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A FLOCK of sheep
was spending the night on the broad steppe road that is called the
great highway. Two shepherds were guarding it. One, a toothless old
man of eighty, with a tremulous face, was lying on his stomach at
the very edge of the road, leaning his elbows on the dusty leaves of
a plantain; the other, a young fellow with thick black eyebrows and
no moustache, dressed in the coarse canvas of which cheap sacks are
made, was lying on his back, with his arms under his head, looking
upwards at the sky, where the stars were slumbering and the Milky
Way lay stretched exactly above his face.
The shepherds were not alone. A couple of yards from them in the
dusk that shrouded the road a horse made a patch of darkness, and,
beside it, leaning against the saddle, stood a man in high boots and
a short full-skirted jacket who looked like an overseer on some big
estate. Judging from his upright and motionless figure, from his
manners, and his behaviour to the shepherds and to his horse, he was
a serious, reasonable man who knew his own value; even in the
darkness signs could be detected in him of military carriage and of
the majestically condescending expression gained by frequent
intercourse with the gentry and their stewards.
The sheep were asleep. Against the grey background of the dawn,
already beginning to cover the eastern part of the sky, the
silhouettes of sheep that were not asleep could be seen here and
there; they stood with drooping heads, thinking. Their thoughts,
tedious and oppressive, called forth by images of nothing but the
broad steppe and the sky, the days and the nights, probably weighed
upon them themselves, crushing them into apathy; and, standing there
as though rooted to the earth, they noticed neither the presence of
a stranger nor the uneasiness of the dogs.
The drowsy, stagnant air was full of the monotonous noise
inseparable from a summer night on the steppes; the grasshoppers
chirruped incessantly; the quails called, and the young nightingales
trilled languidly half a mile away in a ravine where a stream flowed
and willows grew.
The overseer had halted to ask the shepherds for a light for his
pipe. He lighted it in silence and smoked the whole pipe; then,
still without uttering a word, stood with his elbow on the saddle,
plunged in thought. The young shepherd took no notice of him, he
still lay gazing at the sky while the old man slowly looked the
overseer up and down and then asked:
"Why, aren't you Panteley from Makarov's estate?"
"That's myself," answered the overseer.
"To be sure, I see it is. I didn't know you—that is a sign you will
be rich. Where has God brought you from?"
"From the Kovylyevsky fields."
"That's a good way. Are you letting the land on the part-crop
system?"
"Part of it. Some like that, and some we are letting on lease, and
some for raising melons and cucumbers. I have just come from the
mill."
A big shaggy old sheep-dog of a dirty white colour with woolly tufts
about its nose and eyes walked three times quietly round the horse,
trying to seem unconcerned in the presence of strangers, then all at
once dashed suddenly from behind at the overseer with an angry aged
growl; the other dogs could not refrain from leaping up too.
"Lie down, you damned brute," cried the old man, raising himself on
his elbow; "blast you, you devil's creature."
When the dogs were quiet again, the old man resumed his former
attitude and said quietly:
"It was at Kovyli on Ascension Day that Yefim Zhmenya died. Don't
speak of it in the dark, it is a sin to mention such people. He was
a wicked old man. I dare say you have heard."
"No, I haven't."
"Yefim Zhmenya, the uncle of Styopka, the blacksmith. The whole
district round knew him. Aye, he was a cursed old man, he was! I
knew him for sixty years, ever since Tsar Alexander who beat the
French was brought from Taganrog to Moscow. We went together to meet
the dead Tsar, and in those days the great highway did not run to
Bahmut, but from Esaulovka to Gorodishtche, and where Kovyli is now,
there were bustards' nests—there was a bustard's nest at every step.
Even then I had noticed that Yefim had given his soul to damnation,
and that the Evil One was in him. I have observed that if any man of
the peasant class is apt to be silent, takes up with old women's
jobs, and tries to live in solitude, there is no good in it, and
Yefim from his youth up was always one to hold his tongue and look
at you sideways, he always seemed to be sulky and bristling like a
cock before a hen. To go to church or to the tavern or to lark in
the street with the lads was not his fashion, he would rather sit
alone or be whispering with old women. When he was still young he
took jobs to look after the bees and the market gardens. Good folks
would come to his market garden sometimes and his melons were
whistling. One day he caught a pike, when folks were looking on, and
it laughed aloud, 'Ho-ho-ho-ho!'"
"It does happen," said Panteley.
The young shepherd turned on his side and, lifting his black
eyebrows, stared intently at the old man.
"Did you hear the melons whistling?" he asked.
