your heart, finer than you can read of in a fairy tale. I am a man of no importance, but I feel as though I
were limitless: I embrace the whole world!"
The passengers, looking at the tipsy and blissful bridegroom, are infected by his cheerfulness and no
longer feel sleepy. Instead of one listener, Ivan Alexyevitch has now an audience of five. He wriggles
and splutters, gesticulates, and prattles on without ceasing. He laughs and they all laugh.
"Gentlemen, gentlemen, don't think so much! Damn all this analysis! If you want a drink, drink, no
need to philosophize as to whether it's bad for you or not. . . . Damn all this philosophy and
psychology!"
The guard walks through the compartment.
"My dear fellow," the bridegroom addresses him, "when you pass through the carriage No. 209 look out
for a lady in a grey hat with a white bird and tell her I'm here!"
"Yes, sir. Only there isn't a No. 209 in this train; there's 219!"
"Well, 219, then! It's all the same. Tell that lady, then, that her husband is all right!"
Ivan Alexyevitch suddenly clutches his head and groans:
"Husband. . . . Lady. . . . All in a minute! Husband. . . . Ha-ha! I am a puppy that needs thrashing, and
here I am a husband! Ach, idiot! But think of her! . . . Yesterday she was a little girl, a midget . . . it s
simply incredible!"
"Nowadays it really seems strange to see a happy man," observes one of the passengers; "one as soon
expects to see a white elephant."
"Yes, and whose fault is it?" says Ivan Alexyevitch, stretching his long legs and thrusting out his feet
with their very pointed toes. "If you are not happy it's your own fault! Yes, what else do you suppose it
is? Man is the creator of his own happiness. If you want to be happy you will be, but you don't want to
be! You obstinately turn away from happiness."
"Why, what next! How do you make that out?"
"Very simply. Nature has ordained that at a certain stage in his life man should love. When that time
comes you should love like a house on fire, but you won't heed the dictates of nature, you keep waiting
for something. What's more, it's laid down by law that the normal man should enter upon matrimony.
There's no happiness without marriage. When the propitious moment has come, get married. There's no
use in shilly-shallying. . . . But you don't get married, you keep waiting for something! Then the
Scriptures tell us that 'wine maketh glad the heart of man.' . . . If you feel happy and you want to feel
better still, then go to the refreshment bar and have a drink. The great thing is not to be too clever, but
to follow the beaten track! The beaten track is a grand thing!"
"You say that man is the creator of his own happiness. How the devil is he the creator of it when a
toothache or an ill-natured mother-in-law is enough to scatter his happiness to the winds? Everything
depends on chance. If we had an accident at this moment you'd sing a different tune."