| PART 5
Chapter 3
 A crowd of people, principally women, was thronging round the
 church lighted up for the wedding.  Those who had not succeeded
 in getting into the main entrance were crowding about the
 windows, pushing, wrangling, and peeping through the gratings. More than twenty carriages had already been drawn up in ranks
 along the street by the police.  A police officer, regardless of
 the frost, stood at the entrance, gorgeous in his uniform.  More
 carriages were continually driving up, and ladies wearing flowers
 and carrying their trains, and men taking off their helmets or
 black hats kept walking into the church.  Iside the church both
 lusters were already lighted, and all the candles before the holy
 pictures.  The gilt on the red ground of the holy picture-stand,
 and the gilt relief on the pictures, and the silver of the
 lusters and candlesticks, and the stones of the floor, and the
 rugs, and the banners above in the choir, and the steps of the
 altar, and the old blackened books, and the cassocks and
 surplices--all were flooded with light.  On the right side of the
 warm church, in the crowd of frock coats and white ties, uniforms
 and broadcloth, velvet, satin, hair and flowers, bare shoulders
 and arms and long gloves, there was discreet but lively
 conversation that echoed strangely in the high cupola.  Every
 time there was heard the creak of the opened door the
 conversation in the crowd died away, and everybody looked round
 expecting to see the bride and bridegroom come in.  But the door
 had opened more than ten times, and each time it was either a
 belated guest or guests, who joined the circle of the invited on
 the right, or a spectator, who had eluded or softened the police
 officer, and went to join the crowd of outsiders on the left. 
 Both the guests and the outside public had by now passed through
 all the phases of anticipation. At first they imagined that the bride and bridegroom would arrive
 immediately, and attached no importance at all to their being
 late.  Then they began to look more and more often towards the
 door, and to talk of whether anything could have happened.  Then
 the long delay began to be positively discomforting, and
 relations and guests tried to look as if they were not thinking
 of the bridegroom but were engrossed in conversation. |