In October 1905, after the twelve-year-long separation, Van and Ada (now married to Andrey Vinelander) meet again in Mont Roux, and Ada tells Van: "Sbrit’ usï! (that mustache must go):"
He stopped on the threshold of the main lounge, but hardly had he begun to scan the distribution of its scattered human contents, than an abrupt flurry occurred in a distant group. Ada, spurning decorum, was hurrying toward him. Her solitary and precipitate advance consumed in reverse all the years of their separation as she changed from a dark-glittering stranger with the high hair-do in fashion to the pale-armed girl in black who had always belonged to him. At that particular twist of time they happened to be the only people conspicuously erect and active in the huge room, and heads turned and eyes peered when the two met in the middle of it as on a stage; but what should have been, in culmination of her headlong motion, of the ecstasy in her eyes and fiery jewels, a great explosion of voluble love, was marked by incongruous silence; he raised to his unbending lips and kissed her cygneous hand, and then they stood still, staring at each other, he playing with coins in his trouser pockets under his ‘humped’ jacket, she fingering her necklace, each reflecting, as it were, the uncertain light to which all that radiance of mutual welcome had catastrophically decreased. She was more Ada than ever, but a dash of new elegancy had been added to her shy, wild charm. Her still blacker hair was drawn back and up into a glossy chignon, and the Lucette line of her exposed neck, slender and straight, came as a heartrending surprise. He was trying to form a succinct sentence (to warn her about the device he planned for securing a rendezvous), but she interrupted his throat clearing with a muttered injunction: Sbrit’ usï! (that mustache must go) and turned away to lead him to the far corner from which she had taken so many years to reach him. (3.8)
In his poem Vsyo na svete delo sluchaya ("Everything in the world is a matter of chance") G. Ivanov says that, if he wins a lot of money in a lottery (of the slot-machine type), he will shave off his mustache (i usï, konechno, sbreyu):
Все на свете дело случая —
Вот нажму на лотерею,
Денег выиграю кучу я
И усы, конечно, сбрею.
Потому что — для чего же
Богачу нужны усы?
Много, милостивый Боже,
В мире покупной красы:
И нилоны, и часы,
И вещички подороже.
Nilony (the nylons) mentioned by G. Ivanov in the penultimate line bring to mind Lucette's ninon stockings:
She was such a pathetic darling that, as they proceeded to leave the grill, he could not help, for sensuality is the best breeding broth of fatal error, caressing her glossy young shoulder so as to fit for an instant, the happiest in her life, its ideal convexity bilboquet-wise within the hollow of his palm. Then she walked before him as conscious of his gaze as if she were winning a prize for ‘poise.’ He could describe her dress only as struthious (if there existed copper-curled ostriches), accentuating as it did the swing of her stance, the length of her legs in ninon stockings. Objectively speaking, her chic was keener than that of her ‘vaginal’ sister. As they crossed landings where velvet ropes were hastily stretched by Russian sailors (who glanced with sympathy at the handsome pair speaking their incomparable tongue) or walked this or that deck, Lucette made him think of some acrobatic creature immune to the rough seas. He saw with gentlemanly displeasure that her tilted chin and black wings, and free stride, attracted not only blue innocent eyes but the bold stare of lewd fellow passengers. He loudly exclaimed that he would slap the next jackanapes, and involuntarily walked backward with ridiculous truculent gestures into a folded deck chair (he also running the reel of time backward, in a minor way), which caused her to emit a yelp of laughter. Feeling now much happier, enjoying his gallant champagne-temper, she steered Van away from the mirage of her admirers, back to the lift. (3.5)
and Ada's lenclose:
Before the two ladies proceeded toward the lift, Ada glanced at Van - and he - no fool in amorous strategy - refrained to comment on her 'forgetting' her tiny black silk handbag on the seat of her chair. He did not accompany them beyond the passage leading liftward and, clutching the token, awaited her planned return behind a pillar of hotel-hall mongrel design, knowing that in a moment she would say to her accursed companion (by now revising, no doubt, her views on the 'beau ténébreux') as the lift's eye turned red under a quick thumb: 'Akh, sumochku zabïla (forgot my bag)!' – and instantly flitting back, like Vere's Ninon, she would be in his arms.
