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Short Fiction: The Examining Magistrate

Short Fiction
The Examining Magistrate
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Imprint
  3. A Living Chattel
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
  4. Joy
  5. At the Barber’s
  6. An Enigmatic Nature
  7. A Classical Student
  8. The Death of a Government Clerk
  9. A Daughter of Albion
  10. The Trousseau
  11. An Inquiry
  12. Fat and Thin
  13. A Tragic Actor
  14. A Slander
  15. The Bird Market
  16. Choristers
  17. The Album
  18. Minds in Ferment
  19. A Chameleon
  20. In the Graveyard
  21. Oysters
  22. The Swedish Match
    1. I
    2. II
  23. The Marshal’s Widow
  24. Small Fry
  25. In an Hotel
  26. Boots
  27. Nerves
  28. A Country Cottage
  29. Malingerers
  30. The Fish
  31. Gone Astray
  32. The Huntsman
  33. A Malefactor
  34. A Dead Body
  35. The Cook’s Wedding
  36. In a Strange Land
  37. Overdoing It
  38. Old Age
  39. Sorrow
  40. Oh! The Public
  41. Mari d’Elle
  42. The Looking-Glass
  43. Art
  44. A Blunder
  45. Children
  46. Misery
  47. An Actor’s End
  48. The Requiem
  49. Anyuta
  50. Ivan Matveyitch
  51. The Witch
  52. A Story Without an End
  53. A Joke
  54. Agafya
  55. A Nightmare
  56. Grisha
  57. Love
  58. Easter Eve
  59. Ladies
  60. Strong Impressions
  61. A Gentleman Friend
  62. A Happy Man
  63. The Privy Councillor
  64. A Day in the Country
  65. At a Summer Villa
  66. Panic Fears
  67. The Chemist’s Wife
  68. Not Wanted
  69. The Chorus Girl
  70. The Schoolmaster
  71. A Troublesome Visitor
  72. A Misfortune
  73. A Pink Stocking
  74. Martyrs
  75. The First-Class Passenger
  76. Talent
  77. The Dependents
  78. The Jeune Premier
  79. In the Dark
  80. A Trivial Incident
  81. A Tripping Tongue
  82. A Trifle from Life
  83. Difficult People
  84. In the Court
  85. A Peculiar Man
  86. Mire
    1. I
    2. II
  87. Dreams
  88. Hush!
  89. Excellent People
  90. An Incident
  91. The Orator
  92. A Work of Art
  93. Who Was to Blame?
  94. On the Road
  95. Vanka
  96. Champagne
  97. Frost
  98. The Beggar
  99. Enemies
  100. Darkness
  101. Polinka
  102. Drunk
  103. An Inadvertence
  104. Verotchka
  105. Shrove Tuesday
  106. A Defenceless Creature
  107. A Bad Business
  108. Home
  109. The Lottery Ticket
  110. Too Early!
  111. Typhus
  112. In Passion Week
  113. A Mystery
  114. The Cossack
  115. The Letter
  116. An Adventure
  117. The Examining Magistrate
  118. Aborigines
  119. Happiness
  120. Bad Weather
  121. A Play
  122. A Transgression
  123. From the Diary of a Violent-Tempered Man
  124. Uprooted
  125. A Father
  126. A Happy Ending
  127. In the Coach-House
  128. Zinotchka
  129. The Doctor
  130. The Pipe
  131. An Avenger
  132. The Post
  133. The Runaway
  134. A Problem
  135. The Old House
  136. The Cattle-Dealers
  137. Expensive Lessons
  138. The Lion and the Sun
  139. In Trouble
  140. The Kiss
  141. Boys
  142. Kashtanka
    1. I: Misbehaviour
    2. II: A Mysterious Stranger
    3. III: New and Very Agreeable Acquaintances
    4. IV: Marvels on a Hurdle
    5. V: Talent! Talent!
    6. VI: An Uneasy Night
    7. VII: An Unsuccessful Debut
  143. A Lady’s Story
  144. A Story Without a Title
  145. Sleepy
  146. The Steppe
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
  147. Lights
  148. The Beauties
    1. I
    2. II
  149. The Party
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
  150. The Shoemaker and the Devil
  151. The Bet
    1. I
    2. II
  152. The Princess
  153. A Dreary Story
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
  154. The Teacher of Literature
    1. I
    2. II
  155. A Nervous Breakdown
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
  156. The Horse-Stealers
  157. Gusev
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
  158. Peasant Wives
  159. The Wife
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
  160. The Grasshopper
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
  161. After the Theatre
  162. In Exile
  163. Terror
  164. Neighbours
  165. Ward No. 6
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
    9. IX
    10. X
    11. XI
    12. XII
    13. XIII
    14. XIV
    15. XV
    16. XVI
    17. XVII
    18. XVIII
    19. XIX
  166. The Two Volodyas
  167. Rothschild’s Fiddle
  168. The Student
  169. At a Country House
  170. The Head-Gardener’s Story
  171. A Woman’s Kingdom
    1. I: Christmas Eve
    2. II: Christmas Morning
    3. III: Dinner
    4. IV: Evening
  172. Anna on the Neck
    1. I
    2. II
  173. Whitebrow
  174. Ariadne
  175. The Helpmate
  176. The Murder
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
  177. Three Years
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
    9. IX
    10. X
    11. XI
    12. XII
    13. XIII
    14. XIV
    15. XV
    16. XVI
    17. XVII
  178. An Artist’s Story
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
  179. My Life
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
    9. IX
    10. X
    11. XI
    12. XII
    13. XIII
    14. XIV
    15. XV
    16. XVI
    17. XVII
    18. XVIII
    19. XIX
    20. XX
  180. Peasants
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
    9. IX
  181. The Petchenyeg
  182. At Home
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
  183. The Schoolmistress
  184. The Man in a Case
  185. Gooseberries
  186. About Love
  187. The Darling
  188. The New Villa
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
  189. On Official Duty
  190. The Lady with the Dog
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
  191. At Christmas Time
    1. I
    2. II
  192. In the Ravine
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
    7. VII
    8. VIII
    9. IX
  193. The Bishop
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
  194. Betrothed
    1. I
    2. II
    3. III
    4. IV
    5. V
    6. VI
  195. Endnotes
  196. Colophon
  197. Uncopyright