"Hear them I didn't, the Lord spared me," sighed the old man, "but
folks told me so. It is no great wonder... the Evil One will begin
whistling in a stone if he wants to. Before the Day of Freedom a
rock was humming for three days and three nights in our parts. I
heard it myself. The pike laughed because Yefim caught a devil
instead of a pike."
The old man remembered something. He got up quickly on to his knees
and, shrinking as though from the cold, nervously thrusting his
hands into his sleeves, he muttered in a rapid womanish gabble:
"Lord save us and have mercy upon us! I was walking along the river
bank one day to Novopavlovka. A storm was gathering, such a tempest
it was, preserve us Holy Mother, Queen of Heaven.... I was hurrying
on as best I could, I looked, and beside the path between the thorn
bushes—the thorn was in flower at the time—there was a white bullock
coming along. I wondered whose bullock it was, and what the devil
had sent it there for. It was coming along and swinging its tail and
moo-oo-oo! but would you believe it, friends, I overtake it, I come
up close—and it's not a bullock, but Yefim—holy, holy, holy! I make
the sign of the cross while he stares at me and mutters, showing the
whites of his eyes; wasn't I frightened! We came alongside, I was
afraid to say a word to him—the thunder was crashing, the sky was
streaked with lightning, the willows were bent right down to the
water—all at once, my friends, God strike me dead that I die
impenitent, a hare ran across the path... it ran and stopped, and
said like a man: 'Good-evening, peasants.' Lie down, you brute!" the
old man cried to the shaggy dog, who was moving round the horse
again. "Plague take you!"
"It does happen," said the overseer, still leaning on the saddle and
not stirring; he said this in the hollow, toneless voice in which
men speak when they are plunged in thought.
"It does happen," he repeated, in a tone of profundity and
conviction.
"Ugh, he was a nasty old fellow," the old shepherd went on with
somewhat less fervour. "Five years after the Freedom he was flogged
by the commune at the office, so to show his spite he took and sent
the throat illness upon all Kovyli. Folks died out of number, lots
and lots of them, just as in cholera...."
"How did he send the illness?" asked the young shepherd after a
brief silence.
"We all know how, there is no great cleverness needed where there is
a will to it. Yefim murdered people with viper's fat. That is such a
poison that folks will die from the mere smell of it, let alone the
fat."
"That's true," Panteley agreed.
"The lads wanted to kill him at the time, but the old people would
not let them. It would never have done to kill him; he knew the
place where the treasure is hidden, and not another soul did know.
The treasures about here are charmed so that you may find them and
not see them, but he did see them. At times he would walk along the
river bank or in the forest, and under the bushes and under the
rocks there would be little flames, little flames... little flames
as though from brimstone. I have seen them myself. Everyone expected
that Yefim would show people the places or dig the treasure up
himself, but he—as the saying is, like a dog in the manger—so he
died without digging it up himself or showing other people."
The overseer lit a pipe, and for an instant lighted up his big
moustaches and his sharp, stern-looking, and dignified nose. Little
circles of light danced from his hands to his cap, raced over the
saddle along the horse's back, and vanished in its mane near its
ears.
"There are lots of hidden treasures in these parts," he said.
And slowly stretching, he looked round him, resting his eyes on the
whitening east and added:
"There must be treasures."
"To be sure," sighed the old man, "one can see from every sign there
are treasures, only there is no one to dig them, brother. No one
knows the real places; besides, nowadays, you must remember, all the
treasures are under a charm. To find them and see them you must have
a talisman, and without a talisman you can do nothing, lad. Yefim
had talismans, but there was no getting anything out of him, the
bald devil. He kept them, so that no one could get them."
The young shepherd crept two paces nearer to the old man and,
propping his head on his fists, fastened his fixed stare upon him. A
childish expression of terror and curiosity gleamed in his dark
eyes, and seemed in the twilight to stretch and flatten out the
large features of his coarse young face. He was listening intently.
"It is even written in the Scriptures that there are lots of
treasures hidden here," the old man went on; "it is so for sure...
and no mistake about it. An old soldier of Novopavlovka was shown at
Ivanovka a writing, and in this writing it was printed about the
place of the treasure and even how many pounds of gold was in it and
the sort of vessel it was in; they would have found the treasures
long ago by that writing, only the treasure is under a spell, you
can't get at it."
"Why can't you get at it, grandfather?" asked the young man.
"I suppose there is some reason, the soldier didn't say. It is under
a spell... you need a talisman."
