Glad that he had been so successful in the part of peacemaker,
Kovrin went into the park. Sitting on a garden seat, thinking, he
heard the rattle of a carriage and a feminine laugh--visitors
were arriving. When the shades of evening began falling on the
garden, the sounds of the violin and singing voices reached him
indistinctly, and that reminded him of the black monk. Where, in
what land or in what planet, was that optical absurdity moving now?
Hardly had he recalled the legend and pictured in his imagination
the dark apparition he had seen in the rye-field, when, from behind
a pine-tree exactly opposite, there came out noiselessly, without
the slightest rustle, a man of medium height with uncovered grey
head, all in black, and barefooted like a beggar, and his black
eyebrows stood out conspicuously on his pale, death-like face.
Nodding his head graciously, this beggar or pilgrim came noiselessly
to the seat and sat down, and Kovrin recognised him as the black
monk.
For a minute they looked at one another, Kovrin with amazement, and
the monk with friendliness, and, just as before, a little slyness,
as though he were thinking something to himself.
"But you are a mirage," said Kovrin. "Why are you here and sitting
still? That does not fit in with the legend."
"That does not matter," the monk answered in a low voice, not
immediately turning his face towards him. "The legend, the mirage,
and I are all the products of your excited imagination. I am a
phantom."
"You can think as you like," said the monk, with a faint smile. "I
exist in your imagination, and your imagination is part of nature,
so I exist in nature."
"You have a very old, wise, and extremely expressive face, as though
you really had lived more than a thousand years," said Kovrin. "I
did not know that my imagination was capable of creating such
phenomena. But why do you look at me with such enthusiasm? Do you
like me?"
"Yes, you are one of those few who are justly called the chosen of
God. You do the service of eternal truth. Your thoughts, your
designs, the marvellous studies you are engaged in, and all your
life, bear the Divine, the heavenly stamp, seeing that they are
consecrated to the rational and the beautiful--that is, to what
is eternal."
"You said 'eternal truth.' . . . But is eternal truth of use to man
and within his reach, if there is no eternal life?"
"Yes, of course. A grand, brilliant future is in store for you men.
And the more there are like you on earth, the sooner will this
future be realised. Without you who serve the higher principle and
live in full understanding and freedom, mankind would be of little
account; developing in a natural way, it would have to wait a long
time for the end of its earthly history. You will lead it some
thousands of years earlier into the kingdom of eternal truth--and
therein lies your supreme service. You are the incarnation of the
blessing of God, which rests upon men."
"And what is the object of eternal life?" asked Kovrin.
"As of all life--enjoyment. True enjoyment lies in knowledge, and
eternal life provides innumerable and inexhaustible sources of
knowledge, and in that sense it has been said: 'In My Father's house
there are many mansions.'"
"If only you knew how pleasant it is to hear you!" said Kovrin,
rubbing his hands with satisfaction.
"But I know that when you go away I shall be worried by the question
of your reality. You are a phantom, an hallucination. So I am
mentally deranged, not normal?"
"What if you are? Why trouble yourself? You are ill because you
have overworked and exhausted yourself, and that means that you
have sacrificed your health to the idea, and the time is near at
hand when you will give up life itself to it. What could be better?
That is the goal towards which all divinely endowed, noble natures
strive."
"If I know I am mentally affected, can I trust myself?"
"And are you sure that the men of genius, whom all men trust, did
not see phantoms, too? The learned say now that genius is allied
to madness. My friend, healthy and normal people are only the common
herd. Reflections upon the neurasthenia of the age, nervous exhaustion
and degeneracy, et cetera, can only seriously agitate those who
place the object of life in the present--that is, the common
herd."
"The Romans used to say: Mens sana in corpore sano."
"Not everything the Greeks and the Romans said is true. Exaltation,
enthusiasm, ecstasy--all that distinguishes prophets, poets,
martyrs for the idea, from the common folk--is repellent to the
animal side of man--that is, his physical health. I repeat, if
you want to be healthy and normal, go to the common herd."
"Strange that you repeat what often comes into my mind," said Kovrin.
"It is as though you had seen and overheard my secret thoughts. But
don't let us talk about me. What do you mean by 'eternal truth'?"
The monk did not answer. Kovrin looked at him and could not distinguish
his face. His features grew blurred and misty. Then the monk's head
and arms disappeared; his body seemed merged into the seat and the
evening twilight, and he vanished altogether.
"The hallucination is over," said Kovrin; and he laughed. "It's a
pity."
He went back to the house, light-hearted and happy. The little the
monk had said to him had flattered, not his vanity, but his whole
soul, his whole being. To be one of the chosen, to serve eternal
truth, to stand in the ranks of those who could make mankind worthy
of the kingdom of God some thousands of years sooner--that is,
to free men from some thousands of years of unnecessary struggle,
sin, and suffering; to sacrifice to the idea everything--youth,
strength, health; to be ready to die for the common weal--what
an exalted, what a happy lot! He recalled his past--pure, chaste,
laborious; he remembered what he had learned himself and what he
had taught to others, and decided that there was no exaggeration
in the monk's words.
Tanya came to meet him in the park: she was by now wearing a different
dress.
"Are you here?" she said. "And we have been looking and looking for
you. . . . But what is the matter with you?" she asked in wonder,
glancing at his radiant, ecstatic face and eyes full of tears. "How
strange you are, Andryusha!"
"I am pleased, Tanya," said Kovrin, laying his hand on her shoulders.
"I am more than pleased: I am happy. Tanya, darling Tanya, you are
an extraordinary, nice creature. Dear Tanya, I am so glad, I am so
glad!"
"I have just passed through an exalted, wonderful, unearthly moment.
But I can't tell you all about it or you would call me mad and not
believe me. Let us talk of you. Dear, delightful Tanya! I love you,
and am used to loving you. To have you near me, to meet you a dozen
times a day, has become a necessity of my existence; I don't know
how I shall get on without you when I go back home."
"Oh," laughed Tanya, "you will forget about us in two days. We are
humble people and you are a great man."
"No; let us talk in earnest!" he said. "I shall take you with me,
Tanya. Yes? Will you come with me? Will you be mine?"
"Come," said Tanya, and tried to laugh again, but the laugh would
not come, and patches of colour came into her face.
She began breathing quickly and walked very quickly, but not to the
house, but further into the park.
"I was not thinking of it . . . I was not thinking of it," she said,
wringing her hands in despair.
And Kovrin followed her and went on talking, with the same radiant,
enthusiastic face:
"I want a love that will dominate me altogether; and that love only
you, Tanya, can give me. I am happy! I am happy!"
She was overwhelmed, and huddling and shrinking together, seemed
ten years older all at once, while he thought her beautiful and
expressed his rapture aloud: