Nikolai Gogol
The Nose
(1836)
I
On March 25th there took place, in
Petersburg, an extraordinarily strange occurrence. The barber Ivan Yakovlevich, who lives on Voznesensky
Avenue (his family name has been lost and even on his signboard, where a gentleman
is depicted with a lathered cheek and the inscription “Also bloodletting,”
there is nothing else)—the barber Ivan Yakovlevich
woke up rather early and smelled fresh bread. Raising himself slightly in bed
he saw his spouse, a rather respectable lady who was very fond of drinking coffee, take some newly baked loaves out of the oven.
“I won’t have any coffee to-day, Praskovya Osipovna,” said Ivan Yakovlevich.
“Instead, I would like to eat a bit of hot bread with onion.” (That is to
say, Ivan Yakovlevich would have liked both the one
and the other, but he knew that it was quite impossible to demand two things
at once, for Praskovya Osipovna
very much disliked such whims.) “Let the fool eat the bread; all the better
for me,” the wife thought to herself, “there will be an extra cup of coffee
left.” And she threw a loaf onto the table.
For the sake of propriety Ivan Yakovlevich put a
tailcoat on over his shirt and, sitting down at the table, poured out some
salt, got two onions ready, picked up a knife and, assuming a meaningful
expression, began to slice the bread. Having cut the loaf in two halves, he
looked inside and to his astonishment saw something white. Ivan Yakovlevich poked it carefully with the knife and felt it
with his finger. “Solid!” he said to himself. “What could it be?”
He stuck in his finger and extracted—a nose! Ivan Yakovlevich
was dumbfounded. He rubbed his eyes and felt the object: a nose, a nose
indeed, and a familiar one at that. Ivan Yakovlevich’s
face expressed horror. But this horror was nothing compared to the
indignation which seized his spouse.
“You beast, where did you cut off a nose?” she shouted angrily.
“Scoundrel! drunkard! I’ll report you to the police
myself. What a ruffian! I have already heard from three people that you jerk
their noses about so much when shaving that it’s a wonder they stay in
place.”
But Ivan Yakovlevich was more dead than alive.
He recognized the nose as that of none other than Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov, whom he shaved every Wednesday and Sunday.
“Hold on, Praskovya Osipovna!
I shall put it in a corner, after I’ve wrapped it in a rag: let it lie there
for a while, and later I’ll take it away.”
“I won’t even hear of it. That I should allow a cut-off nose to lie about in
my room? You dry stick! All he knows is how to strop his razor, but soon
he’ll be in no condition to carry out his duty, the rake, the
villain! Am I to answer for you to the police? You piece of filth, you
blockhead! Away with it! Away! Take it anywhere you like! Out of my sight
with it!”
Ivan Yakovlevich stood there as though bereft of
senses. He thought and thought—and really did not know what to think. “The
devil knows how it happened,” he said at last, scratching behind his ear with
his hand. “Was I drunk or wasn’t I when I came home yesterday, I really can’t
say. Whichever way you look at it, this is an impossible occurrence. After
all, bread is something baked, and a nose is something altogether different.
I can’t make it out at all.”
Ivan Yakovlevich fell silent. The idea that the
police might find the nose in his possession and bring a charge against him
drove him into a complete frenzy. He was already visualizing the scarlet
collar, beautifully embroidered with silver, the saber—and he trembled all
over. At last he got out his underwear and boots, pulled on all these tatters
and, followed by rather weighty exhortations from Praskovya
Osipovna, wrapped the nose in a rag and went out
into the street.
He wanted to shove it under something somewhere, either into the
hitching-post by the gate—or just drop it as if by accident and then turn off
into a side street. But as bad luck would have it, he kept running into
people he knew, who at once would ask him, “Where are you going?” or “Whom
are you going to shave so early?” so that Ivan Yakovlevich
couldn’t find the right moment. Once he actually did drop it, but a policeman
some distance away pointed to it with his halberd and said: “Pick it
up—you’ve dropped something there,” and Ivan Yakovlevich
was obliged to pick up the nose and hide it in his pocket. He was seized with
despair, all the more so as the number of people in the street constantly
increased when the shops began to open.
He decided to go to St. Isaac’s Bridge—might he
not just manage to toss it into the Neva? But I am somewhat to blame for
having so far said nothing about Ivan Yakovlevich,
in many ways a respectable man.
Like any self-respecting Russian artisan,
Ivan Yakovlevich was a terrible drunkard. And
although every day he shaved other people’s chins
his own was ever unshaven. Ivan Yakovlevich’s
tailcoat (Ivan Yakovlevich never wore a frockcoat)
was piebald, that is to say, it was all black but
dappled with brownish-yellow and gray; the collar was shiny, and in place of
three of the buttons hung just the ends of thread. Ivan Yakovlevich
was a great cynic, and when Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov
told him while being shaved, “Your hands, Ivan Yakovlevich,
always stink,” Ivan Yakovlevich would reply with
the question, “Why should they stink?” “I don’t know, my dear fellow,” the
Collegiate Assessor would say, “but they do,” and Ivan Yakovlevich,
after taking a pinch of snuff, would, in retaliation, lather all over his
cheeks and under his nose, and behind his ear, and under his chin—in other
words, wherever his fancy took him.
This worthy citizen now found himself on St. Isaac’s Bridge. To begin
with, he took a good look around, then leaned on the railings as though to
look under the bridge to see whether or not there were many fish swimming
about, and surreptitiously tossed down the rag containing the nose. He felt
as though all of a sudden a ton had been lifted off him: Ivan Yakovlevich even smirked. Instead of going to shave some
civil servants’ chins he set off for an establishment bearing a sign “Snacks
and Tea” to order a glass of punch when he suddenly noticed, at the end of
the bridge, a police officer of distinguished appearance, with wide
sideburns, wearing a three-cornered hat and with a sword. His heart sank: the
officer was wagging his finger at him and saying, “Step this way, my friend.”
Knowing the etiquette, Ivan Yakovlevich removed
his cap while still some way off, and approaching with alacrity said, “I wish
your honor good health.”