The Examining Magistrate

A district doctor and an examining magistrate were driving one fine spring day to an inquest. The examining magistrate, a man of five and thirty, looked dreamily at the horses and said:

“There is a great deal that is enigmatic and obscure in nature; and even in everyday life, doctor, one must often come upon phenomena which are absolutely incapable of explanation. I know, for instance, of several strange, mysterious deaths, the cause of which only spiritualists and mystics will undertake to explain; a clearheaded man can only lift up his hands in perplexity. For example, I know of a highly cultured lady who foretold her own death and died without any apparent reason on the very day she had predicted. She said that she would die on a certain day, and she did die.”

“There’s no effect without a cause,” said the doctor. “If there’s a death there must be a cause for it. But as for predicting it there’s nothing very marvellous in that. All our ladies⁠—all our females, in fact⁠—have a turn for prophecies and presentiments.”

“Just so, but my lady, doctor, was quite a special case. There was nothing like the ladies’ or other females’ presentiments about her prediction and her death. She was a young woman, healthy and clever, with no superstitions of any sort. She had such clear, intelligent, honest eyes; an open, sensible face with a faint, typically Russian look of mockery in her eyes and on her lips. There was nothing of the fine lady or of the female about her, except⁠—if you like⁠—her beauty! She was graceful, elegant as that birch tree; she had wonderful hair. That she may be intelligible to you, I will add, too, that she was a person of the most infectious gaiety and carelessness and that intelligent, good sort of frivolity which is only found in good-natured, lighthearted people with brains. Can one talk of mysticism, spiritualism, a turn for presentiment, or anything of that sort, in this case? She used to laugh at all that.”

The doctor’s chaise stopped by a well. The examining magistrate and the doctor drank some water, stretched, and waited for the coachman to finish watering the horses.

“Well, what did the lady die of?” asked the doctor when the chaise was rolling along the road again.

“She died in a strange way. One fine day her husband went in to her and said that it wouldn’t be amiss to sell their old coach before the spring and to buy something rather newer and lighter instead, and that it might be as well to change the left trace horse and to put Bobtchinsky (that was the name of one of her husband’s horses) in the shafts.

“His wife listened to him and said:

“ ‘Do as you think best, but it makes no difference to me now. Before the summer I shall be in the cemetery.’

“Her husband, of course, shrugged his shoulders and smiled.

“ ‘I am not joking,’ she said. ‘I tell you in earnest that I shall soon be dead.’

“ ‘What do you mean by soon?’

“ ‘Directly after my confinement. I shall bear my child and die.’

“The husband attached no significance to these words. He did not believe in presentiments of any sort, and he knew that ladies in an interesting condition are apt to be fanciful and to give way to gloomy ideas generally. A day later his wife spoke to him again of dying immediately after her confinement, and then every day she spoke of it and he laughed and called her a silly woman, a fortune-teller, a crazy creature. Her approaching death became an idée fixe with his wife. When her husband would not listen to her she would go into the kitchen and talk of her death to the nurse and the cook.

“ ‘I haven’t long to live now, nurse,’ she would say. ‘As soon as my confinement is over I shall die. I did not want to die so early, but it seems it’s my fate.’

“The nurse and the cook were in tears, of course. Sometimes the priest’s wife or some lady from a neighbouring estate would come and see her and she would take them aside and open her soul to them, always harping on the same subject, her approaching death. She spoke gravely with an unpleasant smile, even with an angry face which would not allow any contradiction. She had been smart and fashionable in her dress, but now in view of her approaching death she became slovenly; she did not read, she did not laugh, she did not dream aloud. What was more she drove with her aunt to the cemetery and selected a spot for her tomb. Five days before her confinement she made her will. And all this, bear in mind, was done in the best of health, without the faintest hint of illness or danger. A confinement is a difficult affair and sometimes fatal, but in the case of which I am telling you every indication was favourable, and there was absolutely nothing to be afraid of. Her husband was sick of the whole business at last. He lost his temper one day at dinner and asked her:

“ ‘Listen, Natasha, when is there going to be an end of this silliness?’

