Chapter
32
Forgiveness
and Eternal Refuge
The chapter
begins on a melancholy note. Bulgakov is highlighting their suffering and also
telling the readers why they are not at all sad to go away from the earth:
“Gods,
my gods! How sad the evening earth! How mysterious the mists over the swamps!
He who has wandered in these mists, he who has suffered much before death, he
who has flown over this earth bearing on himself too heavy a burden, knows it.
The weary man knows it. And without regret he leaves the mists of the earth,
its swamps and rivers, with a light heart he gives himself into the hands of
death, knowing that she alone can bring him peace.”
All of them
were silent, as they were leaving behind the earth; as the large red Moon came
in the sky to welcome them, they came into their real shapes. Bulgakov
mesmerizes readers with his description: there is magic in his descriptions,
hypnotism:
“Night
began to cover forests and fields with its black shawl, night lit melancholy
little lights somewhere far below - now no longer interesting and necessary
either for Margarita or for the master - alien lights. Night was outdistancing
the cavalcade, it sowed itself over them from above, casting white specks of
stars here and there in the saddened sky.
Night
thickened, flew alongside, caught at the riders' cloaks and, tearing them from
their shoulders, exposed the deceptions. And when Margarita, blown upon by the
cool wind, opened her eyes, she saw how the appearance of them all was changing
as they flew to their goal. And when, from beyond the edge of the forest, the
crimson and full moon began rising to meet them, all deceptions vanished, fell
into the swamp, the unstable magic garments drowned in the mists.
Hardly
recognizable as Koroviev-Fagott, the self-appointed interpreter to the
mysterious consultant who needed no interpreting, was he who now flew just
beside Woland, to the right of the master's friend. In place of him who had
left Sparrow Hills in a ragged circus costume under the name of
Koroviev-Fagott, there now rode, softly clinking the golden chains of the
bridle, a dark-violet knight with a most gloomy and never-smiling face. He
rested his chin on his chest, he did not look at the moon, he was not
interested in the earth, he was thinking something of his own, flying beside
Woland.
"Why
has he changed so?' Margarita quietly asked Woland to the whistling of the
wind.
‘This
knight once made an unfortunate joke,' replied Woland, turning his face with
its quietly burning eye to Margarita. 'The pun he thought up, in a discussion
about light and darkness, was not altogether good. And after that the knight
had to go on joking a bit more and longer than he supposed. But this is one of
the nights when accounts are settled. The knight has paid up and closed his
account.'
Night
also tore off Behemoth's fluffy tail, pulled off his fur and scattered it in
tufts over the swamps. He who had been a cat, entertaining the prince of
darkness, now turned out to be a slim youth, a demon-page, the best jester the
world has ever seen. Now he, too, grew quiet and flew noiselessly, setting his
young face towards the light that streamed from the moon.
At the
far side, the steel of his armour glittering, flew Azazello. The moon also
changed his face. The absurd, ugly fang disappeared without a trace, and the
albugo on his eye proved false. Azazello's eyes were both the same, empty and
black, and his face was white and cold. Now Azazello flew in his true form, as
the demon of the waterless desert, the killer-demon.”
They come to an open place where Woland
gets down from his horse and shows them a man:
“Thus
they flew in silence for a long time, until the place itself began to change
below them.
The
melancholy forests drowned in earthly darkness and drew with them the dim
blades of the rivers. Boulders appeared and began to gleam below, with black
gaps between them where the moonlight did not penetrate.
Woland
reined in his horse on a stony, joyless, flat summit, and the riders then
proceeded at a walk, listening to the crunch of flint and stone under the
horses' shoes. Moonlight flooded the platform greenly and brightly, and soon
Margarita made out an armchair in this deserted place and in it the white
figure of a seated man. Possibly the seated man was deaf, or else too sunk in
his own thoughts. He did not hear the stony earth shudder under the horses'
weight, and the riders approached him without disturbing him.
The
moon helped Margarita well, it shone better than the best electric lantern, and
Margarita saw that the seated man, whose eyes seemed blind, rubbed his hands
fitfully, and peered with those same unseeing eyes at the disc of the moon. Now
Margarita saw that beside the heavy stone chair, on which sparks glittered in
the moonlight, lay a dark, huge, sharp-eared dog, and, like its master, it
gazed anxiously at the moon. Pieces of a broken jug were scattered by the
seated man's
feet
and an undrying black-red puddle spread there. The riders stopped their horses.
