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    The Death of Ivan Ilych

    Page 6
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    logs for tomorrow."

      "Then hold my legs up a bit higher, can you?"

      "Of course I can. Why not?" and Gerasim raised his master's

      legs higher and Ivan Ilych thought that in that position he did not

      feel any pain at all.

      "And how about the logs?"

      "Don't trouble about that, sir. There's plenty of time."

      Ivan Ilych told Gerasim to sit down and hold his legs, and

      began to talk to him. And strange to say it seemed to him that he

      felt better while Gerasim held his legs up.

      After that Ivan Ilych would sometimes call Gerasim and get him

      to hold his legs on his shoulders, and he liked talking to him.

      Gerasim did it all easily, willingly, simply, and with a good

      nature that touched Ivan Ilych. Health, strength, and vitality in

      other people were offensive to him, but Gerasim's strength and

      vitality did not mortify but soothed him.

      What tormented Ivan Ilych most was the deception, the lie,

      which for some reason they all accepted, that he was not dying but

      was simply ill, and the only need keep quiet and undergo a

      treatment and then something very good would result. He however

      knew that do what they would nothing would come of it, only still

      more agonizing suffering and death. This deception tortured him --

      their not wishing to admit what they all knew and what he knew, but

      wanting to lie to him concerning his terrible condition, and

      wishing and forcing him to participate in that lie. Those lies --

      lies enacted over him on the eve of his death and destined to

      degrade this awful, solemn act to the level of their visitings,

      their curtains, their sturgeon for dinner -- were a terrible agony

      for Ivan Ilych. And strangely enough, many times when they were

      going through their antics over him he had been within a

      hairbreadth of calling out to them: "Stop lying! You know and I

      know that I am dying. Then at least stop lying about it!" But he

      had never had the spirit to do it. The awful, terrible act of his

      dying was, he could see, reduced by those about him to the level of

      a casual, unpleasant, and almost indecorous incident (as if someone

      entered a drawing room defusing an unpleasant odour) and this was

      done by that very decorum which he had served all his life long.

      He saw that no one felt for him, because no one even wished to

      grasp his position. Only Gerasim recognized it and pitied him.

      And so Ivan Ilych felt at ease only with him. He felt comforted

      when Gerasim supported his legs (sometimes all night long) and

      refused to go to bed, saying: "Don't you worry, Ivan Ilych. I'll

      get sleep enough later on," or when he suddenly became familiar and

      exclaimed: "If you weren't sick it would be another matter, but as

      it is, why should I grudge a little trouble?" Gerasim alone did

      not lie; everything showed that he alone understood the facts of

      the case and did not consider it necessary to disguise them, but

      simply felt sorry for his emaciated and enfeebled master. Once

      when Ivan Ilych was sending him away he even said straight out:

      "We shall all of us die, so why should I grudge a little trouble?"

      -- expressing the fact that he did not think his work burdensome,

      because he was doing it for a dying man and hoped someone would do

      the same for him when his time came.

      Apart from this lying, or because of it, what most tormented

      Ivan Ilych was that no one pitied him as he wished to be pitied.

      At certain moments after prolonged suffering he wished most of all

      (though he would have been ashamed to confess it) for someone to

      pity him as a sick child is pitied. He longed to be petted and

      comforted. he knew he was an important functionary, that he had a

      beard turning grey, and that therefore what he long for was

      impossible, but still he longed for it. and in Gerasim's attitude

      towards him there was something akin to what he wished for, and so

      that attitude comforted him. Ivan Ilych wanted to weep, wanted to

      be petted and cried over, and then his colleague Shebek would come,

      and instead of weeping and being petted, Ivan Ilych would assume a

      serious, severe, and profound air, and by force of habit would

      express his opinion on a decision of the Court of Cassation and

      would stubbornly insist on that view. This falsity around him and

      within him did more than anything else to poison his last days.

