Canto the First

 Canto the First
‘The Spleen’
 
‘He rushes at life and exhausts the passions.’
 
— Prince Viazemski
I
 
“My uncle’s goodness is extreme,
 
If seriously he hath disease;
 
He hath acquired the world’s esteem
 
And nothing more important sees;
 
A paragon of virtue he!
 
But what a nuisance it will be,
 
Chained to his bedside night and day
 
Without a chance to slip away.
 
Ye need dissimulation base
 
A dying man with art to soothe,
 
Beneath his head the pillow smooth,
 
And physic bring with mournful face,
 
To sigh and meditate alone:
 
When will the devil take his own!”
II
 
Thus mused a madcap young, who drove
 
Through clouds of dust at postal pace,
 
By the decree of Mighty Jove,
 
Inheritor of all his race.
 
Friends of Liudmila and Ruslan,1
 
Let me present ye to the man,
 
Who without more prevarication
 
The hero is of my narration!
 
Oneguine, O my gentle readers,
 
Was born beside the Neva, where
 
It may be ye were born, or there
 
Have shone as one of fashion’s leaders.
 
I also wandered there of old,
 
But cannot stand the northern cold.2
 
1 Ruslan and Liudmila, the title of Pushkin’s first important work, written 1817–20. It is a tale relating the adventures of the knight-errant Ruslan in search of his fair lady Liudmila, who has been carried off by a kaldoon, or magician.
 
2 Written in Bessarabia.
III
 
Having performed his service truly,
 
Deep into debt his father ran;
 
Three balls a year he gave ye duly,
 
At last became a ruined man.
 
But Eugene was by fate preserved,
 
For first “madame” his wants observed,
 
And then “monsieur” supplied her place;3
 
The boy was wild but full of grace.
 
“Monsieur l’Abbe,” a starving Gaul,
 
Fearing his pupil to annoy,
 
Instructed jestingly the boy,
 
Morality taught scarce at all;
 
Gently for pranks he would reprove
 
And in the Summer Garden rove.
 
3 In Russia foreign tutors and governesses are commonly styled “monsieur” or “madame.”
IV
 
When youth’s rebellious hour drew near
 
And my Eugene the path must trace —
 
The path of hope and tender fear —
 
Monsieur clean out of doors they chase.
 
Lo! my Oneguine free as air,
 
Cropped in the latest style his hair,
 
Dressed like a London dandy he
 
The giddy world at last shall see.
 
He wrote and spoke, so all allowed,
 
In the French language perfectly,
 
Danced the mazurka gracefully,
 
Without the least constraint he bowed.
 
What more’s required? The world replies,
 
He is a charming youth and wise.
V
 
We all of us of education
 
A something somehow have obtained,
 
Thus, praised be God! a reputation
 
With us is easily attained.
 
Oneguine was — so many deemed
 
[Unerring critics self-esteemed],
 
Pedantic although scholar like,
 
In truth he had the happy trick
 
Without constraint in conversation
 
Of touching lightly every theme.
 
Silent, oracular ye’d see him
 
Amid a serious disputation,
 
Then suddenly discharge a joke
 
The ladies’ laughter to provoke.
VI
 
Latin is just now not in vogue,
 
But if the truth I must relate,
 
Oneguine knew enough, the rogue
 
A mild quotation to translate,
 
A little Juvenal to spout,
 
With “vale” finish off a note;
 
Two verses he could recollect
 
Of the Aeneid, but incorrect.
 
In history he took no pleasure,
 
The dusty chronicles of earth
 
For him were but of little worth,
 
Yet still of anecdotes a treasure
 
Within his memory there lay,
 
From Romulus unto our day.
VII
 
For empty sound the rascal swore he
 
Existence would not make a curse,
 
Knew not an iamb from a choree,
 
Although we read him heaps of verse.
 
Homer, Theocritus, he jeered,
 
But Adam Smith to read appeared,
 
And at economy was great;
 
That is, he could elucidate
 
How empires store of wealth unfold,
 
How flourish, why and wherefore less
 
If the raw product they possess
 
The medium is required of gold.
 
The father scarcely understands
 
His son and mortgages his lands.
VIII
 
But upon all that Eugene knew
 
I have no leisure here to dwell,
 
But say he was a genius who
 
In one thing really did excel.
 