Your
novel has been read,' Woland began, turning to the master, 'and the only thing
said about it was that, unfortunately, it is not finished. So, then, I wanted
to show you your hero. For about two thousand years he has been sitting on this
platform and sleeping, but when the full moon comes, as you see, he is
tormented by insomnia. It torments not only him, but also his faithful guardian,
the dog.
If it
is true that cowardice is the most grievous vice, then the dog at least is not
guilty of it.
Storms
were the only thing the brave dog feared. Well, he who loves must share the lot
of the one he loves.'
`What
is he saying?' asked Margarita, and her perfectly calm face clouded over with
compassion.
'He
says one and the same thing,' Woland replied. `He says that even the moon gives
him no peace, and that his is a bad job. That is what he always says when he is
not asleep, and when he sleeps, he dreams one and the same thing: there is a
path of moonlight, and he wants to walk down it and talk with the prisoner
Ha-Nozri, because, as he insists, he never finished what he was saying that
time, long ago, on the fourteenth day of the spring month of Nisan. But, alas,
for some reason he never manages to get on to this path, and no one comes to
him. Then there's no help for it, he must talk to himself. However, one does
need some diversity, and to his talk about the moon he often adds that of all
things in the world, he most hates his immortality and his unheard-of fame. He
maintains that he would willingly exchange his lot for that of the ragged tramp
Matthew Levi.'
Margarita
comments :
`Twelve
thousand moons for one moon long ago, isn't that too much?' asked
Margarita.
`Repeating
the story with Frieda?' said Woland. 'But don't trouble yourself here,
Margarita. Everything will turn out right, the world is built on that.'
'Let
him go!' Margarita suddenly cried piercingly, as she had cried once as a witch,
and at this cry a stone fell somewhere in the mountains and tumbled down the
ledges into the abyss, filling the mountains with rumbling. But Margarita could
not have said whether it was the rumbling of its fall or the rumbling of
satanic laughter. In any case, Woland was laughing as he glanced at Margarita
and said:
'Don't
shout in the mountains, he's accustomed to avalanches anyway, and it won't
rouse him.
You
don't need to ask for him, Margarita, because the one he so yearns to talk with
has already asked for him.' Here Woland turned to the master and said:
'Well,
now you can finish your novel with one phrase!'
The
master seemed to have been expecting this, as he stood motionless and looked at
the seated procurator. He cupped his hands to his mouth and cried out so that
the echo leaped over the unpeopled and unforested mountains:
'You're
free! You're free! He's waiting for you!'
The
mountains turned the master's voice to thunder, and by this same thunder they
were destroyed. The accursed rocky walls collapsed. Only the platform with the
stone armchair remained. Over the black abyss into which the walls had gone, a
boundless city lit up, dominated by gleaming idols above a garden grown
luxuriously over many thousands of moons. The path of moonlight so long awaited
by the procurator stretched right to this garden, and the first to rush down it
was the sharp-eared dog. The man in the white cloak with blood-red lining rose
from the armchair and shouted something in a hoarse, cracked voice. It was
impossible to tell whether he was weeping or laughing, or what he shouted. It
could only be seen that, following his faithful guardian, he, too, rushed headlong
down the path of moonlight.
`I'm
to follow him there?' the master asked anxiously, holding the bridle.
'No,'
replied Woland, 'why run after what is already finished?'
‘There,
then?' the master asked, turning and pointing back, where the recently abandoned
city with the gingerbread towers of its convent, with the sun broken to
smithereens in its windows, now wove itself behind them.
'Not
there, either,' replied Woland, and his voice thickened and flowed over the
rocks.
`Romantic
master! He, whom the hero you invented and have just set free so yearns to see,
has read your novel.' Here Woland turned to Margarita: `Margarita Nikolaevna!