      VIII

      It was morning. He knew it was morning because Gerasim had

      gone, and Peter the footman had come and put out the candles, drawn

      back one of the curtains, and begun quietly to tidy up. Whether it

      was morning or evening, Friday or Sunday, made no difference, it

      was all just the same: the gnawing, unmitigated, agonizing pain,

      never ceasing for an instant, the consciousness of life inexorably

      waning but not yet extinguished, the approach of that ever dreaded

      and hateful Death which was the only reality, and always the same

      falsity. What were days, weeks, hours, in such a case?

      "Will you have some tea, sir?"

      "He wants things to be regular, and wishes the gentlefolk to

      drink tea in the morning," thought ivan Ilych, and only said "No."

      "Wouldn't you like to move onto the sofa, sir?"

      "He wants to tidy up the room, and I'm in the way. I am

      uncleanliness and disorder," he thought, and said only:

      "No, leave me alone."

      The man went on bustling about. Ivan Ilych stretched out his

      hand. Peter came up, ready to help.

      "What is it, sir?"

      "My watch."

      Peter took the watch which was close at hand and gave it to

      his master.

      "Half-past eight. Are they up?"

      "No sir, except Vladimir Ivanovich" (the son) "who has gone to

      school. Praskovya Fedorovna ordered me to wake her if you asked

      for her. Shall I do so?"

      "No, there's no need to." "Perhaps I's better have some tea,"

      he thought, and added aloud: "Yes, bring me some tea."

      Peter went to the door, but Ivan Ilych dreaded being left

      alone. "How can I keep him here? Oh yes, my medicine." "Peter,

      give me my medicine." "Why not? Perhaps it may still do some

      good." He took a spoonful and swallowed it. "No, it won't help.

      It's all tomfoolery, all deception," he decided as soon as he

      became aware of the familiar, sickly, hopeless taste. "No, I can't

      believe in it any longer. But the pain, why this pain? If it

      would only cease just for a moment!" And he moaned. Peter turned

      towards him. "It's all right. Go and fetch me some tea."

      Peter went out. Left alone Ivan Ilych groaned not so much

      with pain, terrible thought that was, as from mental anguish.

      Always and for ever the same, always these endless days and nights.

      If only it would come quicker! If only *what* would come quicker?

      Death, darkness?...No, no! anything rather than death!

      when Peter returned with the tea on a tray, Ivan Ilych stared

      at him for a time in perplexity, not realizing who
    and what he was.

      Peter was disconcerted by that look and his embarrassment brought

      Ivan Ilych to himself.

      "Oh, tea! All right, put it down. Only help me to wash and

      put on a clean shirt."

      And Ivan Ilych began to wash. With pauses for rest, he washed

      his hands and then his face, cleaned his teeth, brushed his hair,

      looked in the glass. He was terrified by what he saw, especially

      by the limp way in which his hair clung to his pallid forehead.

      While his shirt was being changed he knew that he would be

      still more frightened at the sight of his body, so he avoided

      looking at it. Finally he was ready. He drew on a dressing-gown,

      wrapped himself in a plaid, and sat down in the armchair to take

      his tea. For a moment he felt refreshed, but as soon as he began

      to drink the tea he was again aware of the same taste, and the pain

      also returned. He finished it with an effort, and then lay down

      stretching out his legs, and dismissed Peter.

      Always the same. Now a spark of hope flashes up, then a sea

      of despair rages, and always pain; always pain, always despair, and

      always the same. When alone he had a dreadful and distressing

      desire to call someone, but he knew beforehand that with others

      present it would be still worse. "Another dose of morphine--to

      lose consciousness. I will tell him, the doctor, that he must

      think of something else. It's impossible, impossible, to go on

      like this."

      An hour and another pass like that. But now there is a ring

      at the door bell. Perhaps it's the doctor? It is. He comes in

      fresh, hearty, plump, and cheerful, with that look on his face that

      seems to say: "There now, you're in a panic about something, but

      we'll arrange it all for you directly!" The doctor knows this

      expression is out of place here, but he has put it on once for all

      and can't take it off -- like a man who has put on a frock-coat in

      the morning to pay a round of calls.