“No, no, my good fellow, not ‘your honor.’ Just you tell me, what were you
doing over there, standing on the bridge?”
“Honestly, sir, I’ve been to shave someone and only looked to see if the
river were running fast.”
“You’re lying, you’re lying. This won’t do. Just be so good as to answer.”
“I am ready to shave your worship twice a week, or even three times, and
no complaints,” replied Ivan Yakovlevich.
“No, my friend, all that’s nonsense. I have three barbers who shave me and
deem it a great honor, too. Just be so good as to tell me, what were you
doing over there?”
Ivan Yakovlevich turned pale.… But here the
whole episode becomes shrouded in mist, and of what happened subsequently
absolutely nothing is known.
II
Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov woke up
rather early and made a “b-rr-rr” sound with his lips as he was wont to do on
awakening, although he could not have explained the reason for it.
Kovalyov stretched and asked for the small mirror standing on the
table. He wanted to have a look at the pimple which had, the evening before,
appeared on his nose. But to his extreme amazement he saw that he had, in the
place of his nose, a perfectly smooth surface. Frightened, Kovalyov
called for some water and rubbed his eyes with a towel: indeed, no nose! He
ran his hand over himself to see whether or not he was asleep. No, he didn’t
think so. The Collegiate Assessor jumped out of bed and shook himself—no
nose! He at once ordered his clothes to be brought to him, and flew off
straight to the chief of police.
In the meantime something must be said about Kovalyov,
to let the reader see what sort of man this collegiate assessor was.
Collegiate assessors who receive their rank on the strength of scholarly
diplomas can by no means be equated with those who make the rank in the
Caucasus. They are two entirely different breeds. Learned collegiate
assessors… But Russia is such a wondrous land that if you say something about
one collegiate assessor all the collegiate assessors from Riga to Kamchatka
will not fail to take it as applying to them, too. The same is true of all
our ranks and titles. Kovalyov belonged to the
Caucasus variety of collegiate assessors. He had only held that rank for two
years and therefore could not forget it for a moment; and in order to lend
himself added dignity and weight he never referred to himself as collegiate
assessor but always as major. “Listen, my dear woman,” he would usually say
on meeting in the street a woman selling shirt fronts, “come to my place, my
apartment is on Sadovaya; just ask where Major Kovalyov lives, anyone will show you.” And if the woman
he met happened to be a pretty one, he would also give some confidential
instructions, adding, “You just ask, lovely, for Major Kovalyov’s
apartment.”—That is why we, too, will henceforth refer to this collegiate
assessor as Major.
Major Kovalyov was in the habit of taking a
daily stroll along Nevsky Avenue. The collar of his
dress shirt was always exceedingly clean and starched. His sidewhiskers were of the kind you can still see on
provincial and district surveyors, or architects (provided they are
Russians), as well as on those individuals who perform various police duties,
and in general on all those men who have full rosy cheeks and are very good
at boston; these sidewhiskers
run along the middle of the cheek straight up to the nose. Major Kovalyov wore a great many cornelian seals, some with
crests and others with Wednesday, Thursday, Monday, etc., engraved on them.
Major Kovalyov had come to Petersburg on business,
to wit, to look for a post befitting his rank; if he could arrange it, that
of a vice-governor; otherwise, that of a procurement officer in some
important government department. Major Kovalyov was
not averse to getting married, but only in the event that the bride had a
fortune of two hundred thousand. And therefore the reader can now judge for
himself what this major’s state was when he saw, in the place of a fairly
presentable and moderate-sized nose, a most ridiculous flat and smooth
surface.
As bad luck would have it, not a single cab showed up in the street, and
he was forced to walk, wrapped up in his cloak, his face covered with a
handkerchief, pretending that his nose was bleeding. “But perhaps I just
imagined all this—a nose cannot disappear in this idiotic way.” He stepped
into a coffee-house just in order to look at himself in a mirror.
Fortunately, there was no one there. Serving boys were sweeping the rooms and
arranging the chairs; some of them, sleepy-eyed, were bringing out trays of
hot turnovers; yesterday’s papers, coffee-stained, lay about on tables and
chairs. “Well, thank God, there is no one here,” said the Major. “Now I can
have a look.” Timidly he approached the mirror and glanced at it. “Damnation!
How disgusting!” he exclaimed after spitting. “If at least there were
something in place of the nose, but there’s nothing!”
Biting his lips
with annoyance, he left the coffee-house and decided, contrary to his habit,
not to look or to smile at anyone. Suddenly he stopped dead in his tracks
before the door of a house. An inexplicable phenomenon took place before his
very eyes: a carriage drew up to the entrance; the doors opened; a gentleman
in uniform jumped out, slightly stooping, and ran up the stairs. Imagine the
horror and at the same time the amazement of Kovalyov
when he recognized that it was his own nose! At this extraordinary sight
everything seemed to whirl before his eyes; he felt that he could hardly keep
on his feet. Trembling all over as though with fever, he made up his mind,
come what may, to await the gentleman’s return to the carriage. Two minutes later
the Nose indeed came out. He was wearing a gold-embroidered uniform with a
big stand-up collar and doeskin breeches; there was a sword at his side. From
his plumed hat one could infer that he held the rank of a state councillor. Everything pointed to his being on the way to
pay a call. He looked right and left, shouted to his driver, “Bring the
carriage round,” got in and was driven off.
Poor Kovalyov almost went
out of his mind. He did not even know what to think of this strange
occurrence. Indeed, how could a nose which as recently as yesterday had been
on his face and could neither ride nor walk—how could it be in uniform? He
ran after the carriage, which fortunately had not gone far but had stopped
before the Kazan Cathedral.
He hurried into the cathedral, made his
way past the ranks of old beggarwomen with bandaged
faces and two slits for their eyes, whom he used to
make such fun of, and went inside. There were but few worshippers there: they
all stood by the entrance. Kovalyov felt so upset
that he was in no condition to pray and searched with his eyes for the
gentleman in all the church corners. At last he saw him standing to one side.