It occupied him from a boy,
 
A labour, torment, yet a joy,
 
It whiled his idle hours away
 
And wholly occupied his day —
 
The amatory science warm,
 
Which Ovid once immortalized,
 
For which the poet agonized
 
Laid down his life of sun and storm
 
On the steppes of Moldavia lone,
 
Far from his Italy — his own.4
 
4 Referring to Tomi, the reputed place of exile of Ovid. Pushkin, then residing in Bessarabia, was in the same predicament as his predecessor in song, though he certainly did not plead guilty to the fact, since he remarks in his ode to Ovid:
 
???????To exile self-consigned,
 
?With self, society, existence, discontent,
 
?I visit in these days, with melancholy mind,
 
?The country whereunto a mournful age thee sent.
 
Ovid thus enumerates the causes which brought about his banishment:
 
?“Perdiderint quum me duo crimina, carmen et error,
 
?Alterius facti culpa silenda mihi est.”
 
???????Ovidii Nasonis Tristium, lib. ii. 207.
IX
 
How soon he learnt deception’s art,
 
Hope to conceal and jealousy,
 
False confidence or doubt to impart,
 
Sombre or glad in turn to be,
 
Haughty appear, subservient,
 
Obsequious or indifferent!
 
What languor would his silence show,
 
How full of fire his speech would glow!
 
How artless was the note which spoke
 
Of love again, and yet again;
 
How deftly could he transport feign!
 
How bright and tender was his look,
 
Modest yet daring! And a tear
 
Would at the proper time appear.
X
 
How well he played the greenhorn’s part
 
To cheat the inexperienced fair,
 
Sometimes by pleasing flattery’s art,
 
Sometimes by ready-made despair;
 
The feeble moment would espy
 
Of tender years the modesty
 
Conquer by passion and address,
 
Await the long-delayed caress.
 
Avowal then ’twas time to pray,
 
Attentive to the heart’s first beating,
 
Follow up love — a secret meeting
 
Arrange without the least delay —
 
Then, then — well, in some solitude
 
Lessons to give he understood!
XI
 
How soon he learnt to titillate
 
The heart of the inveterate flirt!
 
Desirous to annihilate
 
His own antagonists expert,
 
How bitterly he would malign,
 
With many a snare their pathway line!
 
But ye, O happy husbands, ye
 
With him were friends eternally:
 
The crafty spouse caressed him, who
 
By Faublas in his youth was schooled,5
 
And the suspicious veteran old,
 
The pompous, swaggering cuckold too,
 
Who floats contentedly through life,
 
Proud of his dinners and his wife!
 
5 Les Aventures du Chevalier de Faublas, a romance of a loose character by Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray, b. 1760, d. 1797, famous for his bold oration denouncing Robespierre, Marat and Danton.
XII
 
One morn whilst yet in bed he lay,
 
His valet brings him letters three.
 
What, invitations? The same day
 
As many entertainments be!
 
A ball here, there a children’s treat,
 
Whither shall my rapscallion flit?
 
Whither shall he go first? He’ll see,
 
Perchance he will to all the three.
 
Meantime in matutinal dress
 
And hat surnamed a “Bolivar”6
 
He hies unto the “Boulevard,”
 
To loiter there in idleness
 
Until the sleepless Breguet chime7
 
Announcing to him dinner-time.
 
6 A la “Bolivar,” from the founder of Bolivian independence.
 
7 M. Breguet, a celebrated Parisian watchmaker — hence a slang term for a watch.
XIII
 
’Tis dark. He seats him in a sleigh,
 
“Drive on!” the cheerful cry goes forth,
 
His furs are powdered on the way
 
By the fine silver of the north.
 
He bends his course to Talon’s, where8
 
He knows Kaverine will repair.9
 
He enters. High the cork arose
 
And Comet champagne foaming flows.
 
Before him red roast beef is seen
 
And truffles, dear to youthful eyes,
 
Flanked by immortal Strasbourg pies,
 
The choicest flowers of French cuisine,
 
And Limburg cheese alive and old
 
Is seen next pine-apples of gold.
 
8 Talon, a famous St. Petersburg restaurateur.
 
9 Paul Petrovitch Kaverine, a friend for whom Pushkin in his youth appears to have entertained great respect and admiration. He was an officer in the Hussars of the Guard, and a noted “dandy” and man about town. The poet on one occasion addressed the following impromptu to his friend’s portrait:
 
“Within him daily see the the fires of punch and war,
 
Upon the fields of Mars a gallant warrior,
 
A faithful friend to friends, of ladies torturer,
 
??????But ever the Hussar.”
XIV
 
Still thirst fresh draughts of wine compels
 
To cool the cutlets’ seething grease,
 
When the sonorous Breguet tells
 
Of the commencement of the piece.
 
