Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume V).djvu/66

Rh very likely he is doing even that at his master's bidding. Then, we are a soft people too; it 's not difficult to keep the curb on us. So that 's the way Mr. Gubaryov has become a power among us; he has chipped and chipped away at one point, till he has chipped himself into success. People see that he is a man who has a great opinion of himself, who believes in himself, and commands. That 's the great thing, that he can command; it follows that he must be right, and we ought to obey him. All our sects, our Onuphrists and Akulinists, were founded exactly in that way. He who holds the rod is the corporal.' Potugin's cheeks were flushed and his eye's grew dim but, strange to say, his speech, cruel and even malicious as it was, had no touch of bitterness, but rather of sorrow, genuine and sincere sorrow. 'How did you come to know Gubaryov?' asked Litvinov. 'I have known him a long while. And observe, another peculiarity among us; a certain writer, for example, spent his whole life in inveighing in prose and verse against drunkenness, and attacking the system of the drink monopoly, and lo and behold! he went and bought two spirit distilleries and opened a hundred drink-shops — and it made no difference!