The old man spoke with warmth, as though he were pouring out his
soul before the overseer. He talked through his nose and, being
unaccustomed to talk much and rapidly, stuttered; and, conscious of
his defects, he tried to adorn his speech with gesticulations of the
hands and head and thin shoulders, and at every movement his hempen
shirt crumpled into folds, slipped upwards and displayed his back,
black with age and sunburn. He kept pulling it down, but it slipped
up again at once. At last, as though driven out of all patience by
the rebellious shirt, the old man leaped up and said bitterly:
"There is fortune, but what is the good of it if it is buried in the
earth? It is just riches wasted with no profit to anyone, like chaff
or sheep's dung, and yet there are riches there, lad, fortune enough
for all the country round, but not a soul sees it! It will come to
this, that the gentry will dig it up or the government will take it
away. The gentry have begun digging the barrows.... They scented
something! They are envious of the peasants' luck! The government,
too, is looking after itself. It is written in the law that if any
peasant finds the treasure he is to take it to the authorities! I
dare say, wait till you get it! There is a brew but not for you!"
The old man laughed contemptuously and sat down on the ground. The
overseer listened with attention and agreed, but from his silence
and the expression of his figure it was evident that what the old
man told him was not new to him, that he had thought it all over
long ago, and knew much more than was known to the old shepherd.
"In my day, I must own, I did seek for fortune a dozen times," said
the old man, scratching himself nervously. "I looked in the right
places, but I must have come on treasures under a charm. My father
looked for it, too, and my brother, too—but not a thing did they
find, so they died without luck. A monk revealed to my brother
Ilya—the Kingdom of Heaven be his—that in one place in the fortress
of Taganrog there was a treasure under three stones, and that that
treasure was under a charm, and in those days—it was, I remember, in
the year '38—an Armenian used to live at Matvyeev Barrow who sold
talismans. Ilya bought a talisman, took two other fellows with him,
and went to Taganrog. Only when he got to the place in the fortress,
brother, there was a soldier with a gun, standing at the very
spot...."
A sound suddenly broke on the still air, and floated in all
directions over the steppe. Something in the distance gave a
menacing bang, crashed against stone, and raced over the steppe,
uttering, "Tah! tah! tah! tah!" When the sound had died away the old
man looked inquiringly at Panteley, who stood motionless and
unconcerned.
"It's a bucket broken away at the pits," said the young shepherd
after a moment's thought.
It was by now getting light. The Milky Way had turned pale and
gradually melted like snow, losing its outlines; the sky was
becoming dull and dingy so that you could not make out whether it
was clear or covered thickly with clouds, and only from the bright
leaden streak in the east and from the stars that lingered here and
there could one tell what was coming.
The first noiseless breeze of morning, cautiously stirring the
spurges and the brown stalks of last year's grass, fluttered along
the road.
The overseer roused himself from his thoughts and tossed his head.
With both hands he shook the saddle, touched the girth and, as
though he could not make up his mind to mount the horse, stood still
again, hesitating.
"Yes," he said, "your elbow is near, but you can't bite it. There is
fortune, but there is not the wit to find it."
And he turned facing the shepherds. His stern face looked sad and
mocking, as though he were a disappointed man.
"Yes, so one dies without knowing what happiness is like..." he said
emphatically, lifting his left leg into the stirrup. "A younger man
may live to see it, but it is time for us to lay aside all thought
of it."
Stroking his long moustaches covered with dew, he seated himself
heavily on the horse and screwed up his eyes, looking into the
distance, as though he had forgotten something or left something
unsaid. In the bluish distance where the furthest visible hillock
melted into the mist nothing was stirring; the ancient barrows, once
watch-mounds and tombs, which rose here and there above the horizon
and the boundless steppe had a sullen and death-like look; there was
a feeling of endless time and utter indifference to man in their
immobility and silence; another thousand years would pass, myriads
of men would die, while they would still stand as they had stood,
wit h no regret for the dead nor interest in the living, and no soul
would ever know why they stood there, and what secret of the steppes
was hidden under them.
The rooks awakening, flew one after another in silence over the
earth. No meaning was to be seen in the languid flight of those
long-lived birds, nor in the morning which is repeated punctually
every twenty-four hours, nor in the boundless expanse of the steppe.
The overseer smiled and said:
"What space, Lord have mercy upon us! You would have a hunt to find
treasure in it! Here," he went on, dropping his voice and making a
serious face, "here there are two treasures buried for a certainty.
The gentry don't know of them, but the old peasants, particularly
the soldiers, know all about them. Here, somewhere on that ridge
[the overseer pointed with his whip] robbers one time attacked a
caravan of gold; the gold was being taken from Petersburg to the
Emperor Peter who was building a fleet at the time at Voronezh. The
robbers killed the men with the caravan and buried the gold, but did
not find it again afterwards. Another treasure was buried by our
Cossacks of the Don. In the year '12 they carried off lots of
plunder of all sorts from the French, goods and gold and silver.