Their open mouths met in tender fury, and then he pounced upon her new, young, divine, Japanese neck which he had been coveting like a veritable Jupiter Olorinus throughout the evening. 'We'll vroom straight to my place as soon as you wake up, don't bother to bathe, jump into your lenclose -' and, with the burning sap brimming, he again devoured her, until (Dorothy must have reached the sky!) she danced three fingers on his wet lips - and escaped. (3.8)
Darkbloom (‘Notes to Ada’): Olorinus: from Lat. olor, swan (Leda’s lover).
lenclose: distorted ‘clothes’ (influenced by ‘Ninon de Lenclos’), the courtesan in Vere de Vere’s novel mentioned above.
Van shaves his mustache off with howls of pain in Ada's presence:
‘My upper-lip space feels indecently naked.’ (He had shaved his mustache off with howls of pain in her presence). ‘And I cannot keep sucking in my belly all the time.’
‘Oh, I like you better with that nice overweight — there’s more of you. It’s the maternal gene, I suppose, because Demon grew leaner and leaner. He looked positively Quixotic when I saw him at Mother’s funeral. It was all very strange. He wore blue mourning. D’Onsky’s son, a person with only one arm, threw his remaining one around Demon and both wept comme des fontaines. Then a robed person who looked like an extra in a technicolor incarnation of Vishnu made an incomprehensible sermon. Then she went up in smoke. He said to me, sobbing: "I will not cheat the poor grubs!" Practically a couple of hours after he broke that promise we had sudden visitors at the ranch — an incredibly graceful moppet of eight, black-veiled, and a kind of duenna, also in black, with two bodyguards. The hag demanded certain fantastic sums — which Demon, she said, had not had time to pay, for "popping the hymen" — whereupon I had one of our strongest boys throw out vsyu (the entire) kompaniyu.’
‘Extraordinary,’ said Van, ‘they had been growing younger and younger — I mean the girls, not the strong silent boys. His old Rosalind had a ten-year-old niece, a primed chickabiddy. Soon he would have been poaching them from the hatching chamber.’
‘You never loved your father,’ said Ada sadly.
‘Oh, I did and do — tenderly, reverently, understandingly, because, after all, that minor poetry of the flesh is something not unfamiliar to me. But as far as we are concerned, I mean you and I, he was buried on the same day as our uncle Dan.’
‘I know, I know. It’s pitiful! And what use was it? Perhaps I oughtn’t to tell you, but his visits to Agavia kept getting rarer and shorter every year. Yes, it was pitiful to hear him and Andrey talking. I mean, Andrey n’a pas le verbe facile, though he greatly appreciated — without quite understanding it — Demon’s wild flow of fancy and fantastic fact, and would often exclaim, with his Russian "tssk-tssk" and a shake of the head — complimentary and all that — "what a balagur (wag) you are!" — And then, one day, Demon warned me that he would not come any more if he heard again poor Andrey’s poor joke (Nu i balagur-zhe vï, Dementiy Labirintovich) or what Dorothy, l’impayable ("priceless for impudence and absurdity") Dorothy, thought of my camping out in the mountains with only Mayo, a cowhand, to protect me from lions.’
‘Could one hear more about that?’ asked Van.
‘Well, nobody did. All this happened at a time when I was not on speaking terms with my husband and sister-in-law, and so could not control the situation. Anyhow, Demon did not come even when he was only two hundred miles away and simply mailed instead, from some gaming house, your lovely, lovely letter about Lucette and my picture.’
‘One would also like to know some details of the actual coverture — frequence of intercourse, pet names for secret warts, favorite smells —’
‘Platok momental’no (handkerchief quick)! Your right nostril is full of damp jade,’ said Ada, and then pointed to a lawnside circular sign, rimmed with red, saying: Chiens interdits and depicting an impossible black mongrel with a white ribbon around its neck: Why, she wondered, should the Swiss magistrates forbid one to cross highland terriers with poodles? (3.8)
Darkbloom (‘Notes to Ada’): comme etc.: shedding floods of tears.