A critic of the stage malicious,
 
A slave of actresses capricious,
 
Oneguine was a citizen
 
Of the domains of the side-scene.
 
To the theatre he repairs
 
Where each young critic ready stands,
 
Capers applauds with clap of hands,
 
With hisses Cleopatra scares,
 
Moina recalls for this alone
 
That all may hear his voice’s tone.
XV
 
Thou fairy-land! Where formerly
 
Shone pungent Satire’s dauntless king,
 
Von Wisine, friend of liberty,
 
And Kniajnine, apt at copying.
 
The young Simeonova too there
 
With Ozeroff was wont to share
 
Applause, the people’s donative.
 
There our Katenine did revive
 
Corneille’s majestic genius,
 
Sarcastic Shakhovskoi brought out
 
His comedies, a noisy rout,
 
There Didelot became glorious,
 
There, there, beneath the side-scene’s shade
 
The drama of my youth was played.10
 
10 Denis Von Wisine (1741–92), a favourite Russian dramatist. His first comedy “The Brigadier,” procured him the favour of the second Catherine. His best, however, is the “Minor” (Niedorosl). Prince Potemkin, after witnessing it, summoned the author, and greeted him with the exclamation, “Die now, Denis!” In fact, his subsequent performances were not of equal merit.
 
Jacob Borissovitch Kniajnine (1742–91), a clever adapter of French tragedy.
 
Simeonova, a celebrated tragic actress, who retired from the stage in early life and married a Prince Gagarine.
 
Ozeroff, one of the best-known Russian dramatists of the period; he possessed more originality than Kniajnine. “Oedipus in Athens,” “Fingal,” “Demetrius Donskoi,” and “Polyxena,” are the best known of his tragedies.
 
Katenine translated Corneille’s tragedies into Russian.
 
Didelot, sometime Director of the ballet at the Opera at St. Petersburg.
XVI
 
My goddesses, where are your shades?
 
Do ye not hear my mournful sighs?
 
Are ye replaced by other maids
 
Who cannot conjure former joys?
 
Shall I your chorus hear anew,
 
Russia’s Terpsichore review
 
Again in her ethereal dance?
 
Or will my melancholy glance
 
On the dull stage find all things changed,
 
The disenchanted glass direct
 
Where I can no more recollect? —
 
A careless looker-on estranged
 
In silence shall I sit and yawn
 
And dream of life’s delightful dawn?
XVII
 
The house is crammed. A thousand lamps
 
On pit, stalls, boxes, brightly blaze,
 
Impatiently the gallery stamps,
 
The curtain now they slowly raise.
 
Obedient to the magic strings,
 
Brilliant, ethereal, there springs
 
Forth from the crowd of nymphs surrounding
 
Istomina(*) the nimbly-bounding;
 
With one foot resting on its tip
 
Slow circling round its fellow swings
 
And now she skips and now she springs
 
Like down from Aeolus’s lip,
 
Now her lithe form she arches o’er
 
And beats with rapid foot the floor.
 
*Istomina — A celebrated Circassian dancer of the day, with whom the poet in his extreme youth imagined himself in love.
XVIII
 
Shouts of applause! Oneguine passes
 
Between the stalls, along the toes;
 
Seated, a curious look with glasses
 
On unknown female forms he throws.
 
Free scope he yields unto his glance,
 
Reviews both dress and countenance,
 
With all dissatisfaction shows.
 
To male acquaintances he bows,
 
And finally he deigns let fall
 
Upon the stage his weary glance.
 
He yawns, averts his countenance,
 
Exclaiming, “We must change ’em all!
 
I long by ballets have been bored,
 
Now Didelot scarce can be endured!”
XIX
 
Snakes, satyrs, loves with many a shout
 
Across the stage still madly sweep,
 
Whilst the tired serving-men without
 
Wrapped in their sheepskins soundly sleep.
 
Still the loud stamping doth not cease,
 
Still they blow noses, cough, and sneeze,
 
Still everywhere, without, within,
 
The lamps illuminating shine;
 
The steed benumbed still pawing stands
 
And of the irksome harness tires,
 
And still the coachmen round the fires11
 
Abuse their masters, rub their hands:
 
But Eugene long hath left the press
 
To array himself in evening dress.
 
