FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   >>  
He is a coward and a liar." "Oh, very well. He is a coward and a liar, and deceived me. And you? Excuse my frankness; what are you? He deceived me and left me to take my chance in Petersburg, and you have deceived me and abandoned me here. But he did not mix up ideas with his deceit, and you . . ." "For goodness' sake, why are you saying this?" I cried in horror, wringing my hands and going up to her quickly. "No, Zinaida Fyodorovna, this is cynicism. You must not be so despairing; listen to me," I went on, catching at a thought which flashed dimly upon me, and which seemed to me might still save us both. "Listen. I have passed through so many experiences in my time that my head goes round at the thought of them, and I have realised with my mind, with my racked soul, that man finds his true destiny in nothing if not in self-sacrificing love for his neighbour. It is towards that we must strive, and that is our destination! That is my faith!" I wanted to go on to speak of mercy, of forgiveness, but there was an insincere note in my voice, and I was embarrassed. "I want to live!" I said genuinely. "To live, to live! I want peace, tranquillity; I want warmth--this sea here--to have you near. Oh, how I wish I could rouse in you the same thirst for life! You spoke just now of love, but it would be enough for me to have you near, to hear your voice, to watch the look in your face . . . !" She flushed crimson, and to hinder my speaking, said quickly: "You love life, and I hate it. So our ways lie apart." She poured herself out some tea, but did not touch it, went into the bedroom, and lay down. "I imagine it is better to cut short this conversation," she said to me from within. "Everything is over for me, and I want nothing . . . . What more is there to say?" "No, it's not all over!" "Oh, very well! . . . I know! I am sick of it. . . . That's enough." I got up, took a turn from one end of the room to the other, and went out into the corridor. When late at night I went to her door and listened, I distinctly heard her crying. Next morning the waiter, handing me my clothes, informed me, with a smile, that the lady in number thirteen was confined. I dressed somehow, and almost fainting with terror ran to Zinaida Fyodorovna. In her room I found a doctor, a midwife, and an elderly Russian lady from Harkov, called Darya Milhailovna. There was a smell of ether. I had scarcely crossed the threshold when from
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   >>  



Top keywords:

deceived

 

thought

 

coward

 

quickly

 

Zinaida

 

Fyodorovna

 

Everything

 

crimson

 

speaking

 
bedroom

flushed

 
hinder
 
conversation
 

imagine

 
poured
 

doctor

 

midwife

 

elderly

 
terror
 

dressed


confined

 

fainting

 

Russian

 
Harkov
 
scarcely
 

crossed

 

threshold

 

called

 

Milhailovna

 

thirteen


number

 
corridor
 

handing

 

waiter

 

clothes

 

informed

 

morning

 

listened

 
distinctly
 

crying


tranquillity
 
flashed
 

despairing

 

listen

 

catching

 

experiences

 

Listen

 
passed
 

cynicism

 
Excuse