“ ‘It’s not silliness, I am in earnest.’

“ ‘Nonsense, I advise you to give over being silly that you may not feel ashamed of it afterwards.’

“Well, the confinement came. The husband got the very best midwife from the town. It was his wife’s first confinement, but it could not have gone better. When it was all over she asked to look at her baby. She looked at it and said:

“ ‘Well, now I can die.’

“She said goodbye, shut her eyes, and half an hour later gave up her soul to God. She was fully conscious up to the last moment. Anyway when they gave her milk instead of water she whispered softly:

“ ‘Why are you giving me milk instead of water?’

“So that is what happened. She died as she predicted.”

The examining magistrate paused, gave a sigh and said:

“Come, explain why she died. I assure you on my honour, this is not invented, it’s a fact.”

The doctor looked at the sky meditatively.

“You ought to have had an inquest on her,” he said.

“Why?”

“Why, to find out the cause of her death. She didn’t die because she had predicted it. She poisoned herself most probably.”

The examining magistrate turned quickly, facing the doctor, and screwing up his eyes, asked:

“And from what do you conclude that she poisoned herself?”

“I don’t conclude it, but I assume it. Was she on good terms with her husband?”

“H’m, not altogether. There had been misunderstandings soon after their marriage. There were unfortunate circumstances. She had found her husband on one occasion with a lady. She soon forgave him however.”

“And which came first, her husband’s infidelity or her idea of dying?”

The examining magistrate looked attentively at the doctor as though he were trying to imagine why he put that question.

“Excuse me,” he said, not quite immediately. “Let me try and remember.” The examining magistrate took off his hat and rubbed his forehead. “Yes, yes … it was very shortly after that incident that she began talking of death. Yes, yes.”

“Well, there, do you see? … In all probability it was at that time that she made up her mind to poison herself, but, as most likely she did not want to kill her child also, she put it off till after her confinement.”

“Not likely, not likely! … it’s impossible. She forgave him at the time.”

“That she forgave it quickly means that she had something bad in her mind. Young wives do not forgive quickly.”

The examining magistrate gave a forced smile, and, to conceal his too noticeable agitation, began lighting a cigarette.

“Not likely, not likely,” he went on. “No notion of anything of the sort being possible ever entered into my head. … And besides … he was not so much to blame as it seems. … He was unfaithful to her in rather a queer way, with no desire to be; he came home at night somewhat elevated, wanted to make love to somebody, his wife was in an interesting condition … then he came across a lady who had come to stay for three days⁠—damnation take her⁠—an empty-headed creature, silly and not good-looking. It couldn’t be reckoned as an infidelity. His wife looked at it in that way herself and soon … forgave it. Nothing more was said about it. …”

“People don’t die without a reason,” said the doctor.

“That is so, of course, but all the same … I cannot admit that she poisoned herself. But it is strange that the idea has never struck me before! And no one thought of it! Everyone was astonished that her prediction had come to pass, and the idea … of such a death was far from their mind. And indeed, it cannot be that she poisoned herself! No!”

The examining magistrate pondered. The thought of the woman who had died so strangely haunted him all through the inquest. As he noted down what the doctor dictated to him he moved his eyebrows gloomily and rubbed his forehead.

“And are there really poisons that kill one in a quarter of an hour, gradually, without any pain?” he asked the doctor while the latter was opening the skull.

“Yes, there are. Morphia for instance.”

“H’m, strange. I remember she used to keep something of the sort. … But it could hardly be.”

On the way back the examining magistrate looked exhausted, he kept nervously biting his moustache, and was unwilling to talk.

“Let us go a little way on foot,” he said to the doctor. “I am tired of sitting.”

After walking about a hundred paces, the examining magistrate seemed to the doctor to be overcome with fatigue, as though he had been climbing up a high mountain. He stopped and, looking at the doctor with a strange look in his eyes, as though he were drunk, said:

“My God, if your theory is correct, why it’s … it was cruel, inhuman! She poisoned herself to punish someone else! Why, was the sin so great? Oh, my God! And why did you make me a present of this damnable idea, doctor!”

The examining magistrate clutched at his head in despair, and went on:

“What I have told you was about my own wife, about myself. Oh, my God! I was to blame, I wounded her, but can it have been easier to die than to forgive? That’s typical feminine logic⁠—cruel, merciless logic. Oh, even then when she was living she was cruel! I recall it all now! It’s all clear to me now!”

As the examining magistrate talked he shrugged his shoulders, then clutched at his head. He got back into the carriage, then walked again. The new idea the doctor had imparted to him seemed to have overwhelmed him, to have poisoned him; he was distracted, shattered in body and soul, and when he got back to the town he said goodbye to the doctor, declining to stay to dinner though he had promised the doctor the evening before to dine with him.

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