When they were going homewards they heard on the way that the
government wanted to take away all the gold and silver from them.
Rather than give up their plunder like that to the government for
nothing, the brave fellows took and buried it, so that their
children, anyway, might get it; but where they buried it no one
knows."
"I have heard of those treasures," the old man muttered grimly.
"Yes..." Panteley pondered again. "So it is...."
A silence followed. The overseer looked dreamily into the distance,
gave a laugh and pulled the rein, still with the same expression as
though he had forgotten something or left something unsaid. The
horse reluctantly started at a walking pace. After riding a hundred
paces Panteley shook his head resolutely, roused himself from his
thoughts and, lashing his horse, set off at a trot.
The shepherds were left alone.
"That was Panteley from Makarov's estate," said the old man. "He
gets a hundred and fifty a year and provisions found, too. He is a
man of education...."
The sheep, waking up—there were about three thousand of them—began
without zest to while away the time, nipping at the low,
half-trampled grass. The sun had not yet risen, but by now all the
barrows could be seen and, like a cloud in the distance, Saur's
Grave with its peaked top. If one clambered up on that tomb one
could see the plain from it, level and boundless as the sky, one
could see villages, manor-houses, the settlements of the Germans and
of the Molokani, and a long-sighted Kalmuck could even see the town
and the railway-station. Only from there could one see that there
was something else in the world besides the silent steppe and the
ancient barrows, that there was another life that had nothing to do
with buried treasure and the thoughts of sheep.
The old man felt beside him for his crook—a long stick with a hook
at the upper end—and got up. He was silent and thoughtful. The young
shepherd's face had not lost the look of childish terror and
curiosity. He was still under the influence of what he had heard in
the night, and impatiently awaiting fresh stories.
"Grandfather," he asked, getting up and taking his crook, "what did
your brother Ilya do with the soldier?"
The old man did not hear the question. He looked absent-mindedly at
the young man, and answered, mumbling with his lips:
"I keep thinking, Sanka, about that writing that was shown to that
soldier at Ivanovka. I didn't tell Panteley—God be with him—but you
know in that writing the place was marked out so that even a woman
could find it. Do you know where it is? At Bogata Bylotchka at the
spot, you know, where the ravine parts like a goose's foot into
three little ravines; it is the middle one."
"Well, will you dig?"
"I will try my luck..."
"And, grandfather, what will you do with the treasure when you find
it?"
"Do with it?" laughed the old man. "H'm!... If only I could find it
then.... I would show them all.... H'm!... I should know what to
do...."
And the old man could not answer what he would do with the treasure
if he found it. That question had presented itself to him that
morning probably for the first time in his life, and judging from
the expression of his face, indifferent and uncritical, it did not
seem to him important and deserving of consideration. In Sanka's
brain another puzzled question was stirring: why was it only old men
searched for hidden treasure, and what was the use of earthly
happiness to people who might die any day of old age? But Sanka
could not put this perplexity into words, and the old man could
scarcely have found an answer to it.
An immense crimson sun came into view surrounded by a faint haze.
Broad streaks of light, still cold, bathing in the dewy grass,
lengthening out with a joyous air as though to prove they were not
weary of their task, began spreading over the earth. The silvery
wormwood, the blue flowers of the pig's onion, the yellow mustard,
the corn-flowers—all burst into gay colours, taking the sunlight for
their own smile.
The old shepherd and Sanka parted and stood at the further sides of
the flock. Both stood like posts, without moving, staring at the
ground and thinking. The former was haunted by thoughts of fortune,
the latter was pondering on what had been said in the night; what
interested him was not the fortune itself, which he did not want and
could not imagine, but the fantastic, fairy-tale character of human
happiness.
A hundred sheep started and, in some inexplicable panic as at a
signal, dashed away from the flock; and as though the thoughts of
the sheep—tedious and oppressive—had for a moment infected Sanka
also, he, too, dashed aside in the same inexplicable animal panic,
but at once he recovered himself and shouted:
"You crazy creatures! You've gone mad, plague take you!"
When the sun, promising long hours of overwhelming heat, began to
bake the earth, all living things that in the night had moved and
uttered sounds were sunk in drowsiness. The old shepherd and Sanka
stood with their crooks on opposite sides of the flock, stood
without stirring, like fakirs at their prayers, absorbed in thought.
They did not heed each other; each of them was living in his own
life. The sheep were pondering, too.
Happiness Story
A Short Story
by
Anton Chekhov
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