| PART 7
Chapter 5
 (continued)"You mean...what has Cordelia to do with it?" Levin asked
 timidly, forgetting that the fantasia was supposed to represent
 King Lear. "Cordelia comes in...see here!" said Pestsov, tapping his finger
 on the satiny surface of the program he held in his hand and
 passing it to Levin. Only then Levin recollected the title of the fantasia, and made
 haste to read in the Russian translation the lines from
 Shakespeare that were printed on the back of the program. "You can't follow it without that," said Pestsov, addressing
 Levin, as the person he had been speaking to had gone away, and
 he had no one to talk to. In the entr'acte Levin and Pestsov fell into an argument upon
 the merits and defects of music of the Wagner school.  Levin
 maintained that the mistake of Wagner and all his followers lay
 in their trying to take music into the sphere of another art,
 just as poetry goes wrong when it tries to paint a face as the
 art of painting ought to do, and as an instance of this mistake
 he cited the sculptor who carved in marble certain poetic
 phantasms flitting round the figure of the poet on the pedestal.
 "These phantoms were so far from being phantoms that they were
 positively clinging on the ladder," said Levin.  The comparison
 pleased him, but he could not remember whether he had not used
 the same phrase before, and to Pestsov, too, and as he said it he
 felt confused. Pestsov maintained that art is one, and that it can attain its
 highest manifestations only by conjunction with all kinds of art. The second piece that was performed Levin could not hear.
 Pestsov, who was standing beside him, was talking to him almost
 all the time, condemning the music for its excessive affected
 assumption of simplicity, and comparing it with the simplicity of
 the Pre-Raphaelites in painting.  As he went out Levin met many
 more acquaintances, with whom he talked of politics, of music,
 and of common acquaintances.  Among others he met Count Bol, whom
 he had utterly forgotten to call upon. |