11 In Russia large fires are lighted in winter time in front of the theatres for the benefit of the menials, who, considering the state of the thermometer, cannot be said to have a jovial time of it. But in this, as in other cases, “habit” alleviates their lot, and they bear the cold with a wonderful equanimity.
XX
 
Faithfully shall I now depict,
 
Portray the solitary den
 
Wherein the child of fashion strict
 
Dressed him, undressed, and dressed again?
 
All that industrial London brings
 
For tallow, wood and other things
 
Across the Baltic’s salt sea waves,
 
All which caprice and affluence craves,
 
All which in Paris eager taste,
 
Choosing a profitable trade,
 
For our amusement ever made
 
And ease and fashionable waste —
 
Adorned the apartment of Eugene,
 
Philosopher just turned eighteen.
XXI
 
China and bronze the tables weight,
 
Amber on pipes from Stamboul glows,
 
And, joy of souls effeminate,
 
Phials of crystal scents enclose.
 
Combs of all sizes, files of steel,
 
Scissors both straight and curved as well,
 
Of thirty different sorts, lo! brushes
 
Both for the nails and for the tushes.
 
Rousseau, I would remark in passing,12
 
Could not conceive how serious Grimm
 
Dared calmly cleanse his nails ‘fore him,
 
Eloquent raver all-surpassing —
 
The friend of liberty and laws
 
In this case quite mistaken was.
 
12 “Tout le monde sut qu’il (Grimm) mettait du blanc; et moi, qui n’en croyait rien, je commencai de le croire, non seulement par l’embellissement de son teint, et pour avoir trouve des tasses de blanc sur la toilette, mais sur ce qu’entrant un matin dans sa chambre, je le trouvais brossant ses ongles avec une petite vergette faite expres, ouvrage qu’il continua fierement devant moi. Je jugeai qu’un homme qui passe deux heures tous les matins a brosser ses ongles peut bien passer quelques instants a remplir de blanc les creux de sa peau.”
— Confessions de J. J. Rousseau
XXII
 
The most industrious man alive
 
May yet be studious of his nails;
 
What boots it with the age to strive?
 
Custom the despot soon prevails.
 
A new Kaverine Eugene mine,
 
Dreading the world’s remarks malign,
 
Was that which we are wont to call
 
A fop, in dress pedantical.
 
Three mortal hours per diem he
 
Would loiter by the looking-glass,
 
And from his dressing-room would pass
 
Like Venus when, capriciously,
 
The goddess would a masquerade
 
Attend in male attire arrayed.
XXIII
 
On this artistical retreat
 
Having once fixed your interest,
 
I might to connoisseurs repeat
 
The style in which my hero dressed;
 
Though I confess I hardly dare
 
Describe in detail the affair,
 
Since words like pantaloons, vest, coat,
 
To Russ indigenous are not;
 
And also that my feeble verse —
 
Pardon I ask for such a sin —
 
With words of foreign origin
 
Too much I’m given to intersperse,
 
Though to the Academy I come
 
And oft its Dictionary thumb.13
 
13 Refers to Dictionary of the Academy, compiled during the reign of Catherine II under the supervision of Lomonossoff.
XXIV
 
But such is not my project now,
 
So let us to the ball-room haste,
 
Whither at headlong speed doth go
 
Eugene in hackney carriage placed.
 
Past darkened windows and long streets
 
Of slumbering citizens he fleets,
 
Till carriage lamps, a double row,
 
Cast a gay lustre on the snow,
 
Which shines with iridescent hues.
 
He nears a spacious mansion’s gate,
 
By many a lamp illuminate,
 
And through the lofty windows views
 
Profiles of lovely dames he knows
 
And also fashionable beaux.
XXV
 
Our hero stops and doth alight,
 
Flies past the porter to the stair,
 
But, ere he mounts the marble flight,
 
With hurried hand smooths down his hair.
 
He enters: in the hall a crowd,
 
No more the music thunders loud,
 
Some a mazurka occupies,
 
Crushing and a confusing noise;
 
Spurs of the Cavalier Guard clash,
 
The feet of graceful ladies fly,
 
And following them ye might espy
 
Full many a glance like lightning flash,
 
And by the fiddle’s rushing sound
 
The voice of jealousy is drowned.
XXVI
 
In my young days of wild delight
 
On balls I madly used to dote,
 
Fond declarations they invite
 
Or the delivery of a note.
 