The Nose had completely hidden his face in his big stand-up collar and was
praying in an attitude of utmost piety.
“How am I to approach him?” thought Kovalyov. “From everything, from his uniform, from his
hat, one can see that he is a state councillor.
I’ll be damned if I know how to do it.”
He started clearing his throat, but the Nose never
changed his devout attitude and continued his genuflections.
“My dear sir,” said Kovalyov,
forcing himself to take courage, “my dear sir…”
“What is it you desire?” said the Nose turning
round.
“It is strange, my dear sir … I think … you
ought to know your place. And all of a sudden I find you—and where? In
church. You’ll admit…”
“Excuse me, I cannot
understand what you are talking about.… Make yourself clear.”
“How shall I explain to him?” thought Kovalyov and, emboldened, began: “Of course, I … however,
I am a major. For me to go about without my nose, you’ll admit, is
unbecoming. It’s all right for a peddler woman who sells peeled oranges on Voskresensky Bridge, to sit without a nose. But since I’m
expecting—and besides, having many acquaintances among the ladies—Mrs. Chekhtaryova, a state councillor’s
wife, and others… Judge for yourself… I don’t know, my dear sir…” (Here Major
Kovalyov shrugged his shoulders.) “Forgive me, if
one were to look at this in accordance with rules of duty and honor… you yourself
can understand.…”
“I understand absolutely nothing,” replied the
Nose. “Make yourself more clear.”
“My dear sir,” said Kovalyov
with a sense of his own dignity, “I don’t know how to interpret your words…
The whole thing seems to me quite obvious… Or do you wish… After all, you are
my own nose!”—
The Nose looked at the major and slightly
knitted his brows.
“You are mistaken, my dear sir, I exist
in my own right. Besides, there can be no close relation between us. Judging
by the buttons on your uniform, you must be employed in the Senate or at
least in the Ministry of Justice. As for me, I am in the scholarly line.”
Having said this, the Nose turned away and went back to
his prayers.
Kovalyov was utterly
flabbergasted. He knew not what to do or even what to think. Just then he
heard the pleasant rustle of a lady’s dress: an elderly lady, all in lace,
had come up near him and with her, a slim one, in a white frock which
agreeably outlined her slender figure, and in a straw-colored hat, light as a
cream-puff. Behind them, a tall footman with huge sidewhiskers
and a whole dozen collars, stopped and opened a snuff-box.
Kovalyov stepped closer, pulled out the cambric collar of
his dress shirt, adjusted his seals hanging on a golden chain and, smiling in
all directions, turned his attention to the ethereal young lady who, like a
spring flower, bowed her head slightly and put her little white hand with its
translucent fingers to her forehead. The smile on Kovalyov’s
face grew even wider when from under her hat he caught a glimpse of her
little round dazzling-white chin and part of her cheek glowing with the color
of the first rose of spring. But suddenly he sprang back as though scalded.
He remembered that there was absolutely nothing in the place of his nose, and
tears came to his eyes. He turned round, intending without further ado to
tell the gentleman in uniform that he was merely pretending to be a state councillor, that he was a rogue and a cad and nothing
more than his, the major’s, own nose.… But the Nose was no longer there; he
had managed to dash off, probably to pay another call.
This plunged Kovalyov into despair. He went
back, stopped for a moment under the colonnade and looked carefully, this way
and that, for the Nose to turn up somewhere. He remembered quite well that
the latter had a plumed hat and a gold-embroidered uniform, but he had not
noticed his overcoat, or the color of his carriage or of his horses, not even
whether he had a footman at the back, and if so in what livery. Moreover,
there was such a multitude of carriages dashing back and forth and at such
speed that it was difficult to tell them apart; but even if he did pick one
of them out, he would have no means of stopping it. The day was fine and
sunny. There were crowds of people on Nevsky
Avenue. A whole flowery cascade of ladies poured over the sidewalk, all the
way down from Police Bridge to Anichkin Bridge.
Here came a court councillor he knew, and was used
to addressing as lieutenant-colonel, especially in the presence of strangers.
Here, too, was Yarygin, a head clerk in the Senate,
a great friend of his, who invariably lost at boston
when he went up eight. Here was another major who had won his assessorship in the Caucasus, waving to Kovalyov to join him.…
“O hell!” said Kovalyov. “Hey, cabby, take me
straight to the chief of police!”
Kovalyov got into the cab and kept shouting to
the cabman, “Get going as fast as you can.”
“Is the chief of police at home?” he called out as he entered the hall.
“No, sir,” answered the doorman, “he has just left.”
“You don’t say.”
“Yes,” added the doorman, “he has not been gone long, but he’s gone. Had
you come a minute sooner perhaps you might have found him in.”
Without removing the handkerchief from his face, Kovalyov
got back into the cab and in a voice of despair shouted, “Drive on!”
“Where to?” asked the cabman.
“Drive straight ahead!”
“What do you mean straight ahead? There is a turn here. Right or left?”
This question nonplussed Kovalyov
and made him think again. In his plight the first thing for him to do was to
apply to the Police Department, not because his cause had anything to do
directly with the police, but because they could act much more quickly than
any other institution; while to seek satisfaction from the superiors of the
department by which the Nose claimed to be employed would be pointless
because from the Nose’s own replies it was obvious that this fellow held
nothing sacred, and that he was capable of lying in this case, too, as he had
done when he had assured Kovalyov that they had
never met. Thus Kovalyov was on the point of telling the cabman to take
him to the Police Department when the thought again occurred to him that this
rogue and swindler, who had already treated him so shamelessly during their
first encounter, might again seize his first chance to slip out of town
somewhere, and then all search would be futile or might drag on, God forbid,
a whole month. Finally, it seemed, heaven itself brought him to his senses.