      The doctor rubs his hands vigorously and reassuringly.

      "Brr! How cold it is! There's such a sharp frost; just let

      me warm myself!" he says, as if it were only a matter of waiting

      till he was warm, and then he would put everything right.

      "Well now, how are you?"

      Ivan Ilych feels that the doctor would like to say: "Well,

      how are our affairs?" but that even he feels that this would not

      do, and says instead: "What sort of a night have you had?"

      Ivan Ilych looks at him as much as to say: "Are you really

      never ashamed of lying?" But the doctor does not wish to

      understand this question, and Ivan Ilych says: "Just as terrible

      as ever. The pain never leaves me and never subsides. If only

      something ... "

      "Yes, you sick people are always like that.... There, now I

      think I am warm enough. Even Praskovya Fedorovna, who is so

      particular, could find no fault with my temperature. Well, now I

      can say good-morning," and the doctor presses his patient's hand.

      Then dropping his former playfulness, he begins with a most

      serious face to examine the patient, feeling his pulse and taking

      his temperature, and then begins the sounding and auscultation.

      Ivan Ilych knows quite well and definitely that all this is

      nonsense and pure deception, but when the doctor, getting down on

      his knee, leans over him, putting his ear first higher then lower,

      and performs various gymnastic movements over him with a

      significant expression on his face, Ivan Ilych submits to it all as

      he used to submit to the speeches of the lawyers, though he knew

      very well that they were all lying and why they were lying.

      The doctor, kneeling on the sofa, is still sounding him when

      Praskovya Fedorovna's silk dress rustles at the door and she is

      heard scolding Peter for not having let her know of the doctor's

      arrival.

      She comes in, kisses her husband, and at once proceeds to

      prove that she has been up a long time already, and only owing to

      a misunderstanding failed to be there when the doctor arrived.

      Ivan Ilych looks at her, scans her all over, sets against her

      the whiteness and plumpness and cleanness of her hands and neck,

      the gloss of her hair, and the sparkle of her vivacious eyes. He

      hates her with his whole soul. And the thrill of hatred he feels

      for her makes him suffer from her touch.

      Her attitude towards him and his diseases is still the same.

      Just as the doctor had adopted a certain relation to his patient

      which he could not abandon, so had she formed one towards him --

      that he was not doing something he ought to do and was himself to

      blame, and that she reproached him lovingly for this -- and she

      could not now change that attitude.

      "You see he doesn't listen to me and doesn't take his medicine

      at the proper time. And above all he lies in a position that is no

      doubt bad for him -- with his legs up."

      She described how he made Gerasim hold his legs up.

      The doctor smiled with a contemptuous affability that said:

      "What's to be done? These sick people do have foolish fancies of

      that kind, but we must forgive them."

      When the examination was over the doctor looked at his watch,

      and then Praskovya Fedorovna announced to Ivan Ilych that it was of

      course as he pleased, but she had sent today for a celebrated

      specialist who would examine him and have a consultation with

      Michael Danilovich (their regular doctor).

      "Please don't raise any objections. I am doing this for my own

      sake," she said ironically, letting it be felt that she was doing

      it all for his sake and only said this to leave him no right to

      refuse. He remained silent, knitting his brows. He felt that he

      was surrounded and involved in a mesh of falsity that it was hard

      to unravel anything.

      Everything she did for him was entirely for her own sake, and

      she told him she was doing for herself what she actually was doing

      for herself, as if that was so incredible that he must understand

      the opposite.

      At half-past eleven the celebrated specialist arrived. Again

      the sounding began and the significant conversations in his

      presence and in another room, about the kidneys and the appendix,

      and the questions and answers, with such an air of importance that

      again, instead of the real question of life and death which now

      alone confronted him, the question arose of the kidney and appendix

      which were not behaving as they ought to and would now be attached

      by Michael Danilovich and the specialist and forced to amend their

      ways.