So hearken, every worthy spouse,
 
I would your vigilance arouse,
 
Attentive be unto my rhymes
 
And due precautions take betimes.
 
Ye mothers also, caution use,
 
Upon your daughters keep an eye,
 
Employ your glasses constantly,
 
For otherwise — God only knows!
 
I lift a warning voice because
 
I long have ceased to offend the laws.
XXVII
 
Alas! life’s hours which swiftly fly
 
I’ve wasted in amusements vain,
 
But were it not immoral I
 
Should dearly like a dance again.
 
I love its furious delight,
 
The crowd and merriment and light,
 
The ladies, their fantastic dress,
 
Also their feet — yet ne’ertheless
 
Scarcely in Russia can ye find
 
Three pairs of handsome female feet;
 
Ah! I still struggle to forget
 
A pair; though desolate my mind,
 
Their memory lingers still and seems
 
To agitate me in my dreams.
XXVIII
 
When, where, and in what desert land,
 
Madman, wilt thou from memory raze
 
Those feet? Alas! on what far strand
 
Do ye of spring the blossoms graze?
 
Lapped in your Eastern luxury,
 
No trace ye left in passing by
 
Upon the dreary northern snows,
 
But better loved the soft repose
 
Of splendid carpets richly wrought.
 
I once forgot for your sweet cause
 
The thirst for fame and man’s applause,
 
My country and an exile’s lot;
 
My joy in youth was fleeting e’en
 
As your light footprints on the green.
XXIX
 
Diana’s bosom, Flora’s cheeks,
 
Are admirable, my dear friend,
 
But yet Terpsichore bespeaks
 
Charms more enduring in the end.
 
For promises her feet reveal
 
Of untold gain she must conceal,
 
Their privileged allurements fire
 
A hidden train of wild desire.
 
I love them, O my dear Elvine,14
 
Beneath the table-cloth of white,
 
In winter on the fender bright,
 
In springtime on the meadows green,
 
Upon the ball-room’s glassy floor
 
Or by the ocean’s rocky shore.
 
14 Elvine, or Elvina, was not improbably the owner of the seductive feet apostrophized by the poet, since, in 1816, he wrote an ode, “To Her,” which commences thus:
 
“Elvina, my dear, come, give me thine hand,” and so forth.
XXX
 
Beside the stormy sea one day
 
I envied sore the billows tall,
 
Which rushed in eager dense array
 
Enamoured at her feet to fall.
 
How like the billow I desired
 
To kiss the feet which I admired!
 
No, never in the early blaze
 
Of fiery youth’s untutored days
 
So ardently did I desire
 
A young Armida’s lips to press,
 
Her cheek of rosy loveliness
 
Or bosom full of languid fire —
 
A gust of passion never tore
 
My spirit with such pangs before.
XXXI
 
Another time, so willed it Fate,
 
Immersed in secret thought I stand
 
And grasp a stirrup fortunate —
 
Her foot was in my other hand.
 
Again imagination blazed,
 
The contact of the foot I raised
 
Rekindled in my withered heart
 
The fires of passion and its smart —
 
Away! and cease to ring their praise
 
For ever with thy tattling lyre,
 
The proud ones are not worth the fire
 
Of passion they so often raise.
 
The words and looks of charmers sweet
 
Are oft deceptive — like their feet.
XXXII
 
Where is Oneguine? Half asleep,
 
Straight from the ball to bed he goes,
 
Whilst Petersburg from slumber deep
 
The drum already doth arouse.
 
The shopman and the pedlar rise
 
And to the Bourse the cabman plies;
 
The Okhtenka with pitcher speeds,15
 
Crunching the morning snow she treads;
 
Morning awakes with joyous sound;
 
The shutters open; to the skies
 
In column blue the smoke doth rise;
 
The German baker looks around
 
His shop, a night-cap on his head,
 
And pauses oft to serve out bread.
 
15 i.e. the milkmaid from the Okhta villages, a suburb of St. Petersburg on the right bank of the Neva chiefly inhabited by the labouring classes.
XXXIII
 
But turning morning into night,
 
Tired by the ball’s incessant noise,
 
The votary of vain delight
 
Sleep in the shadowy couch enjoys,
 
Late in the afternoon to rise,
 
When the same life before him lies
 
Till morn — life uniform but gay,
 
To-morrow just like yesterday.
 
