Short Fiction Leonid Andreyev (best books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Leonid Andreyev
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That same day the Governorâs son, an officer in a St. Petersburg regiment, came home for his Sunday furlough, and though he was in gay good humour, and gave no special reason for his unusual visit, it was evident that the same incomprehensible anxiety for the Governor had induced him to come. He made light of the whole affair, and assured them that in St. Petersburg they were delighted with the pluck and energy of Peter Iljitch; and yet he strongly urged that they should ask for another Cossack regiment and double then precautionary measures. âWhat sort of precautionary measures?â asked the Governor, stern and amazedâ âbut there was no answer. These apprehensions seemed all the more absurd as perfect calm had reigned in the city from that day on. The workmen had resumed their labours: even the interment had passed off undisturbed, though the Chief of Police had felt some anxiety, and ordered out all the reserves. Yet nothing indicated the possibility of a repetition of the incident of August seventeenth.
Finally he received from St. Petersburg a flattering acknowledgment of his detailed report of the occurrence. One would have thought that this would lighten the load and sink his burden in the sea of the past! But the fact will not sink! As though deriving its power from Time and Death, it stands rigid in his remembranceâ âthe unburied corpse of a vanished event. Stubbornly, night after night, he seeks to bury it; the darkness passes, day breaks, and there againâ âthe beginning and end of all things, between him and the world stands that indelible picture: the signal with the white handkerchief, the crack of rifles, the blood!
IIThe Governorâs audience has long been ended, and he is about to drive out to his villa, waiting on for his aide-de-camp Kosloff, who is shopping for her Excellency. He sits in his study, his papers before him, and yet he can not workâ âhe broods. Then, rising, he thrusts his hands deeper into the pockets of his red-striped trousers, throws back his great grey head, and paces the room with heavy, soldierly tread. He pauses at the window, spreads the strong, thick fingers of his hand, and says, in strident tones: âBut what is it all about?â And he fancies that as long as he sat and thought he was an ordinary man like any other; simply Peter Iljitchâ âbut with the first sound of his own voice, that gestureâ âhe has suddenly become the Governor, the Major-General! An uneasy feeling creeps over him, his thoughts whirl and tangle; and with a curt official shrug of his left shoulder-strap he turns from the window and paces the floor again.
âThis is the way the Gov-er-nors walk!â The rhythm jerks through his brain, keeping time with his heavy footfall until he seats himself again, carefully avoiding all movement that shall recall his official capacity.
The sound of a bell.
âHas he come yet?â
âIf you please, no, your Excellency.â
And while the lackey speaks the title softly and respectfully, he suddenly recollects: âAh yes! They broke the windows there that day, and I have not seen them yet.ââ ââ âŠ
âCall me when he comes. I shall be in the drawing-room.â
The high old-fashioned windows had eight small panes, which gave the room the gloomy look of an office: the appearance of a Court of Chancery, or of a jail. The three windows nearest the balcony had new panes, which still showed the marks of putty-daubed fingers; apparently it had never entered into the idle brains of any of the countless servants that all traces of that disturbance must be wiped away. It was the same old storyâ âif you ordered them they would do it; if not theyâd never lift a finger of their own accord.â ââ âŠ
âLet this be cleaned directly! I canât stand this disorder!â
âYes, your Excellency!â
He would have liked to step out onto the balcony, yet it seemed unwise to draw the attention of the passersby, so he stared through the glass at the Square, where the mob had surged that day, where the rifles had crashedâ âand forty-seven restless people had been turned to dumb, still corpses!â ârow on rowâ âshoulder to shoulderâ âfeet to feetâ âlike a parade seen from below.
Now all was still out there. Close by the window stands a poplar with ragged bark, already in autumn colouring, and behind it lies the Square, peaceful and sleepy in the sun. Hardly a stone stirring, and the cobblestones lying in even rows like beads, with here and there a bit of grass between, greener in the hollows and along the gutters. Empty and deserted the Square wasâ âbut rather smiling; yet, perhaps because he saw it through the dingy panes, it appeared dismal and squalid, brooding in sullen apathy over its hopeless grey misery. And although it was broad daylight, yet all these thingsâ âthe poplar with its ragged bark, the vacant, even rows of cobblestonesâ âseemed craving for the night to come and wrap their useless being in its darkness.
âHas he not come yet?â
âNo, your Excellency.â
âWhen he comes bring him here.â
The drawing-room had been furnished in the time of the previous Governor, or possibly earlier still, judging from the soiled and faded condition of its costly hangings. About the brassbound chimney hole were traced dark yellow stains, like lines about the drooling mouth of age. These were masked by hangings, and in winter when the rooms were lighted, one hardly noticed these defects; but now they crowded into view in all their shabby elegance, making a most
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