It is impossible not to believe that you have tried to think up the best future
for the master, but, really, what I am offering you, and what Yeshua has asked
for you, is better still! Leave them to each other,' Woland said, leaning
towards the master's saddle from his own, pointing to where the procurator had
gone, 'let's not interfere with them. And maybe they'll still arrive at
something.' Here Woland waved his arm in the direction of Yershalaim, and it
went out.
'And
there, too,' Woland pointed behind them, 'what are you going to do in the
little
basement?'
Here the sun broken up in the glass went out.
'Why?'
Woland went on persuasively and gently, 'oh, thrice-romantic master, can it be
that you don't want to go strolling with your friend in the daytime under
cherry trees just coming into bloom, and in the evening listen to Schubert's
music? Can it be that you won't like writing with a goose quill by candlelight?
Can it be that you don't want to sit over a retort like Faust, in hopes that
you'll succeed in forming a new homunculus? There! There! The house and the old
servant are already waiting for you, the candles are already burning, and soon
they will go out, because you will immediately meet the dawn. Down this path,
master, this one! Farewell! It's time for me to go!'
'Farewell!'
Margarita and the master answered Woland in one cry. Then the black Woland, heedless
of any road, threw himself into a gap, and his retinue noisily hurried down
after him.
There
were no rocks, no platform, no path of moonlight, no Yershalaim around. The
black steeds also vanished. The master and Margarita saw the promised dawn. It
began straight away, immediately after the midnight moon.
The
master walked with his friend in the brilliance of the first rays of morning
over a mossy little stone bridge. They crossed it. The faithful lovers left the
stream behind and walked down the sandy path.
'Listen
to the stillness,' Margarita said to the master, and the sand rustled under her
bare feet, `listen and enjoy what you were not given in life - peace. Look,
there ahead is your eternal home, which you have been given as a reward. I can
already see the Venetian window and the twisting vine, it climbs right up to
the roof. Here is your home, your eternal home.
I know
that in the evenings you will be visited by those you love, those who interest
you and who will never trouble you. They will play for you, they will sing for
you, you will see what light is in the room when the candles are burning. You
will fall asleep, having put on your greasy and eternal nightcap, you will fall
asleep with a smile on your lips. Sleep will strengthen you, you will reason wisely.
And you will no longer be able to drive me away. I will watch over your sleep.'
Thus
spoke Margarita, walking with the master to their eternal home, and it seemed
to the master that Margarita's words flowed in the same way as the stream they
had left behind flowed and whispered, and the master's memory, the master's
anxious, needled memory began to fade.
Someone
was setting the master free, as he himself had just set free the hero he had
created. This hero had gone into the abyss, gone irrevocably, the son of the
astrologer-king, forgiven on the eve of Sunday, the cruel fifth procurator of
Judea, the equestrian Pontius Pilate.’
So, Master and
Margarita finally attain eternal peace and happiness with Woland’s help.
Let’s think
about Margarita’s comment about 12,000 moons….though Woland says that Pontius Pilate is sitting here for the
last 2000 years. In one translation, it is rendered as 24,000 moons, but Pevear
chose to retain Bulgakov’s version…I too have done the same.
I am convinced
that Bulgakov wants to point out at something.
Well, with
reference to original Yeshua and Yerushalem, 2000 years was alright, that is
when the A.D. began. But in our case, it is not really referring to the Holy
Bible. So, let us try to see where does Bulgakov take us.
12,000 moons occur not in 1000
years but in 966 years. Let’s remember that Bulgakov was perfect in his
dates….so if we go back and see what happened 966 years ago, we reach X
century: (962 -974) corresponding to ( 1928 – 1940) when Bulgakov was writing
his novel. This was the time when Kiev was founded by Prince Kie…about the
beginning of Ryurikh Dynasty which was known for great warrior kings Oleg,
Queen Olga, Igor, Svyatoslav, Vladimir. Interestingly Olga was the first to be
christened. Later , it was Vladimir who christened Rus. So the period 962- 974
corresponds to advent of Christanity, Kievskaya
Rus. Hence, we see that here too
Bulgakov tells the readers that his novel is deeply rooted in the Russian soil,
it has nothing to do with the Biblical legend.
Thus, having seen that Master &
Margarita and safely and peacefully settled in their new and eternal abode, we
go back to Moscow and see what happened to all those victims of Woland and his
team….to the Epilogue!
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