But was our friend Eugene content,
 
Free, in the blossom of his spring,
 
Amidst successes flattering
 
And pleasure’s daily blandishment,
 
Or vainly ‘mid luxurious fare
 
Was he in health and void of care? —
XXXIV
 
Even so! His passions soon abated,
 
Hateful the hollow world became,
 
Nor long his mind was agitated
 
By love’s inevitable flame.
 
For treachery had done its worst;
 
Friendship and friends he likewise curst,
 
Because he could not gourmandise
 
Daily beefsteaks and Strasbourg pies
 
And irrigate them with champagne;
 
Nor slander viciously could spread
 
Whene’er he had an aching head;
 
And, though a plucky scatterbrain,
 
He finally lost all delight
 
In bullets, sabres, and in fight.
XXXV
 
His malady, whose cause I ween
 
It now to investigate is time,
 
Was nothing but the British spleen
 
Transported to our Russian clime.
 
It gradually possessed his mind;
 
Though, God be praised! he ne’er designed
 
To slay himself with blade or ball,
 
Indifferent he became to all,
 
And like Childe Harold gloomily
 
He to the festival repairs,
 
Nor boston nor the world’s affairs
 
Nor tender glance nor amorous sigh
 
Impressed him in the least degree —
 
Callous to all he seemed to be.
XXXVI
 
Ye miracles of courtly grace,
 
He left you first, and I must own
 
The manners of the highest class
 
Have latterly vexatious grown;
 
And though perchance a lady may
 
Discourse of Bentham or of Say,
 
Yet as a rule their talk I call
 
Harmless, but quite nonsensical.
 
Then they’re so innocent of vice,
 
So full of piety, correct,
 
So prudent, and so circumspect
 
Stately, devoid of prejudice,
 
So inaccessible to men,
 
Their looks alone produce the spleen.16
 
16 Apropos of this somewhat ungallant sentiment, a Russian scholiast remarks:—“The whole of this ironical stanza is but a refined eulogy of the excellent qualities of our countrywomen. Thus Boileau, in the guise of invective, eulogizes Louis XIV. Russian ladies unite in their persons great acquirements, combined with amiability and strict morality; also a species of Oriental charm which so much captivated Madame de Stael.” It will occur to most that the apologist of the Russian fair “doth protest too much.” The poet in all probability wrote the offending stanza in a fit of Byronic “spleen,” as he would most likely himself have called it. Indeed, since Byron, poets of his school seem to assume this virtue if they have it not, and we take their utterances under its influence for what they are worth.
XXXVII
 
And you, my youthful damsels fair,
 
Whom latterly one often meets
 
Urging your droshkies swift as air
 
Along Saint Petersburg’s paved streets,
 
From you too Eugene took to flight,
 
Abandoning insane delight,
 
And isolated from all men,
 
Yawning betook him to a pen.
 
He thought to write, but labour long
 
Inspired him with disgust and so
 
Nought from his pen did ever flow,
 
And thus he never fell among
 
That vicious set whom I don’t blame —
 
Because a member I became.
XXXVIII
 
Once more to idleness consigned,
 
He felt the laudable desire
 
From mere vacuity of mind
 
The wit of others to acquire.
 
A case of books he doth obtain —
 
He reads at random, reads in vain.
 
This nonsense, that dishonest seems,
 
This wicked, that absurd he deems,
 
All are constrained and fetters bear,
 
Antiquity no pleasure gave,
 
The moderns of the ancients rave —
 
Books he abandoned like the fair,
 
His book-shelf instantly doth drape
 
With taffety instead of crape.
XXXIX
 
Having abjured the haunts of men,
 
Like him renouncing vanity,
 
His friendship I acquired just then;
 
His character attracted me.
 
An innate love of meditation,
 
Original imagination,
 
And cool sagacious mind he had:
 
I was incensed and he was sad.
 
Both were of passion satiate
 
And both of dull existence tired,
 
Extinct the flame which once had fired;
 
Both were expectant of the hate
 
With which blind Fortune oft betrays
 
The very morning of our days.
XL
 
He who hath lived and living, thinks,
 
Must e’en despise his kind at last;
 
He who hath suffered ofttimes shrinks
 
From shades of the relentless past.
 
No fond illusions live to soothe,
 
But memory like a serpent’s tooth
 
With late repentance gnaws and stings.
 
All this in many cases brings
 
A charm with it in conversation.
 
