Thunderous
applause from the audience when the blood-red curtain came down ending the
performance of the comedy drama 'Government Inspector' that evening. This
performance tells the story of how nervous the Governor and other officials
were when they found out that there would be an inspection by a Government
Inspector who came incognito to their area. They are frantically trying to
cover up all the bad things in this area which is infiltrated by corruption
everywhere, which is depicted hilariously and full of satire. The audience who
filled the Akimov Comedy Theater greeted the performance with smiles and
laughter. It was fitting that the audience's response was like that, it is said
that Tsar Nicholas I chuckled at the premiere of this comedy drama and gave a
standing ovation at the end of the performance. Although this drama is actually
a humorous criticism of the depravity of bureaucrats under the Tsarist
government.
Before
the applause died down I slipped out, because I had an appointment to meet
someone very important. Who can say, I made an appointment to meet with
Nikolai, the playwright of this drama! So I rushed down Nevsky Prospekt, the famous
street in St Petersburg, on a cold night. We arranged to meet at the Literary
Café, a café frequented by many aristocrats, poets and other artists. The
famous Russian poet Alexander Pushkin also often hung out here. When I arrived,
Nikolai was already sitting waiting in the corner of the room with dark brown
wooden walls. The hanging lights make the atmosphere of this café cozy and
calm. The chairs are also patterned with dark brown checks, making this room feels
truly aristocratic.
Nikolai
stood up and greeted me in a friendly manner. It turns out he was small, with
legs that were too short for his body. His rather baby face was plastered with
long strands of hair that hung down from her forehead to the side of his face
covering his ears. His nose looked too ponty for his face. He wore modest
clothes, not showing off his fame. With a smile he invited me to sit down.
I
started the conversation:
“Nikolai, I have just finished
watching 'The Government Inspector' at the Akimov Building..., I am amazed that
such a horrendous performance was permitted by the Tsar, who imposed strict
censorship on all works in Russia... The audience responded with uproarious
laughter. laughing at the corrupt behavior of the governor and his government
officials, who were worried about being investigated by the Government
Inspector, who would come incognito. The governor and government officials are
frantically trying to cover up their lies and corruption in every possible way.
They even bribed the person they thought was the undercover Government
Inspector.… There had never been a performance like this before, this was truly
a new movement for the performance art in Russia…”
Nikolai:
“However, there were also hue and cry
raised by the offended press and officials…”
I
said:
“It is not surprising that this drama
dares to attack the bureaucratic foundations of the government in Russia. It
directly mocked all officials, and exposing corruption among high-ranking
officials. It hurled insults directly at all Russian local government
officials, and, indirectly, pointed out the system of corruption that existed
among the highest officials.”
Nikolai:
“In
the Inspector-General I resolved to gather together all the bad in Russia I
then knew into one heap, all the injustice that was practiced in those places
and in those human relations in which more than in anything justice is demanded
of men, and to have one big laugh over it all. But that, as is well known,
produced an outburst of excitement. Through my laughter, which never before
came to me with such force, the reader sensed profound sorrow. I myself felt
that my laughter was no longer the same as it had been, that in my writings I
could no longer be the same as in the past, and that the need to divert myself
with innocent, careless scenes had ended along with my young years.”
I
said:
"It
is said that Aleksandr Pushkin, the famous Russian poet, was one of your first
admirers... how is your relationship with Pushkin?"
Nikolai:
“Our relationship was very close,
Pushkin considered me his student, and I respected Pushkin and considered him
my mentor. I really respect the taste and criticism he gave me. And ‘Government
Inspector’ was the theme he suggested to me ….”
I
asked:
“Why do you write a satirical comedy
like this?”
Nikolai:
“The
comic, actually is hidden everywhere, only living in the midst of it we are not
conscious of it; but if the artist brings it into his art, on the stage say, we
shall roll about with laughter and only wonder we did not notice it before.”