He decided to go straight to the newspaper office and, before it was too
late, place an advertisement with a detailed description of the Nose’s
particulars, so that anyone coming across him could immediately deliver him
or at least give information about his whereabouts. And so, his mind made up,
he told the cabby to drive to the newspaper office, and all the way down to
it kept whacking him in the back with his first, saying, “Faster, you
villain! faster, you rogue!—“Ugh, mister!”
the cabman would say, shaking his head and flicking his reins at the horse
whose coat was as long as a lapdog’s. At last the cab drew up to a stop, and Kovalyov, panting, ran into a small reception room where
a gray-haired clerk in an old tailcoat and glasses sat at a table and, pen in
his teeth, counted newly brought in coppers.
“Who accepts advertisements here?” cried Kovalyov.
“Ah, good morning!”
“How do you do,” said the gray-haired clerk, raising his eyes for a moment
and lowering them again to look at the neat stacks of money.
“I should like to insert—”
“Excuse me. Will you wait a moment,” said the
clerk as he wrote down a figure on a piece of paper with one hand and moved
two beads on the abacus with the fingers of his left hand. A liveried
footman, whose appearance suggested his sojourn in an aristocratic house, and
who stood by the table with a note in his hand, deemed it appropriate to
demonstrate his savoir-faire: “Would you believe it, sir, this little mutt is
not worth eighty kopecks, that is, I wouldn’t even give eight kopecks for it;
but the countess loves it, honestly she does—and so whoever finds it will get
one hundred rubles! To put it politely, just as you and I are talking,
people’s tastes differ: if you’re a hunter, keep a pointer or a poodle; don’t
grudge five hundred, give a thousand, but then let it be a good dog.”
The worthy clerk listened to this with a
grave expression while at the same time trying to count the number of letters
in the note brought to him. All around stood a great many old women,
salespeople and house porters with notes. One of them offered for sale a
coachman of sober conduct; another, a little-used carriage brought from Paris
in 1814; still others, a nineteen-year-old serf girl experienced in
laundering work and suitable for other kinds of work; a sound droshky with
one spring missing; a young and fiery dappled-gray horse seventeen years old;
turnip and radish seed newly received from London; a summer residence with
all the appurtenances—to wit, two stalls for horses and a place for planting
a grove of birches or firs; there was also an appeal to those wishing to buy
old boot soles, inviting them to appear for final bidding every day between
eight and three o’clock. The room in which this entire company was crowded
was small, and the air in it was extremely thick; but Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov was not in a position to notice the smell,
because he kept his handkerchief pressed to his face and because his nose
itself was goodness knows where.
“My dear sir, may I ask you…It is very urgent,” he said at last with
impatience.
“Presently, presently! Two rubles forty-three kopecks! Just a moment! One
ruble sixty-four kopecks,” recited the gray-haired gentleman, tossing the
notes into the faces of the old women and the house porters. “What can I do
for you?” he said at last, turning to Kovalyov.
“I wish…,” said Kovalyov. “There has been a
swindle or a fraud… I still can’t find out. I just wish to advertise that
whoever hands this scoundrel over to me will receive an adequate reward.”
“Allow me to inquire, what is your name?”
“What do you want my name for? I can’t give it to you. I have many
acquaintances: Mrs. Chekhtaryova, the wife of a
state councillor; Pelageya
Grigoryevna Podtochina,
the wife of a field officer… What if they suddenly were to find out? Heaven
forbid! You can simply write down: a collegiate assessor or, still better, a
person holding the rank of major.”
“And was the runaway your household serf?”
“What do you mean, household serf? That wouldn’t
be such a bad swindle! The runaway was… my nose.…”
“Hmm! what a strange name! And did this Mr. Nosov
rob you of a big sum?”
“My nose,
I mean to say—You’ve misunderstood me. My nose, my very own nose has
disappeared goodness knows where. The devil must have wished to play a trick
on me!”
“But how did it disappear? I don’t quite
understand it.”
“Well, I can’t tell you how; but the main
thing is that it is now gallivanting about town and calling itself a state councillor. And that is why I am asking you to advertise
that whoever apprehends it should deliver it to me immediately and without
delay. Judge for yourself. How, indeed, can I do without such a conspicuous
part of my body? It isn’t like some little toe which I put into my boot, and
no one can see whether it is there or not. On Thursdays I call at the house
of Mrs. Chekhtaryova, a state wife. Mrs. councillor’sPodtochina, Pelageya Grigoryevna, a field officer’s wife, and her very pretty
daughter, are also very good friends of mine, and you can judge for yourself
how can I now… I can’t appear at their house now.”
The clerk thought hard,
his lips pursed tightly in witness thereof.
“No, I can’t insert such an advertisement in
the papers,” he said at last after a long silence.
“How so? Why?”
“Well, the paper might lose its reputation. If
everyone were to write that his nose had run away, why… As it is, people say
that too many absurd stories and false rumors are printed.”
“But why is this business absurd? I don’t think
it is anything of the sort.”
“That’s what you think. But take last week,
there was another such case. A civil servant came in, just as you have,
bringing a note, was billed two rubles seventy-three kopecks, and all the
advertisement consisted of was that a black-coated poodle had run away.
Doesn’t seem to amount to much, does it now? But it turned out to be a libel.
This so-called poodle was the treasurer of I don’t recall what institution.”
“But I am not putting in an advertisement about
a poodle—it’s about my very own nose; that is, practically the same as about
myself.”
“No, I can’t possibly insert such an
advertisement.”
“But when my nose actually has disappeared!”
“If it has disappeared, then it’s a doctor’s
business. They say there are people who can fix you up with any nose you
like. However, I observe that you must be a man of gay disposition and fond
of kidding in company.”
“I swear to you by all that is holy! Perhaps,
if it comes to that, why I’ll show you.”
“Why trouble yourself?”
continued the clerk, taking a pinch of snuff. “However, if it isn’t too much
trouble,” he added, moved by curiosity, “I’d like to have a look.”
The collegiate assessor removed the
handkerchief from his face.
“Very strange indeed!” said the clerk.
“It’s absolutely flat, like a pancake fresh off the griddle. Yes, incredibly
smooth.”
