he would go to see his hosts, alone or with
Daddy Eroshka. They grew so used to him that they were surprised when he
stayed away. He paid well for his wine and was a quiet fellow. Vanyusha
would bring him his tea and he would sit down in a corner near the oven.
The old woman did not mind him but went on with her work, and over their
tea or their chikhir they talked about Cossack affairs, about the
neighbours, or about Russia: Olenin relating and the others inquiring.
Sometimes he brought a book and read to himself. Maryanka crouched like a
wild goat with her feet drawn up under her, sometimes on the top of the
oven, sometimes in a dark corner. She did not take part in the
conversations, but Olenin saw her eyes and face and heard her moving or
cracking sunflower seeds, and he felt that she listened with her whole
being when he spoke, and was aware of his presence while he silently read
to himself. Sometimes he thought her eyes were fixed on him, and meeting
their radiance he involuntarily became silent and gazed at her. Then she
would instantly hide her face and he would pretend to be deep in
conversation with the old woman, while he listened all the time to her
breathing and to her every movement and waited for her to look at him
again. In the presence of others she was generally bright and friendly
with him, but when they were alone together she was shy and rough.
Sometimes he came in before Maryanka had returned home. Suddenly he would
hear her firm footsteps and catch a glimmer of her blue cotton smock at
the open door. Then she would step into the middle of the hut, catch sight
of him, and her eyes would give a scarcely perceptible kindly smile, and
he would feel happy and frightened.</p>
<p>He neither sought for nor wished for anything from her, but every day her
presence became more and more necessary to him.</p>
<p>Olenin had entered into the life of the Cossack village so fully that his
past seemed quite foreign to him. As to the future, especially a future
outside the world in which he was now living, it did not interest him at
all. When he received letters from home, from relatives and friends, he
was offended by the evident distress with which they regarded him as a
lost man, while he in his village considered those as lost who did not
live as he was living. He felt sure he would never repent of having broken
away from his former surroundings and of having settled down in this
village to such a solitary and original life. When out on expeditions, and
when quartered at one of the forts, he felt happy too; but it was here,
from under Daddy Eroshka’s wing, from the forest and from his hut at
the end of the village, and especially when he thought of Maryanka and
Lukashka, that he seemed to see the falseness of his former life. That
falseness used to rouse his indignation even before, but now it seemed
inexpressibly vile and ridiculous. Here he felt freer and freer every day
and more and more of a man. The Caucasus now appeared entirely different
to what his imagination had painted it. He had found nothing at all like
his dreams, nor like the descriptions of the Caucasus he had heard and
read. ‘There are none of all those chestnut steeds, precipices,
Amalet Beks, heroes or villains,’ thought he. ‘The people live
as nature lives: they die, are born, unite, and more are born—they
fight, eat and drink, rejoice and die, without any restrictions but those
that nature imposes on sun and grass, on animal and tree. They have no
other laws.’ Therefore these people, compared to himself, appeared
to him beautiful, strong, and free, and the sight of them made him feel
ashamed and sorry for himself. Often it seriously occurred to him to throw
up everything, to get registered as a Cossack, to buy a hut and cattle and
marry a Cossack woman (only not Maryanka, whom he conceded to Lukashka),
and to live with Daddy Eroshka and go shooting and fishing with him, and
go with the Cossacks on their expeditions. ‘Why ever don’t I
do it? What am I waiting for?’ he asked himself, and he egged
himself on and shamed himself. ‘Am I afraid of doing what I hold to
be reasonable and right? Is the wish to be a simple Cossack, to live close
to nature, not to injure anyone but even to do good to others, more stupid
than my former dreams, such as those of becoming a minister of state or a
colonel?’ but a voice seemed to say that he should wait, and not
take any decision. He was held back by a dim consciousness that he could
not live altogether like Eroshka and Lukashka because he had a different
idea of happiness—he was held back by the thought that happiness
lies in self-sacrifice. What he had done for Lukashka continued to give
him joy. He kept looking for occasions to sacrifice himself for others,
but did not meet with them. Sometimes he forgot this newly discovered
recipe for happiness and considered himself capable of identifying his
life with Daddy Eroshka’s, but then he quickly bethought himself and
promptly clutched at the idea of conscious self-sacrifice, and from that
basis looked calmly and proudly at all men and at their happiness.</p>
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