Oneguine’s speeches I abhorred
 
At first, but soon became inured
 
To the sarcastic observation,
 
To witticisms and taunts half-vicious
 
And gloomy epigrams malicious.
XLI
 
How oft, when on a summer night
 
Transparent o’er the Neva beamed
 
The firmament in mellow light,
 
And when the watery mirror gleamed
 
No more with pale Diana’s rays,17
 
We called to mind our youthful days —
 
The days of love and of romance!
 
Then would we muse as in a trance,
 
Impressionable for an hour,
 
And breathe the balmy breath of night;
 
And like the prisoner’s our delight
 
Who for the greenwood quits his tower,
 
As on the rapid wings of thought
 
The early days of life we sought.
 
17 The midsummer nights in the latitude of St. Petersburg are a prolonged twilight.
XLII
 
Absorbed in melancholy mood
 
And o’er the granite coping bent,
 
Oneguine meditative stood,
 
E’en as the poet says he leant.18
 
’Tis silent all! Alone the cries
 
Of the night sentinels arise
 
And from the Millionaya afar19
 
The sudden rattling of a car.
 
Lo! on the sleeping river borne,
 
A boat with splashing oar floats by,
 
And now we hear delightedly
 
A jolly song and distant horn;
 
But sweeter in a midnight dream
 
Torquato Tasso’s strains I deem.
 
18 Refers to Mouravieff’s “Goddess of the Neva.” At St. Petersburg the banks of the Neva are lined throughout with splendid granite quays.
 
19 A street running parallel to the Neva, and leading from the Winter Palace to the Summer Palace and Garden.
XLIII
 
Ye billows of blue Hadria’s sea,
 
O Brenta, once more we shall meet
 
And, inspiration firing me,
 
Your magic voices I shall greet,
 
Whose tones Apollo’s sons inspire,
 
And after Albion’s proud lyre 20
 
Possess my love and sympathy.
 
The nights of golden Italy
 
I’ll pass beneath the firmament,
 
Hid in the gondola’s dark shade,
 
Alone with my Venetian maid,
 
Now talkative, now reticent;
 
From her my lips shall learn the tongue
 
Of love which whilom Petrarch sung.
 
20 The strong influence exercised by Byron’s genius on the imagination of Pushkin is well known. Shakespeare and other English dramatists had also their share in influencing his mind, which, at all events in its earlier developments, was of an essentially imitative type. As an example of his Shakespearian tastes, see his poem of “Angelo,” founded upon “Measure for Measure.”
XLIV
 
When will my hour of freedom come!
 
Time, I invoke thee! favouring gales
 
Awaiting on the shore I roam
 
And beckon to the passing sails.
 
Upon the highway of the sea
 
When shall I wing my passage free
 
On waves by tempests curdled o’er!
 
’Tis time to quit this weary shore
 
So uncongenial to my mind,
 
To dream upon the sunny strand
 
Of Africa, ancestral land,21
 
Of dreary Russia left behind,
 
Wherein I felt love’s fatal dart,
 
Wherein I buried left my heart.
 
21 The poet was, on his mother’s side, of African extraction, a circumstance which perhaps accounts for the southern fervour of his imagination. His great-grandfather, Abraham Petrovitch Hannibal, was seized on the coast of Africa when eight years of age by a corsair, and carried a slave to Constantinople. The Russian Ambassador bought and presented him to Peter the Great who caused him to be baptized at Vilnius. Subsequently one of Hannibal’s brothers made his way to Constantinople and thence to St. Petersburg for the purpose of ransoming him; but Peter would not surrender his godson who died at the age of ninety-two, having attained the rank of general in the Russian service.
XLV
 
Eugene designed with me to start
 
And visit many a foreign clime,
 
But Fortune cast our lots apart
 
For a protracted space of time.
 
Just at that time his father died,
 
And soon Oneguine’s door beside
 
Of creditors a hungry rout
 
Their claims and explanations shout.
 
But Eugene, hating litigation
 
And with his lot in life content,
 
To a surrender gave consent,
 
Seeing in this no deprivation,
 
Or counting on his uncle’s death
 
And what the old man might bequeath.
XLVI
 
And in reality one day
 
The steward sent a note to tell
 
How sick to death his uncle lay
 
And wished to say to him farewell.
 
Having this mournful document
 
Perused, Eugene in postchaise went
 
And hastened to his uncle’s side,
 
But in his heart dissatisfied,
 
Having for money’s sake alone
 
Sorrow to counterfeit and wail —
 
Thus we began our little tale —
 
But, to his uncle’s mansion flown,
 
He found him on the table laid,
 
A due which must to earth be paid.
XLVII
 
The courtyard full of serfs he sees,
 
And from the country all around
 
Had come both friends and enemies —
 
Funeral amateurs abound!
 