      The celebrated specialist took leave of him with a serious

      though not hopeless look, and in reply to the timid question Ivan

      Ilych, with eyes glistening with fear and hope, put to him as to

      whether there was a chance of recovery, said that he could not

      vouch for it but there was a possibility. The look of hope with

      which Ivan Ilych watched the doctor out was so pathetic that

     
    Praskovya Fedorovna, seeing it, even wept as she left the room to

      hand the doctor his fee.

      The gleam of hope kindled by the doctor's encouragement did

      not last long. The same room, the same pictures, curtains, wall-

      paper, medicine bottles, were all there, and the same aching

      suffering body, and Ivan Ilych began to moan. They gave him a

      subcutaneous injection and he sank into oblivion.

      It was twilight when he came to. They brought him his dinner

      and he swallowed some beef tea with difficulty, and then everything

      was the same again and night was coming on.

      After dinner, at seven o'clock, Praskovya Fedorovna came into

      the room in evening dress, her full bosom pushed up by her corset,

      and with traces of powder on her face. She had reminded him in the

      morning that they were going to the theatre. Sarah Bernhardt was

      visiting the town and they had a box, which he had insisted on

      their taking. Now he had forgotten about it and her toilet

      offended him, but he concealed his vexation when he remembered that

      he had himself insisted on their securing a box and going because

      it would be an instructive and aesthetic pleasure for the children.

      Praskovya Fedorovna came in, self-satisfied but yet with a

      rather guilty air. She sat down and asked how he was, but, as he

      saw, only for the sake of asking and not in order to learn about

      it, knowing that there was nothing to learn -- and then went on to

      what she really wanted to say: that she would not on any account

      have gone but that the box had been taken and Helen and their

      daughter were going, as well as Petrishchev (the examining

      magistrate, their daughter's fiance) and that it was out of the

      question to let them go alone; but that she would have much

      preferred to sit with him for a while; and he must be sure to

      follow the doctor's orders while she was away.

      "Oh, and Fedor Petrovich" (the fiance) "would like to come in.

      May he? And Lisa?"

      "All right."

      Their daughter came in in full evening dress, her fresh young

      flesh exposed (making a show of that very flesh which in his own

      case caused so much suffering), strong, healthy, evidently in love,

      and impatient with illness, suffering, and death, because they

      interfered with her happiness.

      Fedor petrovich came in too, in evening dress, his hair curled

      *a la Capoul*, a tight stiff collar round his long sinewy neck, an

      enormous white shirt-front and narrow black trousers tightly

      stretched over his strong thighs. He had one white glove tightly

      drawn on, and was holding his opera hat in his hand.

      Following him the schoolboy crept in unnoticed, in a new

      uniform, poor little fellow, and wearing gloves. Terribly dark

      shadows showed under his eyes, the meaning of which Ivan Ilych knew

      well.

      His son had always seemed pathetic to him, and now it was

      dreadful to see the boy's frightened look of pity. It seemed to

      Ivan Ilych that Vasya was the only one besides Gerasim who

      understood and pitied him.

      They all sat down and again asked how he was. A silence

      followed. Lisa asked her mother about the opera glasses, and there

      was an altercation between mother and daughter as to who had taken

      them and where they had been put. This occasioned some

      unpleasantness.

      Fedor Petrovich inquired of Ivan Ilych whether he had ever

      seen Sarah Bernhardt. Ivan Ilych did not at first catch the

      question, but then replied: "No, have you seen her before?"

      "Yes, in *Adrienne Lecouvreur*."

      Praskovya Fedorovna mentioned some roles in which Sarah

      Bernhardt was particularly good. Her daughter disagreed.

      Conversation sprang up as to the elegance and realism of her acting

      -- the sort of conversation that is always repeated and is always

      the same.

      In the midst of the conversation Fedor Petrovich glanced at

      Ivan Ilych and became silent. The others also looked at him and

      grew silent. Ivan Ilych was staring with glittering eyes straight

      before him, evidently indignant with them. This had to be

      rectified, but it was impossible to do so. The silence had to be

      broken, but for a time no one dared to break it and they all became

      afraid that the conventional deception would suddenly become

     


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