The Billionaire
by Maxim
Gorkiy
Click here for reading tip #1.
The kings
of steel, of petroleum, and all the other kings of
the United States have always in a high degree excited
my power of imagination. It seemed to me certain that
these people who possess so much money could not be
like other mortals.
Each of
them (so I said to myself) must call his own, at least,
three stomachs and a hundred and fifty teeth. I did
not doubt that the millionaire ate without intermission,
from six o'clock in the morning till midnight. It
goes without saying, the most exquisite and sumptuous
viands! Toward evening, then, he must be tired of
the hard chewing, to such a degree that (so I pictured
to myself) he gave orders to his servants to digest
the meals that he had swallowed with satisfaction
during the day. Completely limp, covered with sweat
and almost suffocated, he had to be put to bed by
his servants, in order that on the next morning at
six o'clock he might be able to begin again his work
of eating.
Nevertheless,
it must be impossible for such a man -- whatever pains
he might take -- to consume merely the half of the
interest of his wealth.
To be sure,
such a life is awful, but what is one to do? For what
is one a millionaire -- what am I saying? -- a billionaire,
if one cannot eat more than every other common mortal!
I pictured to myself that this privileged being wore
cloth-of-gold underclothing, shoes with gold nails,
and instead of a hat a diadem of diamonds on his head.
His clothes, made of the most expensive velvet, must
be at least fifty feet long and fastened with three
hundred gold buttons; and on holidays he must be compelled
by dire necessity to put on over each other six pairs
of costly trousers. Such a costume is certainly very
uncomfortable. But, if one is rich like that, one
can't after all dress like all the world.
The pocket
of a billionaire, I pictured to myself so big that
therein easily a church or the whole senate could
find room. The paunch of such a gentleman I conceived
to myself like the hull of an ocean steamer, the length
and breadth of which I was not able to think out.
Of the bulk, too, of a billionaire I could never give
myself a clear idea; but I supposed that the coverlet
under which he sleeps measures a dozen hundred square
yards. If he chews tobacco, it was unquestionably
only the best kind, of which he always sticks two
pounds at a time into his mouth. And on taking snuff
(I thought to myself) he must use up a pound at a
pinch. Indeed, money will be spent!
His fingers
must possess the magic power of lengthening at will.
In spirit, I saw a New York billionaire as he stretched
out his hand across Bering Strait and brought back
a dollar that had rolled somewhere toward Siberia,
without especially exerting himself thereby.
Curiously,
I could form to myself no clear conception of the
head of this monster. In this organism consisting
of gigantic muscles and bones that is made for squeezing
money out of all things, a head seemed to me really
quite superfluous.
Click here for reading tip #2.
Who, now,
can conceive my astonishment when, standing facing
one of these fabulous beings, I arrived at the conviction
that a billionaire is a human being like all the rest!
I saw there
comfortably reclining in an armchair a long, wizened
old man, who held his brown, sinewy hands folded across
a body of quite ordinary dimensions. The flabby skin
of his face was carefully shaved. The underlip, which
hung loosely down, covered solidly built jaws, in
which gilded teeth were stuck. The upper lip, smooth,
narrow and pallid, scarcely moved when the old man
spoke. Colorless eyes without brows, a perfectly bald
skull. It might be thought that a little skin was
wanting to this reddish face, to this countenance
that was expressionless and puckered like that of
one new-born. Was this being just beginning its life,
or was it already nearing its end?
Nothing
in his dress distinguished him from the ordinary mortal.
A ring, a watch, and his teeth were all the gold he
carried with him. Scarcely half a pound, all told!
Taken altogether, the appearance of the man recalled
that of an old servant of an aristocratic family in
Europe.
The furnishing
of the room in which he received me had nothing unusually
luxurious about it. The furniture was solid; that
is all that can be said. Oftentimes elephants probably
come into this house, I involuntarily thought at the
sight of the heavy, substantial pieces of furniture.
'Are you
the billionaire?' I asked, since I could not trust
my eyes.
'Yes, indeed,'
he answered, nodding convincingly with his head.
'How much
meat can you consume for breakfast?'
'I eat no
meat in the morning,' he avowed. 'A quarter of an
orange, an egg, a small cup of tea, that's all . .
.'
His innocent
child's-eyes blinked with a feeble luster, like two
drops of muddy water.
'Good,'
I began again, half disconcerted. 'But be honest with
me; tell me the truth. How often in the day do you
eat?'
'Twice,'
he answered, peacefully. 'Breakfast and dinner suffice
me. At noon I take soup, a little white meat, vegetables,
fruit, a cup of coffee, a cigar . . .'
My surprise
grew apace. I drew breath, and went on:
'But, if
that's true, what do you do with your money?'
'Make more
money!'
'What for?'
'To make
more money out of that!'
'What for?'
I repeated.
He leaned
toward me, his hands supported by the arms of his
chair, and with some curiosity in his expression he
said:
'You are
probably cracked?'
'And you?'
I said . . .
The old
man inclined his head, and, whistling softly through
the gold of his teeth, he said:
'Droll wag!
. . . You are the first human being of your species
that I ever became acquainted with.'
Then he
bent his head back and looked at me some time, silently
and scrutinizingly.
'What do
you do?' I began again.
'Make money,'
he answered, shortly.
'Oh, you're
a counterfeiter!' I exclaimed, joyfully, for I thought
I had finally got to the bottom of the mystery. But
the billionaire flew into a passion. His whole body
shook, his eyes rolled actively.
'That is
unheard of!' he said, when he had calmed down. Then
he inflated his cheeks, I don't know why.
I considered,
and put further the following question to him:
'How do
you make money?'
Click here for reading tip #3.
'Oh, that's
very simple. I possess railroads; the farmers produce
useful commodities, which I transport to the markets.
I calculate exactly to myself how much money I must
leave the farmer, in order that he may not starve
and be able to produce further. The rest I keep myself
as transportation charges. That's surely very simple!'
'And are
the farmers satisfied with it?'
'Not all,
I believe,' he answered, with a naïve childishness.
'But they say that the people are never satisfied.
There are always odd characters who want still more
. . .'
Translated from the
German for The Arena by Newell
Dunbar.
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