BEAUTY AND
THE BEAST
BY
BAYARD TAYLOR.
CHAPTER EIGHT
The health of the Princess Martha, always delicate, now began
to fail rapidly. She was less and less able to endure her
husband's savage humors, and lived almost exclusively in her own
apartments. She never mentioned the name of Boris in his
presence, for it was sure to throw him into a paroxysm of fury.
Floating rumors in regard to the young Prince had reached him
from the capital, and nothing would convince him that his wife
was not cognizant of her son's doings. The poor Princess clung to
her boy as to all that was left her of life, and tried to prop
her failing strength with the hope of his speedy return. She was
now too helpless to thwart his wishes in any way; but she
dreaded, more than death, the terrible SOMETHING which would
surely take place between father and son if her conjectures
should prove to be true.
One day, in the early part of November, she received a letter
from Boris, announcing his marriage. She had barely strength and
presence of mind enough to conceal the paper in her bosom before
sinking in a swoon. By some means or other the young Prince had
succeeded in overcoming all the obstacles to such a step:
probably the favor of the Empress was courted, in order to obtain
her consent. The money he had received, he wrote, would be
sufficient to maintain them for a few months, though not in a
style befitting their rank. He was proud and happy; the Princess
Helena would be the reigning beauty of the court, when he should
present her, but he desired the sanction of his parents to the
marriage, before taking his place in society. He would write
immediately to his father, and hoped, that, if the news brought a
storm, Mishka might be on hand to divert its force, as on a
former occasion.
Under the weight of this imminent secret, the Princess Martha
could neither eat nor sleep. Her body wasted to a shadow; at
every noise in the castle, she started and listened in terror,
fearing that the news had arrived.
Prince Boris, no doubt, found his courage fail him when he set
about writing the promised letter; for a fortnight elapsed before
it made its appearance. Prince Alexis received it on his return
from the chase. He read it hastily through, uttered a prolonged
roar like that of a wounded bull, and rushed into the castle. The
sound of breaking furniture, of crashing porcelain and shivered
glass, came from the state apartments: the domestics fell on
their knees and prayed; the Princess, who heard the noise and
knew what it portended, became almost insensible from fright.
One of the upper servants entered a chamber as the Prince was in
the act of demolishing a splendid malachite table, which had
escaped all his previous attacks. He was immediately greeted with
a cry of,--
"Send the Princess to me!"
"Her Highness is not able to leave her chamber," the
man replied.
How it happened he could never afterwards describe but he found
himself lying in a corner of the room. When he arose, there
seemed to be a singular cavity in his mouth: his upper front
teeth were wanting.
We will not narrate what took place in the chamber of the
Princess.
The nerves of the unfortunate woman had been so wrought upon by
her fears, that her husband's brutal rage, familiar to her from
long experience, now possessed a new and alarming significance.
His threats were terrible to hear; she fell into convulsions, and
before morning her tormented life was at an end.
There was now something else to think of, and the smashing of
porcelain and cracking of whips came to an end. The Archimandrite
was summoned, and preparations, both religious and secular, were
made for a funeral worthy the rank of the deceased. Thousands
flocked to Kinesma; and when the immense procession moved away
from the castle, although very few of the persons had ever known
or cared in the least, for the Princess Martha, all, without
exception, shed profuse tears. Yes, there was one exception,--one
bare, dry rock, rising alone out of the universal deluge,--Prince
Alexis himself, who walked behind the coffin, his eyes fixed and
his features rigid as stone. They remarked that his face was
haggard, and that the fiery tinge on his cheeks and nose had
faded into livid purple. The only sign of emotion which he gave
was a convulsive shudder, which from time to time passed over his
whole body.
Three archimandrites (abbots)and one hundred priests headed the
solemn funeral procession from the castle to the church on the
opposite hill. There the mass for the dead was chanted, the
responses being sung by a choir of silvery boyish voices. All the
appointments were of the costliest character. Not only all those
within the church, but the thousands outside, spared not their
tears, but wept until the fountains were exhausted. Notice was
given, at the close of the services, that "baked meats"
would be furnished to the multitude, and that all beggars who
came to Kinesma would be charitably fed for the space of six
weeks. Thus, by her death, the amiable Princess Martha was
enabled to dispense more charity than had been permitted to her
life.
At the funeral banquet which followed, Prince Alexis placed the
Abbot Sergius at his right hand, and conversed with him in the
most edifying manner upon the necessity of leading a pure and
godly life. His remarks upon the duty of a Christian, upon
brotherly love, humility, and self-sacrifice, brought tears into
the eyes of the listening priests. He expressed his conviction
that the departed Princess, by the piety of her life, had
attained unto salvation,--and added, that his own life had now no
further value unless he should devote it to religious exercises.