N’a pas le verbe etc.: lacks the gift of the gab.
chiens etc.: dogs not allowed.
A person with only one arm, d’Onsky’s son makes one think of the One-Armed Bandit (the nickname given to the old-style slot machine with a lever on the side). The author of an offensive article on Sirin (VN's Russian nom de plume), G. Ivanov (1894-1958) was one of the editors of Chisla (Numbers), a Russian-language émigré magazine that came out in Paris. Describing the death of his, Ada's and Lucette's mother Marina, Van mentions numbers and rows and series — the nightmare and malediction harrowing pure thought and pure time:
Numbers and rows and series — the nightmare and malediction harrowing pure thought and pure time — seemed bent on mechanizing his mind. Three elements, fire, water, and air, destroyed, in that sequence, Marina, Lucette, and Demon. Terra waited.
For seven years, after she had dismissed her life with her husband, a successfully achieved corpse, as irrelevant, and retired to her still dazzling, still magically well-staffed Côte d’Azur villa (the one Demon had once given her), Van’s mother had been suffering from various ‘obscure’ illnesses, which everybody thought she made up, or talentedly simulated, and which she contended could be, and partly were, cured by willpower. Van visited her less often than dutiful Lucette, whom he glimpsed there on two or three occasions; and once, in 1899, he saw, as he entered the arbutus-and-laurel garden of Villa Armina, a bearded old priest of the Greek persuasion, clad in neutral black, leaving on a motor bicycle for his Nice parish near the tennis courts. Marina spoke to Van about religion, and Terra, and the Theater, but never about Ada, and just as he did not suspect she knew everything about the horror and ardor of Ardis, none suspected what pain in her bleeding bowels she was trying to allay by incantations, and ‘self-focusing’ or its opposite device, ‘self-dissolving.’ She confessed with an enigmatic and rather smug smile that much as she liked the rhythmic blue puffs of incense, and the dyakon’s rich growl on the ambon, and the oily-brown ikon coped in protective filigree to receive the worshipper’s kiss, her soul remained irrevocably consecrated, naperekor (in spite of) Dasha Vinelander, to the ultimate wisdom of Hinduism.
Early in 1900, a few days before he saw Marina, for the last time, at the clinic in Nice (where he learned for the first time the name of her illness), Van had a ‘verbal’ nightmare, caused, maybe, by the musky smell in the Miramas (Bouches Rouges-du-Rhône) Villa Venus. Two formless fat transparent creatures were engaged in some discussion, one repeating ‘I can’t!’ (meaning ‘can’t die’ — a difficult procedure to carry out voluntarily, without the help of the dagger, the ball, or the bowl), and the other affirming ‘You can, sir!’ She died a fortnight later, and her body was burnt, according to her instructions. (3.1)
Darkbloom ('Notes to Ada'): dyakon: deacon.
Numbers and rows and series make one think of a lottery ticket — more specifically, of Chekhov's story Vyigryshnyi bilet ("The Lottery Ticket," 1887). It begins as follows:
Иван Дмитрич, человек средний, проживающий с семьей тысячу двести рублей в год и очень довольный своей судьбой, как-то после ужина сел на диван и стал читать газету.
— Забыла я сегодня в газету поглядеть, — сказала его жена, убирая со стола. — Посмотри, нет ли там таблицы тиражей?
— Да, есть, — ответил Иван Дмитрич. — А разве твой билет не пропал в залоге?
— Нет, я во вторник носила проценты.
— Какой номер?
— Серия 9 499, билет 26.
— Так-с… Посмотрим-с… 9 499 и 26.
Иван Дмитрич не верил в лотерейное счастие и в другое время ни за что не стал бы глядеть в таблицу тиражей, но теперь от нечего делать и — благо, газета была перед глазами — он провел пальцем сверху вниз по номерам серий. И тотчас же, точно в насмешку над его неверием, не дальше как во второй строке сверху резко бросилась в глаза цифра 9 499! Не поглядев, какой номер билета, не проверяя себя, он быстро опустил газету на колени и, как будто кто плеснул ему на живот холодной водой, почувствовал под ложечкой приятный холодок: и щекотно, и страшно, и сладко!
— Маша, 9 499 есть! — сказал он глухо.