I smiled:
"Yes,
I remember when the governor in this play remembered something he was careless
about: ‘Good God, though, I forgot that about forty cart-loads of rubbish have
been dumped against that fence. What a vile, filthy town this is! A monument,
or even only a fence, is erected, and instantly they bring a lot of dirt
together, from the devil knows where, and dump it there.”
Nikolai:
“When all his depravity was revealed,
the Governor was very worried about his reputation, and complained: ‘Now his
coach bells are jingling all along the road. He is publishing the story to the
whole world. Not only will you be made a laughing-stock of, but some scribbler,
some ink-splasher will put you into a comedy. There's the horrid sting. He
won't spare either rank or station. And everybody will grin and clap his hands.
What are you laughing at? You are laughing at yourself, oh you! ‘ … Stamping
his feet.”
I
said:
“However, about your comical works,
Pushkin once said: ‘Behind laughter we can feel sad tears.’…. This is really
felt in a short story you wrote entitled 'The Overcoat'.... concerns a simple
humble scribe. His income was so small that he only had one overcoat and it had
been worn for too long and was full of patches. Through various thrifts and
sacrifices, which you describe comically, the scribe finally had a beautiful
new robe, which he adored all the time. But one day he was robbed and the overcoat
he was wearing were taken by the robbers... How tragic,... even though the
story is told in comical way .....”.
Nikolai:
“Yes, in a certain department there was a certain
official -- not a very high one, it must be allowed -- short of stature,
somewhat pock-marked, red-haired, and short-sighted, with a bald forehead,
wrinkled cheeks, and a complexion of the kind known as sanguine.
His
family name was Bashmatchkin. This name is evidently derived from
"bashmak" (shoe); but when, at what time, and in what manner, is not
known. His father and grandfather, and all the Bashmatchkins, always wore
boots, which only had new heels two or three times a year.
I
said:
“His
complete name was Akakiy Akakievitch, and it is said that he was very dedicated
to his work as a scribe…”
Nikolai:
“It
would be difficult to find another man who lived so entirely for his duties. It
is not enough to say that Akakiy laboured with zeal: no, he laboured with love.
In his copying, he found a varied and agreeable employment. Enjoyment was
written on his face: some letters were even favourites with him; and when he
encountered these, he smiled, winked, and worked with his lips, till it seemed
as though each letter might be read in his face, as his pen traced it. If his
pay had been in proportion to his zeal, he would, perhaps, to his great
surprise, have been made even a councillor of state. But he worked, as his
companions, the wits, put it, like a horse in a mill.”
I
said:
"Hmm,
I remember that you also worked as a scribe, copying clerk..., where did you
ever work like that...?"
Nikolai:
“When
I left college at nineteen and went to St. Petersburg, where I secured a
position as copying clerk in a government department. He did not keep his
position long, yet long enough to store away in his mind a number of
bureaucratic types.”
I
said:
“So
those experiences are what provide material for your writings, regarding the
ins and outs of bureaucracy in government, with all its depravity..."
Nikolai:
“But,
well, even though Tsar Nicholas I chuckled during the performance of
'Government Inspector', this performance had made fun of everyone. They said, perhaps rightly, that they
themselves were the targets of the satire. Naturally official Russia did not
relish this innovation in dramatic art, and indignation ran high among them and
their supporters. Bulgarin led the attack. Everything that is usually said
against a new departure in literature or art was said against the drama. It was
not original. It was improbable, impossible, coarse, vulgar; lacked plot. It
turned on a stale anecdote that everybody knew. It was a rank farce. The
characters were mere caricatures. ‘What sort of a town was it that did not hold
a single honest soul?’
The
ensuing uproar in polite society was so intense that I felt I had to flee
Russia for Europe, eventually settling in Rome “
I
asked: “Do you feel comfortable in Rome?”
Nikolai:
“I
adore Rome. I studied art, read Italian literature and developed a passion for
opera. The religious painter Aleksandr Ivanov who worked in Rome, became my
close friend, and I also met several Russian nobles who visited there,
including Princess Zinaida Volkonsky, we often met. “
I asked:
“Did you write a lot in Rome?”
