Thursday, March 29, 2012
To ask for money,
2
To ask for money, even a salary, is a most disgusting business,
especially if one feels in the recesses of one's conscience that
one has not quite earned it. Yet the evening before, my mother had
been whispering to my sister apart from Versilov ("so as not to
worry Andrey Petrovitch") that she intended to take the ikon
which for some reason was particularly precious to her to the
pawnbroker's. I was to be paid fifty roubles a month, but I had no
idea how I should receive the money; nothing had been said to me
about it.
Meeting the clerk downstairs three days before, I inquired of him
whom one was to ask for one's salary. He looked at me with a smile
as though of astonishment (he did not like me).
"Oh, you get a salary?"
I thought that on my answering he would add:
"What for?"
But he merely answered drily, that he "knew nothing about it," and
buried himself in the ruled exercise book into which he was copying
accounts from some bills.
He was not unaware, however, that I did something. A fortnight
before I had spent four days over work he had given me, making a
fair copy, and as it turned out, almost a fresh draft of something.
It was a perfect avalanche of "ideas" of the prince's which he was
preparing to present to the board of directors. These had to be
put together into a whole and clothed in suitable language. I
spent a whole day with the prince over it afterwards, and he argued
very warmly with me, but was well satisfied in the end. But I
don't know whether he read the paper or not. I say nothing of the
two or three letters, also about business, which I wrote at his
request.
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