War and Peace by graf Leo Tolstoy (nice books to read .txt) đ
- Author: graf Leo Tolstoy
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âNo, I shanât have such luck,â thought RostĂłv, âyet what wouldnât it be worth! It is not to be! Everywhere, at cards and in war, I am always unlucky.â Memories of Austerlitz and of DĂłlokhov flashed rapidly and clearly through his mind. âOnly once in my life to get an old wolf, I want only that!â thought he, straining eyes and ears and looking to the left and then to the right and listening to the slightest variation of note in the cries of the dogs.
Again he looked to the right and saw something running toward him across the deserted field. âNo, it canât be!â thought RostĂłv, taking a deep breath, as a man does at the coming of something long hoped for. The height of happiness was reachedâand so simply, without warning, or noise, or display, that RostĂłv could not believe his eyes and remained in doubt for over a second. The wolf ran forward and jumped heavily over a gully that lay in her path. She was an old animal with a gray back and big reddish belly. She ran without hurry, evidently feeling sure that no one saw her. RostĂłv, holding his breath, looked round at the borzois. They stood or lay not seeing the wolf or understanding the situation. Old KarĂĄy had turned his head and was angrily searching for fleas, baring his yellow teeth and snapping at his hind legs.
âUlyulyulyu!â whispered RostĂłv, pouting his lips. The borzois jumped up, jerking the rings of the leashes and pricking their ears. KarĂĄy finished scratching his hindquarters and, cocking his ears, got up with quivering tail from which tufts of matted hair hung down.
âShall I loose them or not?â Nicholas asked himself as the wolf approached him coming from the copse. Suddenly the wolfâs whole physiognomy changed: she shuddered, seeing what she had probably never seen beforeâhuman eyes fixed upon herâand turning her head a little toward RostĂłv, she paused.
âBack or forward? Eh, no matter, forward...â the wolf seemed to say to herself, and she moved forward without again looking round and with a quiet, long, easy yet resolute lope.
âUlyulyu!â cried Nicholas, in a voice not his own, and of its own accord his good horse darted headlong downhill, leaping over gullies to head off the wolf, and the borzois passed it, running faster still. Nicholas did not hear his own cry nor feel that he was galloping, nor see the borzois, nor the ground over which he went: he saw only the wolf, who, increasing her speed, bounded on in the same direction along the hollow. The first to come into view was MĂlka, with her black markings and powerful quarters, gaining upon the wolf. Nearer and nearer... now she was ahead of it; but the wolf turned its head to face her, and instead of putting on speed as she usually did MĂlka suddenly raised her tail and stiffened her forelegs.
âUlyulyulyulyu!â shouted Nicholas.
The reddish LyubĂm rushed forward from behind MĂlka, sprang impetuously at the wolf, and seized it by its hindquarters, but immediately jumped aside in terror. The wolf crouched, gnashed her teeth, and again rose and bounded forward, followed at the distance of a couple of feet by all the borzois, who did not get any closer to her.
âSheâll get away! No, itâs impossible!â thought Nicholas, still shouting with a hoarse voice.
âKarĂĄy, ulyulyu!...â he shouted, looking round for the old borzoi who was now his only hope. KarĂĄy, with all the strength age had left him, stretched himself to the utmost and, watching the wolf, galloped heavily aside to intercept it. But the quickness of the wolfâs lope and the borzoiâs slower pace made it plain that KarĂĄy had miscalculated. Nicholas could already see not far in front of him the wood where the wolf would certainly escape should she reach it. But, coming toward him, he saw hounds and a huntsman galloping almost straight at the wolf. There was still hope. A long, yellowish young borzoi, one Nicholas did not know, from another leash, rushed impetuously at the wolf from in front and almost knocked her over. But the wolf jumped up more quickly than anyone could have expected and, gnashing her teeth, flew at the yellowish borzoi, which, with a piercing yelp, fell with its head on the ground, bleeding from a gash in its side.
âKarĂĄy? Old fellow!...â wailed Nicholas.
Thanks to the delay caused by this crossing of the wolfâs path, the old dog with its felted hair hanging from its thigh was within five paces of it. As if aware of her danger, the wolf turned her eyes on KarĂĄy, tucked her tail yet further between her legs, and increased her speed. But here Nicholas only saw that something happened to KarĂĄyâthe borzoi was suddenly on the wolf, and they rolled together down into a gully just in front of them.
That instant, when Nicholas saw the wolf struggling in the gully with the dogs, while from under them could be seen her gray hair and outstretched hind leg and her frightened choking head, with her ears laid back (KarĂĄy was pinning her by the throat), was the happiest moment of his life. With his hand on his saddlebow, he was ready to dismount and stab the wolf, when she suddenly thrust her head up from among that mass of dogs, and then her forepaws were on the edge of the gully. She clicked her teeth (KarĂĄy no longer had her by the throat), leaped with a movement of her hind legs out of the gully, and having disengaged herself from the dogs, with tail tucked in again, went forward. KarĂĄy, his hair bristling, and probably bruised or wounded, climbed with difficulty out of the gully.
âOh my God! Why?â Nicholas cried in despair.
âUncleâsâ huntsman was galloping from the other side across the wolfâs path and his borzois once more stopped the animalâs advance. She was again hemmed in.
Nicholas and his attendant, with âUncleâ and his huntsman, were all riding round the wolf, crying âulyulyu!â shouting and preparing to dismount each moment that the wolf crouched back, and starting forward again every time she shook herself and moved toward the wood where she would be safe.
Already, at the beginning of this chase, Daniel, hearing the ulyulyuing, had rushed out from the wood. He saw KarĂĄy seize the wolf, and checked his horse, supposing the affair to be over. But when he saw that the horsemen did not dismount and that the wolf shook herself and ran for safety, Daniel set his chestnut galloping, not at the wolf but straight toward the wood, just as KarĂĄy had run to cut the animal off. As a result of this, he galloped up to the wolf just when she had been stopped a second time by âUncleâsâ borzois.
Daniel galloped up silently, holding a naked dagger in his left hand and thrashing the laboring sides of his chestnut horse with his whip as if it were a flail.
Nicholas neither saw nor heard Daniel until the chestnut, breathing heavily, panted past him, and he heard the fall of a body and
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