“Well, will you go on arguing after this? You see yourself that you can’t
refuse to print my advertisement. I’ll be particularly grateful and am very
glad that this opportunity has given me the pleasure of making your
acquaintance.…” The major, as we can see, decided this time to use a little
flattery.
“To insert it would be easy enough, of course,” said the clerk, “but I
don’t see any advantage to you in it. If you really must, give it to someone
who wields a skillful pen and let him describe this as a rare phenomenon of
nature and publish this little item in The Northern Bee” (here he took
another pinch of snuff) “for the benefit of the young” (here he wiped his
nose), “or just so, as a matter of general interest.”
The collegiate assessor felt completely discouraged. He
dropped his eyes to the lower part of the paper where theatrical performances
were announced. His face was about to break out into a smile as he came
across the name of a pretty actress, and his hand went to his pocket to check
whether he had a blue note, because in his opinion field officers ought to
sit in the stalls—but the thought of his nose spoiled it all.
The clerk himself seemed to be moved by Kovalyov’s embarrassing situation. Wishing at least to
ease his distress he deemed it appropriate to express his sympathy in a few
words: “I really am grieved that such a thing happened to you. Wouldn’t you
care for a pinch of snuff? It dispels headaches and melancholy; it’s even
good for hemorrhoids.” With those words the clerk offered Kovalyov
his snuff-box, rather deftly snapping open the lid which pictured a lady in a
hat.
This unpremeditated
action made Kovalyov lose all patience. “I
can’t understand how you find this a time for jokes,” he said angrily. “Can’t
you see that I lack the very thing one needs to take snuff? To hell with your
snuff! I can’t bear the sight of it now, even if you offered me some râpé itself, let alone your
wretched Berezin’s.” After
saying this he left the newspaper office, deeply vexed, and went to visit the
district police inspector, a man with a passion for sugar. In his house the entire
parlor, which served also as the dining room, was stacked with sugar loaves
which local tradesmen brought to him out of friendship. At the moment
his cook was pulling off the inspector’s regulation topboots;
his sword and all his military trappings were already hanging peacefully in
the corners, and his three-year-old son was reaching for his redoubtable
three-cornered hat, while the inspector himself was preparing to taste the
fruits of peace after his day of warlike, martial pursuits.
Kovalyov came in at the moment when the
inspector had just stretched, grunted and said, “Oh, for a couple of hours’
good snooze!” It was therefore easy to see that the collegiate assessor had
come at quite the wrong time. And I wonder whether he would have been welcome
even if he had brought several pounds of tea or a piece of cloth. The police
inspector was a great patron of all arts and manufactures, but he preferred a
bank note to everything else. “This is the thing,” he would usually say.
“There can be nothing better than it—it doesn’t ask for food, it doesn’t take
much space, it’ll always fit into a pocket, and if you drop it it won’t break.”
The inspector received Kovalyov
rather coolly and said that after dinner was hardly the time to conduct
investigations, that nature itself intended that man should rest a little
after a good meal (from this the collegiate assessor could see that the
aphorisms of the ancient sages were not unknown to the police inspector),
that no real gentleman would allow his nose to be pulled off, and that there
were many majors in this world who hadn’t even decent underwear and hung
about in all sorts of disreputable places.
This last was too close
for comfort. It must be observed that Kovalyov was
extremely quick to take offense. He could forgive whatever was said about himself, but never anything that referred to rank or
title. He was even of the opinion that in plays one could allow references to
junior officers, but that there should be no criticism of field officers. His
reception by the inspector so disconcerted him that he tossed his head and
said with an air of dignity, spreading his arms slightly: “I confess that
after such offensive remarks on your part, I’ve nothing more to add.…” and
left the room.
He came home hardly
able to stand on his feet. It was already dusk. After all
this fruitless search his apartment appeared to him melancholy or
extraordinarily squalid. Coming into the entrance hall he caught sight of his
valet Ivan who, lying on his back on the soiled leather sofa,
was spitting at the ceiling and rather successfully hitting one and the same
spot. Such indifference on the man’s part infuriated him; he struck him on
the forehead with his hat, saying, “You pig, always doing something stupid!”
Ivan jumped up abruptly and rushed to
take off his cloak.
Entering his room the major, tired and sad, sank into an armchair and at
last, after several sighs, said:
“O Lord, O Lord! What have I done to deserve such misery? Had I lost an
arm or a leg, it would not have been so bad; had I lost my ears, it would
have been bad enough but nevertheless bearable; but without a nose a man is
goodness knows what; he’s not a bird, he’s not a human being; in fact, just
take him and throw him out the window! And if at least it had been chopped
off in battle or in a duel, or if I myself had been to blame; but it
disappeared just like that, with nothing, nothing at all to show for it. But
no, it can’t be,’ he added after some thought. “It’s unbelievable that a nose
should disappear; absolutely unbelievable. I must be either dreaming or just
imagining it. Maybe, somehow, by mistake instead of water I drank the vodka
which I rub on my chin after shaving. That fool Ivan didn’t take it away and
I probably gulped it down.”—To satisfy himself that he was not drunk the
major pinched himself so hard that he cried out. The pain he felt fully
convinced him that he was wide awake. He stealthily approached the mirror and
at first half-closed his eyes, thinking that perhaps the nose would appear in
its proper place; but the same moment he sprang back exclaiming, “What a
caricature of a face!”