"Can you not give me a place in your monastery?" he
asked, turning to the Abbot. "I will endow it with a gift of
forty thousand rubles, for the privilege of occupying a monk's
cell."
"Pray, do not decide too hastily, Highness," the Abbot
replied. "You have yet a son."
"What!" yelled Prince Alexis, with flashing eyes, every
trace of humility and renunciation vanishing like
smoke,--"what! Borka? The infamous wretch who has ruined me,
killed his mother, and brought disgrace upon our name? Do you
know that he has married a wench of no family and without a
farthing,--who would be honored, if I should allow her to feed my
hogs? Live for HIM? live for HIM? Ah-R-R-R!"
This outbreak terminated in a sound between a snarl and a bellow.
The priests turned pale, but the Abbot devoutly remarked--
"Encompassed by sorrows, Prince, you should humbly submit to
the will of the Lord."
"Submit to Borka?" the Prince scornfully laughed.
"I know what I'll do. There's time enough yet for a wife and
another child,-- ay,--a dozen children! I can have my pick in the
province; and if I couldn't I'd sooner take Masha, the
goose-girl, than leave Borka the hope of stepping into my shoes.
Beggars they shall be,-- beggars!"
What further he might have said was interrupted by the priests
rising to chant the Blajennon uspennie (blessed be the dead),--
after which, the trisna, a drink composed of mead, wine, and rum,
was emptied to the health of the departed soul. Every one stood
during this ceremony, except Prince Alexis, who fell suddenly
prostrate before the consecrated pictures, and sobbed so
passionately that the tears of the guests flowed for the third
time. There he lay until night; for whenever any one dared to
touch him, he struck out furiously with fists and feet. Finally
he fell asleep on the floor, and the servants then bore him to
his sleeping apartment.
For several days afterward his grief continued to be so violent
that the occupants of the castle were obliged to keep out of his
way. The whip was never out of his hand, and he used it very
recklessly, not always selecting the right person. The parasitic
poor relations found their situation so uncomfortable, that they
decided, one and all, to detach themselves from the tree upon
which they fed and fattened, even at the risk of withering on a
barren soil. Night and morning the serfs prayed upon their knees,
with many tears and groans, that the Saints might send
consolation, in any form, to their desperate lord.
The Saints graciously heard and answered the prayer. Word came
that a huge bear had been seen in the forest stretching towards
Juriewetz. The sorrowing Prince pricked up his ears, threw down
his whip, and ordered a chase. Sasha, the broad-shouldered, the
cunning, the ready, the untiring companion of his master,
secretly ordered a cask of vodki to follow the crowd of hunters
and serfs. There was a steel-bright sky, a low, yellow sun, and a
brisk easterly wind from the heights of the Ural. As the crisp
snow began to crunch under the Prince's sled, his followers saw
the old expression come back to his face. With song and halloo
and blast of horns, they swept away into the forest.
Saint John the Hunter must have been on guard over Russia that
day.
The great bear was tracked, and after a long and exciting chase,
fell by the hand of Prince Alexis himself. Halt was made in an
open space in the forest, logs were piled together and kindled on
the snow, and just at the right moment (which no one knew better
than Sasha) the cask of vodki rolled into its place. When the
serfs saw the Prince mount astride of it, with his ladle in his
hand, they burst into shouts of extravagant joy. "Slava
Bogu!" (Glory be to God!) came fervently from the bearded
lips of those hard, rough, obedient children. They tumbled
headlong over each other, in their efforts to drink first from
the ladle, to clasp the knees or kiss the hands of the restored
Prince. And the dawn was glimmering against the eastern stars, as
they took the way to the castle, making the ghostly fir-woods
ring with shout and choric song.
Nevertheless, Prince Alexis was no longer the same man; his giant
strength and furious appetite were broken. He was ever ready, as
formerly, for the chase and the drinking-bout; but his jovial
mood no longer grew into a crisis which only utter physical
exhaustion or the stupidity of drunkenness could overcome.
Frequently, while astride the cask, his shouts of laughter would
suddenly cease, the ladle would drop from his hand, and he would
sit motionless, staring into vacancy for five minutes at a time.
Then the serfs, too, became silent, and stood still, awaiting a
change. The gloomy mood passed away as suddenly. He would start,
look about him, and say, in a melancholy voice,--
"Have I frightened you, my children? It seems to me that I
am getting old. Ah, yes, we must all die, one day. But we need
not think about it, until the time comes. The Devil take me for
putting it into my head! Why, how now? can't you sing,
children?"
Then he would strike up some ditty which they all knew: a hundred
voices joined in the strain, and the hills once more rang with
revelry.
Since the day when the Princess Martha was buried, the Prince had
not again spoken of marriage. No one, of course, dared to mention
the name of Boris in his presence.