The town of X---- to which our friends set off was in the jurisdiction

of a governor who was a young man, and at once a progressive and a

despot, as often happens with Russians. Before the end of the first

year of his government, he had managed to quarrel not only with the

marshal of nobility, a retired officer of the guards, who kept open

house and a stud of horses, but even with his own subordinates. The

feuds arising from this cause assumed at last such proportions that the

ministry in Petersburg had found it necessary to send down a trusted

personage with a commission to investigate it all on the spot. The

choice of the authorities fell upon Matvy Ilyitch Kolyazin, the son of

the Kolyazin, under whose protection the brothers Kirsanov had once

found themselves. He, too, was a 'young man'; that is to say, he had

not long passed forty, but he was already on the high road to becoming

a statesman, and wore a star on each side of his breast--one, to be

sure, a foreign star, not of the first magnitude. Like the governor,

whom he had come down to pass judgment upon, he was reckoned a

progressive; and though he was already a bigwig, he was not like the

majority of bigwigs. He had the highest opinion of himself; his vanity

knew no bounds, but he behaved simply, looked affable, listened

condescendingly, and laughed so good-naturedly, that on a first

acquaintance he might even be taken for 'a jolly good fellow.' On

important occasions, however, he knew, as the saying is, how to make

his authority felt. 'Energy is essential,' he used to say then,

'_l'énergie est la première qualité d'un homme d'état_;' and for all

that, he was usually taken in, and any moderately experienced official

could turn him round his finger. Matvy Ilyitch used to speak with great

respect of Guizot, and tried to impress every one with the idea that he

did not belong to the class of _routiniers_ and high-and-dry

bureaucrats, that not a single phenomenon of social life passed

unnoticed by him.... All such phrases were very familiar to him. He

even followed, with dignified indifference, it is true, the development

of contemporary literature; so a grown-up man who meets a procession of

small boys in the street will sometimes walk after it. In reality,

Matvy Ilyitch had not got much beyond those political men of the days

of Alexander, who used to prepare for an evening party at Madame

Svyetchin's by reading a page of Condillac; only his methods were

different, more modern. He was an adroit courtier, a great hypocrite,

and nothing more; he had no special aptitude for affairs, and no

intellect, but he knew how to manage his own business successfully; no

one could get the better of him there, and, to be sure, that's the

principal thing.



Matvy Ilyitch received Arkady with the good-nature, we might even call

it playfulness, characteristic of the enlightened higher official. He

was astonished, however, when he heard that the cousins he had invited

had remained at home in the country. 'Your father was always a queer

fellow,' he remarked, playing with the tassels of his magnificent

velvet dressing-gown, and suddenly turning to a young official in a

discreetly buttoned-up uniform, he cried, with an air of concentrated

attention, 'What?' The young man, whose lips were glued together from

prolonged silence, got up and looked in perplexity at his chief. But,

having nonplussed his subordinate, Matvy Ilyitch paid him no further

attention. Our higher officials are fond as a rule of nonplussing their

subordinates; the methods to which they have recourse to attain that

end are rather various. The following means, among others, is in great

vogue, '_is quite a favourite_,' as the English say; a high official

suddenly ceases to understand the simplest words, assuming total

deafness. He will ask, for instance, What's to-day?'



He is respectfully informed, 'To-day's Friday, your Ex-s-s-s-lency.'



'Eh? What? What's that? What do you say?' the great man repeats with

intense attention.



'To-day's Friday, your Ex--s--s--lency.'



'Eh? What? What's Friday? What Friday?'



'Friday, your Ex--s--s--s--lency, the day of the week.'



'What, do you pretend to teach me, eh?'



Matvy Ilyitch was a higher official all the same, though he was

reckoned a liberal.



'I advise you, my dear boy, to go and call on the Governor,' he said to

Arkady; 'you understand, I don't advise you to do so because I adhere

to old-fashioned ideas of the necessity of paying respect to

authorities, but simply because the Governor's a very decent fellow;

besides, you probably want to make acquaintance with the society

here.... You're not a bear, I hope? And he's giving a great ball the

day after to-morrow.'



'Will you be at the ball?' inquired Arkady.



'He gives it in my honour,' answered Matvy Ilyitch, almost pityingly.

'Do you dance?'



'Yes; I dance, but not well.'



'That's a pity! There are pretty girls here, and it's a disgrace for a

young man not to dance. Again, I don't say that through any

old-fashioned ideas; I don't in the least imagine that a man's wit lies

in his feet, but Byronism is ridiculous, _il a fait son temps_.'