It was indeed
incomprehensible. If a button, a silver spoon, a watch, or some such thing
had disappeared-- but to disappear, and for whom to disappear? and besides in his own apartment, too!… After considering
all the circumstances, Major Kovalyov was inclined
to think that most likely it was the fault of none other than the field
officer’s wife, Mrs. Podtochina, who wanted him to
marry her daughter. He, too, liked to flirt with her but avoided a final
showdown. And when the field officer’s wife told him point-blank that she
wanted to marry her daughter off to him, he eased off on his attentions,
saying that he was still young, that he had to serve another five years when
he would be exactly forty-two. And so the field officer’s wife, presumably in
revenge, had decided to put a curse on him and hired for this purpose some
old witchwomen, because it was impossible
even to suppose that the nose had been simply cut off: no one had entered his
room; the barber, Ivan Yakovlevich, had shaved him
as recently as Wednesday and throughout that whole day and even on Thursday
his nose was all there—he remembered and knew it very well. Besides, he would
have felt the pain and no doubt the wound could not have healed so soon and
be as smooth as a pancake. Different plans of action occurred to him: should
he formally summons Mrs. Podtochina to court or go
to her himself and expose her in person? His reflections were interrupted by
light breaking through all the cracks in the door, which told hïm that Ivan had lit the candle in the hall. Soon Ivan
himself appeared, carrying it before him and brightly illuminating the whole
room. Kovalyov’s first gesture was to snatch his
handkerchief and cover the place where his nose had been only the day before,
so that indeed the silly fellow would not stand there gaping at such an
oddity in his master’s strange appearance.
Barely had Ivan gone
into his cubbyhole when an unfamiliar voice was heard in the hall saying, “Does
Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov live
here?” “Come in. Major Kovalyov is here,” said Kovalyov, jumping up quickly and opening the door.
In came a police officer of handsome appearance
with sidewhiskers that were neither too light nor
too dark, and rather full cheeks, the very same who at the beginning of this
story was standing at the end of St. Isaac’s Bridge.
“Did you happen to mislay your nose?”
“That’s right.”
“It has been recovered.”
“What are you saying!” exclaimed Major Kovalyov. He was tonguetied with
joy. He stared at the police officer standing in front of him, on whose full
lips and cheeks the trembling light of the candle flickered. “How?”
“By an odd piece of luck—he was intercepted on
the point of leaving town. He was about to board a stagecoach and leave for
Riga. He even had a passport made out a long time ago in the name of a
certain civil servant. Strangely enough, I also at first took him for a
gentleman. But fortunately I had my glasses with me and I saw at once that it
was a nose. You see, I am nearsighted and when you stand before me all I can
see is that you have a face, but I can’t make out if you have a nose or a
beard or anything. My mother-in-law, that is, my wife’s mother, can’t see
anything, either.’
Kovalyov was beside himself.
“Where is it? Where? I’ll run there at once.”
“Don’t trouble yourself. Knowing that you need
it I have brought it with me. And the strange thing is that chïef villain in this business is that rascally barber
from Voznesensky Street who is now in a lockup. I
have long suspected him of drunkenness and theft, and as recently as the day
before yesterday he stole a dozen buttons from a certain shop. Your nose is
quite in order.”—With these words the police officer reached into his pocket
and pulled out a nose wrapped up in a piece of paper.
“That’s it!” shouted Kovalyov.
“That’s it, all right! Do join me in a little cup of tea today.”
“I would consider it a great pleasure, but I
simply can’t: I have to drop in at a mental asylum.… All food prices have gone
up enormously.… I have my mother-in-law, that’s my wife’s mother, living with
me, and my children; the eldest is particularly promising, a very clever lad,
but we haven’t the means to educate him.”
Kovalyov grasped his meaning and, snatching up a red banknote
from the table, thrust it into the hands of the inspector who, clicking his heels, went out the door. Almost the very same instant Kovalyov heard his voice out in the street where he was
admonishing with his fist a stupid peasant who had driven his cart onto the
boulevard.
After the police officer had left, the collegiate
assessor remained for a few minutes in a sort of indefinable state and only
after several minutes recovered the capacity to see and feel: his unexpected
joy had made him lose his senses. He
carefully took the newly found nose in both his cupped hands and once again
examined it thoroughly.
“That’s it, that’s it, all right,” said Major Kovalyov. “Here on the left side is the pimple which
swelled up yesterday.” The major very nearly laughed with joy.
But there is nothing enduring in this world,
and that is why even joy is not as keen in the moment that follows the first;
and a moment later it grows weaker still and finally merges imperceptibly
into one’s usual state of mind, just as a ring on the water, made by the fall
of a pebble, merges finally into the smooth surface. Kovalyov
began to reflect and realized that the whole business was not yet over: the
nose was found but it still had to be affixed, put in its proper place.
“And what if it doesn’t stick?”
At this question, addressed to himself, the major turned pale.
Seized by unaccountable fear, he rushed to the
table and drew the looking-glass closer, to avoid affixing the nose
crookedly. His hands trembled. Carefully and deliberately, he put it in its
former place. O horror! the nose wouldn’t stick.…He
carried it to his mouth, warmed it slightly with his breath, and again
brought it to the smooth place between his two cheeks; but the nose just
wouldn’t stay on.
“Well, come on, come
on, you fool!” he kept saying to it. But the nose was as though made of wood
and plopped back on the table with a strange corklike sound. The major’s
face was twisted in convulsion. “Won’t it really grow on?” he said fearfully.
But no matter how many times he tried to fit it in its proper place, his
efforts were unsuccessful as before.
He called Ivan and sent him for the doctor who occupied the best
apartment on the first floor of the same house. The doctor was a fine figure
of a man; he had beautiful pitch-black sidewhiskers,
a fresh, healthy wife, ate raw apples first thing in the morning, and kept
his mouth extraordinarily clean, rinsing it every morning for nearly three
quarters of an hour and polishing his teeth with five different kinds of
little brushes. The doctor came at once. After asking him how long ago the
mishap had occurred, he lifted Major Kovalyov’s
face by the chin and flicked him with his thumb on the very spot where the
nose used to be, so that the major had to throw his head back with such force
that he hit the back of it against the wall. The doctor said this didn’t
matter and, suggesting that he move a little away from the wall, told him
first to bend his head to the right, and, after feeling the spot where the
nose had been, said “Hmm!” Then he told him to bend his head to the left and
said “Hmm!”; and in conclusion he again flicked him
with his thumb so that Major Kovalyov jerked his
head like a horse whose teeth are being examined. Having carried out this
test, the doctor shook his head and said: “No, can’t be done. You’d better
stay like this, or we might make things even worse. Of course, it can be
stuck on. I daresay, I could do it right now for you, but I assure you it’ll
be worse for you.”