Nikolai:
“Yes, the short story ‘Overcoat’ I wrote while in Rome. Also, most part of ‘The Dead Souls’ I wrote there.”
I
said:
“Oh, the novel Dead Souls, your
masterpiece…. At first, I thought that the title Dead Souls was a metaphor,
about Souls not caring anything, or something like that..., but it turns out
the meaning is completely different. This novel tells the story of Chichikov,
who you present as the hero, an accomplished imposter who, after several
experiences of bad luck, wants to get rich quickly. Among his tricks he had the
idea to buy dead slaves, which their deaths had not been officially recorded in
the official census. So, officially they are still alive. Then, he had the idea
to buy dead slaves, as if they were still alive, at a cheap price from the
landowner who owned the slaves. Thus Chichikov had proof that he was a rich man
who owned many slaves, which he could use to obtain capital loans from the
bank. That way, he could pawn the certificate of ownership of the slaves to a
bank to borrow a lot of money for capital for his agricultural business. This
is something very unique, which we have never heard of, and never even thought
about... how do you get idea of the story like this...?”
Nikolai:
"I
got the theme of this novel from Pushkin too, which is based on real
event..."
I
said:
"But,
that Chichikov, whom you put forward as the hero of this story, is an imposter,
he is a rascal..."
Nikolai:
“It
does not lie in me to take a virtuous character for my hero: and I will tell
you why. It is because it is high time that a rest were given to the “poor, but
virtuous” individual; it is because the phrase “a man of worth” has grown into
a by-word; it is because the “man of worth” has become converted into a horse,
and there is not a writer but rides him and flogs him, in and out of season; it
is because the “man of worth” has been starved until he has not a shred of his
virtue left, and all that remains of his body is but the ribs and the hide; it
is because the “man of worth” is for ever being smuggled upon the scene; it is
because the “man of worth” has at length forfeited every one’s respect. For
these reasons do I reaffirm that it is high time to yoke a rascal to the
shafts. Let us yoke that rascal.”
I
said:
“I remember Chichikov's father's
advice to him when he was little, which he always remembered: ‘See here, my
boy. Do your lessons well, do not idle or play the fool, and above all things,
see that you please your teachers. So long as you observe these rules you will
make progress, and surpass your fellows, even if God shall have denied you
brains, and you should fail in your studies. Also, do not consort overmuch with
your comrades, for they will do you no good; but, should you do so, then make
friends with the richer of them, since one day they may be useful to you. Also,
never entertain or treat any one, but see that every one entertains and treats
YOU. Lastly, and above all else, keep and save your every kopeck. To save money
is the most important thing in life. Always a friend or a comrade may fail you,
and be the first to desert you in a time of adversity; but never will a KOPECK
fail you, whatever may be your plight. Nothing in the world cannot be done,
cannot be attained, with the aid of money.”
Nikolai:
“More
than once, while taking these walks, our hero pondered the idea of himself
becoming a landowner—not now, of course, but later, when his chief aim should
have been achieved, and he had got into his hands the necessary means for
living the quiet life of the proprietor of an estate. Yes, and at these times
there would include itself in his castle-building the figure of a young, fresh,
fair-faced maiden of the mercantile or other rich grade of society, a woman who
could both play and sing. He also dreamed of little descendants who should
perpetuate the name of Chichikov; perhaps a frolicsome little boy and a fair
young daughter, or possibly, two boys and quite two or three daughters; so that
all should know that he had really lived and had his being, that he had not
merely roamed the world like a spectre or a shadow; so that for him and his the
country should never be put to shame. And from that he would go on to fancy
that a title appended to his rank would not be a bad thing—the title of State
Councillor, for instance, which was deserving of all honour and respect. Ah, it
is a common thing for a man who is taking a solitary walk so to detach himself
from the irksome realities of the present that he is able to stir and to excite
and to provoke his imagination to the conception of things he knows can never
really come to pass!”
THE
END
This
article is an imaginary interview in memory of Nikolai Gogol.
Sources:
The Inspector General by Nikolai Gogol.
The Overcoat by Nikolai Gogol.
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