Жена поглядела на его удивленное, испуганное лицо и поняла, что он не шутит.
— 9 499? — спросила она, бледнея и опуская на стол сложенную скатерть.
— Да, да… Серьезно есть!
— А номер билета?
— Ах, да! Еще номер билета. Впрочем, постой… погоди. Нет, каково? Все-таки номер нашей серии есть! Все-таки, понимаешь…
Ivan Dmitrich, a middle-class man who lived with his family on an income of twelve hundred a year and was very well satisfied with his lot, sat down on the sofa after supper and began reading the newspaper.
"I forgot to look at the newspaper today," his wife said to him as she cleared the table. "Look and see whether the list of drawings is there."
"Yes, it is," said Ivan Dmitrich; "but hasn't your ticket lapsed?"
"No; I took the interest on Tuesday."
"What is the number?"
"Series 9,499, number 26."
"All right . . . we will look . . . 9,499 and 26."
Ivan Dmitritch had no faith in lottery luck, and would not, as a rule, have consented to look at the lists of winning numbers, but now, as he had nothing else to do and as the newspaper was before his eyes, he passed his finger downwards along the column of numbers. And immediately, as though in mockery of his scepticism, no further than the second line from the top, his eye was caught by the figure 9,499! Unable to believe his eyes, he hurriedly dropped the paper on his knees without looking to see the number of the ticket, and, just as though some one had given him a douche of cold water, he felt an agreeable chill in the pit of the stomach; tingling and terrible and sweet!
"Masha, 9,499 is there!" he said in a hollow voice.
His wife looked at his astonished and panicstricken face, and realized that he was not joking.
"9,499?" she asked, turning pale and dropping the folded tablecloth on the table.
"Yes, yes . . . it really is there!"
"And the number of the ticket?"
"Oh yes! There's the number of the ticket too. But stay . . . wait! No, I say! Anyway, the number of our series is there! Anyway, you understand...."
In his memoir essay A. P. Chekhov v khudozhestvennom teatre (A. P. Chekhov at the Art Theater) K. S. Stanislavski says that the characters in Chekhov's play Vishnyovyi sad ("The Cherry Orchard," 1904) initially included an one-armed billiard player (who eventually became Gayev, Mme Ranevski's brother):
Мне посчастливилось наблюдать со стороны за процессом создания Чеховым его пьесы «Вишневый сад». Как-то при разговоре с Антоном Павловичем о рыбной ловле наш артист А. Р. Артем изображал, как насаживают червя на крючок, как закидывают удочку донную или с поплавком. Эти и им подобные сцены передавались неподражаемым артистом с большим талантом, и Чехов искренне жалел о том, что их не увидит большая публика в театре. Вскоре после этого Чехов присутствовал при купании в реке другого нашего артиста и тут же решил:
– Послушайте, надо же, чтобы Артем удил рыбу в моей пьесе, а N купался рядом в купальне, барахтался бы там и кричал, а Артем злился бы на него за то, что он ему пугает рыбу.
Антон Павлович мысленно видел их на сцене – одного удящим около купальни, другого – купающимся в ней, то есть за сценой. Через несколько дней Антон Павлович объявил нам торжественно, что купающемуся ампутировали руку, но, несмотря на это, он страстно любит играть на бильярде своей единственной рукой. Рыболов же оказался стариком лакеем, скопившим деньжонки.
Через некоторое время в воображении Чехова стало рисоваться окно старого помещичьего дома, через которое лезли в комнату ветки деревьев. Потом они зацвели снежно-белым цветом. Затем в воображаемом Чеховым доме поселилась какая-то барыня.
– Но только у вас нет такой актрисы. Послушайте! Надо же особую старуху, – соображал Чехов. – Она же все бегает к старому лакею и занимает у него деньги…
Около старухи очутился не то ее брат, не то дядя – безрукий барин, страстный любитель игры на бильярде. Это большое дитя, которое не может жить без лакея. Как-то раз последний уехал, не приготовив барину брюк, и потому он пролежал весь день в постели…
Мы знаем теперь, что уцелело в пьесе и что отпало без всякого следа или оставило незначительный след.