“I like that!
How am I to remain without a nose?” said Kovalyov.
“It couldn’t possibly be worse than now. This is simply a hell of a thing!
How can I show myself anywhere in such a scandalous state? I have
acquaintances in good society; why, this evening, now, I am expected at
parties in two houses. I know many people: Mrs. Chekhtaryova,
a state councillor’s wife, Mrs. Podtochina,
a field officer’s wife…although after what she’s done now I’ll have nothing
more to do with her except through the police. I appeal to you,” pleaded Kovalyov, “is there no way at all? Fix it on somehow,
even if not very well, just so it stays on; in an emergency, I could even
prop it up with my hand. And besides, I don’t dance, so I can’t do any harm
by some careless movement. As regards my grateful acknowledgment of your
visits, be assured that as far as my means allow.…”
“Would you believe
it,” said the doctor in a voice that was neither loud nor soft but extremely
persuasive and magnetic, “I never treat people out of self-interest. This is
against my principles and my calling. It is true that I charge for my visits,
but solely in order not to offend by my refusal. Of course I could affix your
nose; but I assure you on my honor, if you won’t take my word for it, that it
will be much worse. Rather, let nature take its course. Wash the place more
often with cold water, and I assure you that without a nose you’ll be as
healthy as if you had one. As for the nose itself, I advise you to put the
nose in a jar with alcohol, or, better still, pour into the jar two tablespoonfuls of aqua fortis
and warmed-up vinegar—and then you can get good money for it. I’ll buy it
myself, if you don’t ask too much.”
“No, no! I won’t sell it for
anything!” exclaimed Major Kovalyov in desperation.
“Let it rather go to blazes!”
“Excuse me!” said the doctor, bowing
himself out, “I wanted to be of some use to you.… Never mind! At least you
saw my good will.” Having said this the doctor left
the room with a dignified air. Kovalyov didn’t even
notice his face and in his benumbed state saw nothing but the cuffs of his
snow-white shirt peeping out of the sleeves of his black tailcoat.
The very next
day he decided, before lodging a complaint, to write to Mrs. Podtochina requesting her to restore him his due without
a fight. The letter ran as follows:
Dear Madam
Alexandra
Grigoryevna, I fail to
understand your strange behavior. Be assured that, acting in this way, you
gain nothing and certainly will not force me to marry your daughter. Believe me
that the incident with my nose is fully known to me, just as is the fact that
you—and no one else—are the principal person involved. Its sudden detachment
from its place, its flight and its disguise, first as a certain civil
servant, then at last in its own shape, is nothing other than the result of a
spell cast by you or by those who engage like you in such noble pursuits. I
for my part deem it my duty to forewarn you that if the abovementioned nose
is not back in its place this very day I shall be
forced to resort to the defense and protection of the law.
Whereupon I
have the honor to remain, with my full respect,
Your
obedient servant
Platon Kovalyov
Dear Sir
Platon Kuzmich,
Your letter
came as a complete surprise to me. I frankly confess that I never expected
it, especially as regards your unjust reproaches. I beg to inform you that I
never received in my house the civil servant you mention, neither in disguise
nor in his actual shape. It is true that Filipp Ivanovich Potanchikov had been
visiting me. And though he did indeed seek my daughter’s hand, being himself of good sober conduct and great learning, I never
held out any hopes to him. You also mention your nose. If by this you mean
that I wanted to put your nose out of joint, that is, to give you a formal
refusal, then I am surprised to hear you mention it, for I, as you know, was
of the exactly opposite opinion, and if you now seek my daughter in marriage
in the lawful way, I am ready to give you immediate satisfaction, for this
has always been the object of my keenest desire, in the hope of which I
remain always at your service,
Alexandra Podtochina
“No,” said Kovalyov,
after he had read the letter. “She certainly isn’t guilty. Impossible! The
letter is written in a way no person guilty of a crime can write.”—The
collegiate assessor was an expert in this matter, having been sent several
times to take part in a judicial investigation while still serving in the
Caucasus.—“How then, how on earth could this have happened? The devil alone
can make it out,” he said at last in utter dejection.
In the meantime rumors about this extraordinary occurrence had
spread all over the capital and, as is usual in such cases, not without some
special accretions. In those days the minds of everybody were particularly inclined
toward things extraordinary: not long before, the whole town had shown an
interest in experiments with the effects of hypnotism. Moreover, the story of
the dancing chairs in Street
was still fresh in memory, and one should not be surprised therefore that
soon people began saying that Collegiate Assessor Kovalyov’s nose went strolling along Nevsky Avenue
at precisely three o’clock. Throngs of curious people came there every day.
Someone said that the Nose was in Junker’s store: and such a crowd and jam
was created outside Junker’s that the police had to intervene. One profit seeker
of respectable appearance, with sidewhiskers, who
sold a variety of dry pastries at the entrance to a theater, had specially
constructed excellent, sturdy wooden benches, on which he invited the curious
to mount for eighty kopecks apiece. One veteran colonel made a point of
leaving his house earlier than usual and with much difficulty made his way
through the crowd, but to his great indignation saw in the window of the shop
instead of the nose an ordinary woollen undershirt
and a lithograph showing a young girl straightening her stocking and a dandy,
with a lapeled waistcoat and a small beard, peeping
at her from behind a tree—a picture which had been hanging in the same place
for more than ten years. Moving away he said with annoyance, “How can they
confound the people by such silly and unlikely rumors?”—Then a rumor went
round that Major Kovalyov’s nose was out for a
stroll, not on Nevsky Avenue but in Taurida Gardens, that it had been there for ages; that
when Khosrev-Mirza lived there he marveled greatly
at this strange freak of nature. Some students from the Surgical Academy went
there. One aristocratic, respectable lady, in a special letter to the
Superintendent of the Gardens, asked him to show her children this rare
phenomenon, accompanied, if possible, with an explanation edifying and
instructive for the young.
