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The Duel and Other Stories

Chapter 6 No.6

Word Count: 2725    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

ellow River-and to cook fish soup. They started out soon after five. Foremost of the party in a char-à-banc drove Samoylenko and Laevsky; they were followed

owed three hundred roubles; opposite them, huddled up on the little seat with his feet tucked under him, sat Nikodim Alexandritch, a nea

e top of his voice when he met a cart

ll go by the sea-coast from Vladivostok to the Behring Straits, and then from the Straits to the mouth of the Yenisei. We shall make the map, stud

sible," sai

hy

with ties a

de her for the public benefit to go into a nunnery; that would make it possible for you

con was

theology well?" as

ather

nter. It will be necessary for you to read the notes of religious travellers, too; among them are some good ethnologists and Oriental scholars. When you are familiar with their methods, it will b

o get a place in Central Russia, and my uncle, the head priest, promise

rest from work, you will be exactly the same as you are now in ten years' time, and will have gained nothing but a beard and moustache; while on return

long a shelf on a steep wall, and that in a moment the carriages would drop into the abyss. On the right stretched the sea; on the left was a rough brown wall with black blotches and red veins and with climbing

stupid and vulgar it is! I want to go to the North, to run away, to

the left, and the valley of the Yellow River came into sight and

tasies over nature shows poverty of imagination. In comparison with what my im

s, pressing upon each other with such terrible weight, that Samoylenko could not help gasping every time he looked at them. The dark and beautiful mountain was cleft in places by narrow fissures and gorges from which came a breath of dewy moistur

ins!" sighed Laevsky. "

duhan, with the Russian flag on the roof and with an inscription written in chalk: "The Pleasant duhan." Near it was a little garden, enclosed in a hurdl

as standing in the road, and, holding his stomach, he bowed low to w

"We are driving on a little further, and you t

thing, and only those sitting in the last carriag

bring them!"

n tree blown down by the storm with roots overgrown by moss and dry yellow needles. Here there was a fragile wooden bridge over the stream, and just opposite on the other

se up and towered above them, and the shadows of evening were stealing rapidly, rapidly from the duhan and dark cypress, making the narrow windi

vna, heaving deep sighs of ecstasy.

some reason felt sad as he looked at the sky and then at the blue smok

e this view," Marya Kons

wealth of sights and sounds which every one receives from nature by direct

amber up and sit upon it. "Really?" he repeated, looking directly at Laevsky. "What of 'Romeo and Julie

ter all?" he added after a short pause. "The beauty of poetry and holiness of love are simply the roses

to you about, you al

lanced round at Ka

g it round to?"

nswer: 'Yes, but how ugly it is when it is chewed and digested in one's sto

t in his presence as though every one were constrained and some one were standi

rch for brushwood fo

oyl

but Kirilin, Atchmianov, and Nikodim Alexandritch. Kerbalay brought

, with his haughty deportment, stately carriage, and thick, rather hoarse voice, looked like a young provinci

, deliberately articulating each word. "I ordered you to give

ine of our own, Yego

bserved, timid

in the picnic and I imagine I have full right to contribu

m Alexandritch, in wonder,

s! Thirty!" sh

Atchmianov whispered

ll

shrieking and laughing, ran to the other side to the drying-shed, and she fancied that all the men were admiring her, even Kerbalay. When in the rapidly falling darkness the trees began to melt into the mountains and the horses into the carriages, and a light gleamed in the windows of the duhan, she climbed up the mountain by the little path which zigzagged between stones and thorn-bushes and

've forgotten it. Why are you all sitti

ms folded and one foot on a stone, was standing on a bank at the very edge of the water, thinking about something. Patches of red light from the fire moved together with the shadows over the ground near the dark human figures, and qu

was cleaning and washing on the bank, but

e, rocks, the fire, the twilight, a monstrou

his back to the fire, and with his hands behind his back was telling something, which must have been very interesting, for when Samoylenko threw on twigs and the fire flared up, and scattered sparks and threw a glaring light on the shed, two calm countenances with an expression on them of deep attention could be seen, looking out of the door, while those who were sitting in a circle turned round and began listening to the speaker. Soon after, those sitting in a circle began softly singing something slow and melodious, that sounded like Lenten Church music. . . . Listening to them, the deacon imagined how it wou

hat fish?" he heard

and a straw in his hair, then in due order himself, the deacon, and behind him the priest wearing his calotte and carrying a cross, and behind them, tramping in the dust, a crowd of peasants-men, women, and children; in the crowd his wife and the priest's wi

e too . . ." th

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