'But, uncle, it's not through Byronism, I ...'



'I will introduce you to the ladies here; I will take you under my

wing,' interrupted Matvy Ilyitch, and he laughed complacently. 'You'll

find it warm, eh?'



A servant entered and announced the arrival of the superintendent of

the Crown domains, a mild-eyed old man, with deep creases round his

mouth, who was excessively fond of nature, especially on a summer day,

when, in his words, 'every little busy bee takes a little bribe from

every little flower.' Arkady withdrew.



He found Bazarov at the tavern where they were staying, and was a long

while persuading him to go with him to the Governor's. 'Well, there's

no help for it,' said Bazarov at last. 'It's no good doing things by

halves. We came to look at the gentry; let's look at them!'



The Governor received the young men affably, but he did not ask them to

sit down, nor did he sit down himself. He was in an everlasting fuss

and hurry; in the morning he used to put on a tight uniform and an

excessively stiff cravat; he never ate or drank enough; he was for ever

making arrangements. He invited Kirsanov and Bazarov to his ball, and

within a few minutes invited them a second time, regarding them as

brothers, and calling them Kisarov.



They were on their way home from the Governor's, when suddenly a short

man, in a Slavophil national dress, leaped out of a trap that was

passing them, and crying, 'Yevgeny Vassilyitch!' dashed up to Bazarov.



'Ah! it's you, Herr Sitnikov,' observed Bazarov, still stepping along

on the pavement; 'by what chance did you come here?'



'Fancy, absolutely by chance,' he replied, and returning to the trap,

he waved his hand several times, and shouted, 'Follow, follow us! My

father had business here,' he went on, hopping across the gutter, 'and

so he asked me.... I heard to-day of your arrival, and have already

been to see you....' (The friends did, in fact, on returning to their

room, find there a card, with the corners turned down, bearing the name

of Sitnikov, on one side in French, on the other in Slavonic

characters.) 'I hope you are not coming from the Governor's?'



'It's no use to hope; we come straight from him.'



'Ah! in that case I will call on him too.... Yevgeny Vassilyitch,

introduce me to your ... to the ...'



'Sitnikov, Kirsanov,' mumbled Bazarov, not stopping.



'I am greatly flattered,' began Sitnikov, walking sidewise, smirking,

and hurriedly pulling off his really over-elegant gloves. 'I have heard

so much.... I am an old acquaintance of Yevgeny Vassilyitch, and, I may

say--his disciple. I am indebted to him for my regeneration....'



Arkady looked at Bazarov's disciple. There was an expression of

excitement and dulness imprinted on the small but pleasant features of

his well-groomed face; his small eyes, that seemed squeezed in, had a

fixed and uneasy look, and his laugh, too, was uneasy--a sort of short,

wooden laugh.



'Would you believe it,' he pursued, 'when Yevgeny Vassilyitch for the

first time said before me that it was not right to accept any

authorities, I felt such enthusiasm ... as though my eyes were opened!

Here, I thought, at last I have found a man! By the way, Yevgeny

Vassilyitch, you positively must come to know a lady here, who is

really capable of understanding you, and for whom your visit would be a

real festival; you have heard of her, I suppose?'



'Who is it?' Bazarov brought out unwillingly.



'Kukshina, _Eudoxie_, Evdoksya Kukshin. She's a remarkable nature,

_émancipée_ in the true sense of the word, an advanced woman. Do you

know what? We'll all go together to see her now. She lives only two

steps from here. We will have lunch there. I suppose you have not

lunched yet?'



'No; not yet.'



'Well, that's capital. She has separated, you understand, from her

husband; she is not dependent on any one.'



'Is she pretty?' Bazarov cut in.



'N-no, one couldn't say that.'



'Then, what the devil are you asking us to see her for?'



'Fie; you must have your joke.... She will give us a bottle of

champagne.'



'Oh, that's it. One can see the practical man at once. By the way, is

your father still in the gin business?'



'Yes,' said Sitnikov, hurriedly, and he gave a shrill spasmodic laugh.

'Well? Will you come?'



'I don't really know.'



'You wanted to see people, go along,' said Arkady in an undertone.



'And what do you say to it, Mr. Kirsanov?' Sitnikov put in. 'You must

come too; we can't go without you.'



'But how can we burst in upon her all at once?'



'That's no matter. Kukshina's a brick!'



'There will be a bottle of champagne?' asked Bazarov.



'Three!' cried Sitnikov; 'that I answer for.'



'What with?'



'My own head.'



'Your father's purse would be better. However, we are coming.'