Short Fiction Leonid Andreyev (best books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Leonid Andreyev
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âWhere are we!â asked somebody, and uneasiness and fear sounded in his voice. Somebody sighed; somebody convulsively cracked his fingers; somebody laughed; somebody jumped up and began walking quickly round the table. These last days one could often meet with such men, that were always walking hastily, almost running, at times strangely silent, at times mumbling something in an uncanny way.
âAt the war,â answered he who had laughed, and again burst into a hollow, lingering laugh, as if something was choking him.
âWhat is he laughing at?â asked somebody, indignantly. âLook here, stop it!â
The other choked once more, gave a titter and stopped obediently.
It was growing dark, the cloud seemed to be settling down on the earth, and we could with difficulty distinguish each otherâs yellow phantom-like faces. Somebody askedâ â
âAnd where is Fatty-legs?â
âFatty-legsâ we called a fellow-officer, who, being short, wore enormous watertight boots.
âHe was here just now. Fatty-legs, where are you?â
âFatty-legs, donât hide. We can smell your boots.â
Everybody laughed, but their laugh was interrupted by a rough, indignant voice that sounded out of the darknessâ â
âStop that! Are you not ashamed? Fatty-legs was killed this morning reconnoitring.â
âHe was here just now. It must be a mistake.â
âYou imagined it. Heigh-ho! you there, behind the samovar, cut me a slice of lemon.â
âAnd me!â
âAnd me!â
âThe lemon is finished.â
âHow is that, boys?â sounded a gentle, hurt voice, full of distress and almost crying; âwhy, I only came for the sake of the lemon.â
The other again burst into a hollow and lingering laugh, and nobody checked him. But he soon stopped. He gave a snigger, and was silent. Somebody saidâ â
âTomorrow we begin the advance on the enemy.â
But several voices cried out angrilyâ â
âNonsense, advance on the enemy indeed!â
âBut you know yourselfâ ââ
âShut up. As if we cannot talk of something else.â
The sunset faded. The cloud lifted, and it seemed to grow lighter; the faces became more familiar, and he, who kept circling round us, grew calmer and sat down.
âI wonder what itâs like at home now?â asked he, vaguely, and in his voice there sounded a guilty smile.
And once again all became terrible, incomprehensible and strangeâ âso intensely so, that we were filled with horror, almost to the verge of losing consciousness. And we all began talking and shouting at the same time, bustling about, moving our glasses, touching each otherâs shoulders, hands, kneesâ âand all at once became silent, giving way before the incomprehensible.
âAt home?â cried somebody out of the darkness. His voice was hoarse and quivering with emotion, fear and hatred. And some of the words would not come out, as if he had forgotten how to say them.
âA home? What home? Why, is there home anywhere? Donât interrupt me or else I shall fire. At home I used to take a bath every dayâ âcan you understand?â âa bath with waterâ âwater up to the very edges. While nowâ âI do not even wash my face every day. My head is covered with scurf, and my whole body itches and over it crawl, crawl.â ââ ⊠I am going mad from dirt, while you talk ofâ âhome! I am like an animal, I despise myself, I cannot recognise myself, and death is not at all terrifying. You tear my brain with your shrapnel-shots. Aim at what you will, all hit my brainâ âand you can speak ofâ âhome. What home? Streets, windows, people, but I would not go into the street now for anything. I should be ashamed to. You brought a samovar here, but I was ashamed to look at it.â
The other laughed again. Somebody called outâ â
âDâ ân it all! I shall go home.â
âHome?â
âYou donât understand what duty is!â
âHome? Listen! he wants to go home!â
There was a burst of laughter and of painful shoutsâ âand again all became silentâ âgiving way before the incomprehensible. And then not only I, but every one of us felt that. It was coming towards us out of those dark, mysterious and strange fields; it was rising from out of those obscure dark ravines, where, maybe, the forgotten and lost among the stones were still dying; it was flowing from the strange, unfamiliar sky. We stood around the dying-out samovar in silence, losing consciousness from horror, while an enormous, shapeless shadow that had risen above the world, looked down upon us from the sky with a steady and silent gaze. Suddenly, quite close to us, probably at the Commanderâs house, music burst forth, and the frenzied, joyous, loud sounds seemed to flash out into the night and stillness. The band played with frenzied mirth and defiance, hurriedly, discordantly, too loudly, and too joyously, and one could feel that those who were playing, and
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