Part 9 (1/2)
”Now, the old man, we hear, wants to leave his eldest son, Karp, as master of the house. 'I am getting old,' says he. 'It's my business to attend to the bees.' Well, Karp is a good peasant, a careful peasant; but he doesn't manage to please the old man in the least. There's no sense in it.”
”Well, perhaps Karp wants to speculate in land and wood. What do you think about it?”, pursued the prince, wis.h.i.+ng to learn from the woman all that she knew about her neighbors.
”Scarcely, sir,”[44] continued the nurse. ”The old man hasn't disclosed his money to his son. As long as he lives, of course, the money in the house will be under the old man's control; and it will increase all the time too.”
[Footnote 44: _batiushka._]
”But isn't the old man willing?”
”He is afraid.”
”What is he afraid of?”
”How is it possible, sir, for a seignorial peasant to make a noise about his money? And it's a hard question to decide what to do with money anyway.
Here he went into business with the porter, and was cheated. Where was he to get redress? And so he lost his money. But with the proprietor he would have any loss made good immediately, of course.”
”Yes, hence,” ... said Nekhliudof, reddening. ”But good-by, nurse.”
”Good-by, sir, your excellency. Greatly obliged to you.”
XIV.
”Hadn't I better go home?” mused Nekhliudof, as he strode along toward the Dutlof enclosure, and felt a boundless melancholy and moral weariness.
But at this moment the new deal gates were thrown open before him with a creaking sound; and a handsome, ruddy fellow of eighteen in wagoner's attire appeared, leading a troka of powerful-limbed and still sweaty horses. He hastily brushed back his blonde hair, and bowed to the prince.
”Well, is your father at home, Ilya?” asked Nekhliudof.
”At the bee-house, back of the yard,” replied the youth, driving the horses, one after the other, through the half-opened gates.
”I will not give it up. I will make the proposal. I will do the best I can,” reflected Nekhliudof; and, after waiting till the horses had pa.s.sed out, he entered Dutlof's s.p.a.cious yard.
It was plain to see that the manure had only recently been carried away.
The ground was still black and damp; and in places, particularly in the hollows, were left red fibrous clots.
In the yard and under the high sheds, many carts stood in orderly rows, together with ploughs, sledges, harrows, barrels, and all sorts of farming implements. Doves were flitting about, cooing in the shadows under the broad solid rafters. There was an odor of manure and tar.
In one corner Karp and Ignat were fitting a new cross-bar to a large iron-mounted, three-horse cart.
All three of Dutlof's sons bore a strong family resemblance. The youngest, Ilya, who had met Nekhliudof at the gate, was beardless, of smaller stature, ruddier complexion, and more neatly dressed, than the others. The second, Ignat, was rather taller and darker. He had a wedge-shaped beard; and though he wore boots, a driver's s.h.i.+rt, and a lamb's-skin cap, he had not such a festive, holiday appearance as his brother had.
The eldest, Karp, was still taller. He wore clogs, a gray kaftan, and a s.h.i.+rt without gussets. He had a reddish beard, trimmed; and his expression was serious, even to severity.
”Do you wish my father sent for, your excellency?” he asked, coming to meet the prince, and bowing slightly and awkwardly.
”No, I will go to him at the hives: I wish to see what he's building there.
But I should like a talk with you,” said Nekhliudof, drawing him to the other side of the yard, so that Ignat might not overhear what he was about to talk about with Karp.