11. Count Nestlebroad: That is, Count Karl Vasilievich Nesselrode (1780–1862), of Baltic German birth, who entered the Russian navy and then the diplomatic service under Alexander I, becoming foreign minister in 1816 and remaining in that capacity for more than forty years.
12. our lace: The city of Tula had four specialties: firearms, samovars, gingerbread, and lace.
13. Count Kleinmichel: Count Pyotr Andreevich Kleinmichel (1793–1869) served from 1842 to 1855 as chief administrator of highways and public buildings under Nicholas I.
14. Commandant Skobelev: In 1839, General Ivan Nikitich Skobelev (1778–1849) was commandant of the Peter-and-Paul Fortress in Petersburg, which served as a prison.
15. Martyn-Solsky: The narrator’s variant on the name of Martyn Dmitrievich Solsky (1793–1869), doctor in a guards regiment and member of the medical council of the ministry of internal affairs.
16. Count Chernyshev: Count Alexander Ivanovich Chernyshev (1786–1857), cavalry general and statesman, served as minister of war under Nicholas I from 1826 to 1852.
17. “deeds … of old”: A reference to lines from
The Spirit of Madame de Genlis
(1881)
1. A. B. Calmet: Leskov is mistaken about the middle initial. Antoine Augustin Calmet (1672–1757) was a Benedictine monk. His most well-known work,
2. Mmes de Sévigné … de Genlis: Leskov gives a list of six famous letter writers or memoirists of the reign of Louis XIV, all ladies, before he comes to Mme de Genlis. He misspells most of the names, but we give them in their correct form. Mme de Genlis (Stéphanie Félicité Ducrest de St. Aubin Brûlart, marquise de Sillery, comtesse de Genlis, 1746–1830) first entered the royal palace as lady-in-waiting to the duchesse de Chartres and became the governess of her children, one of whom, Louis Philippe d’Orléans (1773–1850), later became king. She wrote verse, novels, plays, treatises, and some important memoirs.
3. Voltaire … criticism: Mme de Genlis met Voltaire at his estate in Ferney, near Geneva, and noted in her memoirs that he was a tasteless, ill-bred man with a love of crude flattery.
4. Kardec’s theory of “mischievous spirits”: Allan Kardec was the pen name of Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail (1808–69), a French schoolteacher and a prime mover of the spiritualist vogue in the mid-nineteenth century (see note 3 to “The White Eagle”). Among other things, he coined the word “spiritism” and produced a five-volume theoretical synthesis,
5. Prince Gagarin: Prince Ivan Sergeevich Gagarin (1814–82) was serving as secretary of the Russian legation in Paris when, in 1842, he converted to Catholicism and became a Jesuit. He lived the rest of his life in Paris, where Leskov met him in 1875.
6. Heine’s “Bernardiner und Rabiner”: The reference is to the poem “Disputation,” from
7. Mme du Deffand … Gibbon: Marie Anne de Vichy-Chamrond, marquise du Deffand (1697–1780), was a prolific letter writer who corresponded with many notable people of her time, including Voltaire and Horace Walpole, with whom she formed an enduring attachment. The English historian Edward Gibbon (1737–94) is most famous for his
8. Lauzun: Armand Louis de Gontaut, duc de Lauzun (1747–1793), took part in the American War of Independence on the side of the colonists and in the French revolutionary wars. He was arrested and guillotined during the Reign of Terror.
9. Gibbon was … “vile joke”!: Leskov quotes this passage, with cuts and alterations, from the Russian edition of the memoirs of Mme de Genlis,
The Toupee Artist
(1883)
1. February 19, 1861: The date of the imperial manifesto proclaiming the emancipation of the serfs.