The body they consigned to rest,
 
And then made merry pope and guest,
 
With serious air then went away
 
As men who much had done that day.
 
Lo! my Oneguine rural lord!
 
Of mines and meadows, woods and lakes,
 
He now a full possession takes,
 
He who economy abhorred,
 
Delighted much his former ways
 
To vary for a few brief days.
XLVIII
 
For two whole days it seemed a change
 
To wander through the meadows still,
 
The cool dark oaken grove to range,
 
To listen to the rippling rill.
 
But on the third of grove and mead
 
He took no more the slightest heed;
 
They made him feel inclined to doze;
 
And the conviction soon arose,
 
Ennui can in the country dwell
 
Though without palaces and streets,
 
Cards, balls, routs, poetry or fetes;
 
On him spleen mounted sentinel
 
And like his shadow dogged his life,
 
Or better — like a faithful wife.
XLIX
 
I was for calm existence made,
 
For rural solitude and dreams,
 
My lyre sings sweeter in the shade
 
And more imagination teems.
 
On innocent delights I dote,
 
Upon my lake I love to float,
 
For law I far niente take
 
And every morning I awake
 
The child of sloth and liberty.
 
I slumber much, a little read,
 
Of fleeting glory take no heed.
 
In former years thus did not I
 
In idleness and tranquil joy
 
The happiest days of life employ?
L
 
Love, flowers, the country, idleness
 
And fields my joys have ever been;
 
I like the difference to express
 
Between myself and my Eugene,
 
Lest the malicious reader or
 
Some one or other editor
 
Of keen sarcastic intellect
 
Herein my portrait should detect,
 
And impiously should declare,
 
To sketch myself that I have tried
 
Like Byron, bard of scorn and pride,
 
As if impossible it were
 
To write of any other elf
 
Than one’s own fascinating self.
LI
 
Here I remark all poets are
 
Love to idealize inclined;
 
I have dreamed many a vision fair
 
And the recesses of my mind
 
Retained the image, though short-lived,
 
Which afterwards the muse revived.
 
Thus carelessly I once portrayed
 
Mine own ideal, the mountain maid,
 
The captives of the Salguir’s shore.22
 
But now a question in this wise
 
Oft upon friendly lips doth rise:
 
Whom doth thy plaintive Muse adore?
 
To whom amongst the jealous throng
 
Of maids dost thou inscribe thy song?
 
22 Refers to two of the most interesting productions of the poet. The former line indicates the Prisoner of the Caucasus, the latter, The Fountain of Baktchiserai. The Salguir is a river of the Crimea.
LII
 
Whose glance reflecting inspiration
 
With tenderness hath recognized
 
Thy meditative incantation —
 
Whom hath thy strain immortalized?
 
None, be my witness Heaven above!
 
The malady of hopeless love
 
I have endured without respite.
 
Happy who thereto can unite
 
Poetic transport. They impart
 
A double force unto their song
 
Who following Petrarch move along
 
And ease the tortures of the heart —
 
Perchance they laurels also cull —
 
But I, in love, was mute and dull.
LIII
 
The Muse appeared, when love passed by
 
And my dark soul to light was brought;
 
Free, I renewed the idolatry
 
Of harmony enshrining thought.
 
I write, and anguish flies away,
 
Nor doth my absent pen portray
 
Around my stanzas incomplete
 
Young ladies’ faces and their feet.
 
Extinguished ashes do not blaze —
 
I mourn, but tears I cannot shed —
 
Soon, of the tempest which hath fled
 
Time will the ravages efface —
 
When that time comes, a poem I’ll strive
 
To write in cantos twenty-five.
LIV
 
I’ve thought well o’er the general plan,
 
The hero’s name too in advance,
 
Meantime I’ll finish whilst I can
 
Canto the First of this romance.
 
I’ve scanned it with a jealous eye,
 
Discovered much absurdity,
 
But will not modify a tittle —
 
I owe the censorship a little.
 
For journalistic deglutition
 
I yield the fruit of work severe.
 
Go, on the Neva’s bank appear,
 
My very latest composition!
 
Enjoy the meed which Fame bestows —
 
Misunderstanding, words and blows.
 
End of Canto the First