All the men about town, the habitués of society parties, who liked
to amuse ladies and whose resources had by that time been exhausted, were
extremely glad of all these goings-on. A small percentage of respectable and
well-meaning people were extremely displeased. One gentleman said indignantly
that he could not understand how in this enlightened age such senseless
stories could spread and that he was surprised at the government’s failure to
take heed of it. This gentleman apparently was one of those gentlemen who
would like to embroil the government in everything, even in their daily
quarrels with their wives. After that…but here again the whole incident is
shrouded in fog, and what happened afterwards is absolutely unknown.
III
Utterly nonsensical things happen in this world. Sometimes there is
absolutely no rhyme or reason in them: suddenly the very nose which had been
going around with the rank of a state councillor
and created such a stir in the city, found itself again, as though nothing
were the matter, in its proper place, that is to say, between the two cheeks
of Major Kovalyov. This
happened on April 7th. Waking up and chancing to look in the mirror, he
sees—his nose! He grabbed it with his hand—his nose indeed! “Aha!” said Kovalyov, and in his joy he very nearly broke into a
barefooted dance round the room, but Ivan’s entry stopped him. He told Ivan
to bring him some water to wash in and, while washing, glanced again at the
mirror—his nose! Drying himself with his towel, he again glanced at the
mirror—his nose!
“Take a look, Ivan,
I think there’s a pimple on my nose,” he said, and in the meantime thought,
“How awful if Ivan says: ‘Why, no sir, not only there is no pimple but also
the nose itself is gone!’ ”
But Ivan said: “Nothing, sir, no
pimple—your nose is fine!”
“That’s great, damn it!” the major said to himself, snapping his fingers.
At that moment the barber Ivan Yakovlevich peeped
in at the door but as timidly as a cat which had just been whipped for
stealing lard.
“First you tell me—are your hands clean?” Kovalyov
shouted to him before he had approached.
“They are.”
“You’re lying.”
“I swear they are, sir.”
“Well, we’ll see.”
Kovalyov sat down. Ivan Yakovlevich
draped him with a napkin and instantly, with the help of a shaving brush,
transformed his chin and part of his cheek into the whipped cream served at
merchants’ namesday parties. “Well, I never!” Ivan Yakovlevich said to himself, glancing at his nose, and
then cocked his head on the other side and looked at it sideways: “Look at
that! Just you try and figure that out,” he continued and took a good look at
his nose. At last, gently, with the greatest care imaginable, he raised two
fingers to grasp it by the tip. Such was Ivan Yakovlevich’s
method.
“Now, now, now, look out there!” cried Kovalyov.
Dumbfounded and confused as never before in his life, Ivan Yakovlevich let his hands drop. At last he began
cautiously tickling him with the razor under the chin, and although it wasn’t
at all handy for him and difficult to shave without holding on to the
olfactory portion of the face, nevertheless, somehow bracing his gnarled
thumb against the cheek and the lower jaw, he finally overcame all obstacles
and finished shaving him.
When everything was ready, Kovalyov hastened to dress, hired a cab and went straight
to the coffee- house. Before he was properly inside the door he shouted,
“Boy, a cup of chocolate!” and immediately made for the mirror: the nose was
there. He turned round cheerfully and looked ironically, slightly screwing up
one eye, at two military gentlemen one of whom had a nose no bigger than a
waistcoat button. After that he set off for the office of the department
where he was trying to obtain the post of a vice-governor or, failing that,
of a procurement officer. Passing through the reception room, he glanced in
the mirror: the nose was there. Then he went to visit another collegiate
assessor or major, a great wag, to whom he often said in reply to various
derisive remarks: “Oh, come off it, I know you, you’re a kidder.” On the way
there he thought: “If the major doesn’t explode with laughter on seeing me,
it’s a sure sign that everything is in its proper place.” The collegiate
assessor did not explode. “That’s great, that’s great, damn it!” thought
to himself. On the street he met Mrs. KovalyovPodtochina, the field officer’s wife, together with her
daughter, bowed to them and was hailed with joyful exclamations, and so
everything was all right, no part of him was missing. He talked with them a
very long time and, deliberately taking out his snuff- box, right in front of
them kept stuffing his nose with snuff at both entrances for a very long
time, saying to himself: “So much for you, you
women, you stupid hens! I won’t marry the daughter all the same. Anything
else, par amour—by all means.” And from that time on, Major Kovalyov went strolling about as though nothing had
happened, both on Nevsky Avenue, and in the
theaters, and everywhere. And his nose too, as though nothing had happened,
stayed on his face, betraying no sign of having played truant. And thereafter
Major Kovalyov was always seen in good humor,
smiling, running after absolutely all the pretty ladies, and once even
stopping in front of a little shop in Gostinny Dvor and buying himself the ribbon of some order,
goodness knows why, for he hadn’t been decorated with any order.
That is the kind of affair that happened in the northern capital of our
vast empire. Only now, on second thoughts, can we see that there is much that
is improbable in it. Without speaking of the fact that the supernatural
detachment of the nose and its appearance in various places in the guise of a
state councillor is indeed strange, how is it that Kovalyov did not realize that one does not advertise for
one’s nose through the newspaper office? I do not mean to say that
advertising rates appear to me too high: that’s nonsense, and I am not at all
one of those mercenary people. But it’s improper, embarrassing, not nice! And then again—how did the nose come to be in a
newly baked loaf, and how about Ivan Yakovlevich? …
No, this is something I can’t understand, positively can’t understand. But
the strangest, the most incomprehensible thing of all, is how authors can
choose such subjects. I confess that this is quite inconceivable; it is
indeed … no, no, I just can’t understand it at all! In the first place, there
is absolutely no benefit in it for the fatherland; in the second place … but
in the second place, there is no benefit either. I simply don’t know what to
make of it. …
And yet, in spite of it all, though, of course, we may assume this and
that and the other, perhaps even … And after all, where aren’t there
incongruities?—But all the same, when you think about it, there really is
something in all this. Whatever anyone says, such things happen in this
world; rarely, but they do.
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