The Duel Aleksandr Kuprin (best inspirational books .txt) đ
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
Book online «The Duel Aleksandr Kuprin (best inspirational books .txt) đ». Author Aleksandr Kuprin
âMy Ego,â thought Romashov, âis only that which is within me, the very kernel of my being; all the rest is the non-Egoâ âthat is, only secondary things. This room, street, trees, sky, the commander of my regiment, Lieutenant Andrusevich, the service, the standard, the soldiersâ âall this is non-Ego. No, no, this is non-Egoâ âmy hands and feet.â Romashov lifted up his hands to the level of his face, and looked at them with wonder and curiosity, as if he saw them now for the first time in his life. âNo, all this is non-Ego. But lookâ âI pinch my armâ âthat is the Ego. I see my arm, I lift it upâ âthis is the Ego. And what I am thinking now is also Ego. If I now want to go my way, that is the Ego. And even if I stop, that is the Ego.
âOh, how wonderful, how mysterious is this. And so simple too. Is it true that all individuals possess a similar Ego? Perhaps it is only I who have it? Or perhaps nobody has it. Down there hundreds of soldiers stand drawn up in front of me. I give the order: âEyes to the right,â to hundreds of human beings who has each his own Ego, and who see in me something foreign, distant, i.e. non-Egoâ âthen turn their heads at once to the right. But I do not distinguish one from the other; they are to me merely a mass. And to Colonel Schulgovich both I and ViĂ€tkin and Lbov, and all the captains and lieutenants, are likewise perhaps merely a âmass,â viz., he does not distinguish one of us from the other, or, in other words, we are entirely outside his ken as individuals to him.â
The door was opened, and HainĂĄn stole into the room. He began at once his usual dance, threw up his legs into the air, rocked his shoulders, and shoutedâ â
âYour Honour, I got no cigarettes. They said that Lieutenant Skriabin gave orders that you were not to have any more on credit.â
âOh, damn! You can go, HainĂĄn. What am I to do without cigarettes? However, it is of no consequence. You can go, HainĂĄn.â
âWhat was it I was thinking of?â Romashov asked himself, when he was once more alone. He had lost the threads, and, unaccustomed as he was to think, he could not pick them up again at once. âWhat was I thinking of just now? It was something important and interesting. Well, let us turn back and take the questions in order. Also, I am under arrest; out in the street I see people at large; my mother tied me up with a threadâ âme, me. Yes, so it was. The soldier perhaps has an Ego, perhaps even Colonel Shulgovich. Ha, he! now I remember; go on. Here I am sitting in my room. I am arrested, but my door is open. I want to go out, but I dare not. Why do I not dare? Have I committed any crimeâ âtheftâ âmurder? No. All I did was merely omitting to keep my heels together when I was talking to another man. Possibly I was wrong. Yet, why? Is it anything important? Is it the chief thing in life? In about twenty or thirty yearsâ âa second in eternityâ âmy life, my Ego, will go out like a lamp does when one turns the wick down. They will light lifeâ âthe lampâ âafresh, over and over again; but my Ego is gone forever. Likewise this room, this sky, the regiment, the whole army, all stars, this dirty globe, my hands and feetâ âall, allâ âshall be annihilated forever. Yes, yes; that is so. Well, all rightâ âbut wait a bit. I must not be in too much of a hurry. I shall not be in existence. Ah, wait. I found myself in infinite darkness. Somebody came and lighted my lifeâs lamp, but almost immediately he blew it out again, and once more I was in darkness, in the eternity of eternities. What did I do? What did I utter during this short moment of my existence? I held my thumb on the seam of my trousers and my heels together. I shrieked as loud as I could: âShoulder arms!â and immediately afterwards I thundered âUse your butt ends, you donkeys!â I trembled before a hundred tyrants, now miserable ghosts in eternity like my own remarkable, lofty Ego. But why did I tremble before those ghosts and why could they compel me to do such a lot of unnecessary, idiotic, unpleasant things? How could they venture to annoy and insult my Egoâ âthese miserable spectres?â
Romashov sat down by the table, put his elbows on it, and leaned his head on his hands. It was hard work for him to keep in check these wild thoughts which raced through his mind.
âHâm!â âmy friend Romashov, what a lot you have forgottenâ âyour fatherland, the ashes of your sire, the altar of honour, the warriorâs oath and discipline. Who shall preserve the land of your sires when the foe rushes over its boundaries? Ah! when I am dead there will be no more fatherland, no enemy, no honour. They will disappear at the same time as my consciousness. But if all this be buried and brought to naughtâ âcountry, enemies, honour, and all the other big wordsâ âwhat has all this to do with my Ego? I am more important than all these phrases about duty, honour, love, etc. Assume that I am a soldier and my Ego suddenly says, âI wonât fight,â and not only my own Ego, but millions of other Egos that constitute the whole of the army, the whole of Russia, the entire world; all these say, âWe wonât!â Then it will
Comments (0)