The Created Legend Fyodor Sologub (chromebook ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Fyodor Sologub
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âYou are not afraid?â
âWhat is there to be afraid of?â replied Piotr morosely. âI am not at all a tragic person. My path is clear to me, and I know who guides me.â
âYou donât know that,â said Trirodov. âBesides, Elena is lovely. He who fears to take the grand and the terrible, he who loves tender melodies, for him there is Elena.â
Piotr was silent. Some sort of newâ âperhaps alienâ âthoughts swarmed in his head. He listened to them, and suddenly said:
âYou havenât visited us for a long time, and you are very much liked in our house. You would be welcome. You may come when you like, and you may talk or be silent, as suits your mood.â
Trirodov smiled in response.
Piotr Matov returned home quite late in a dazed state of mind. Everyone had already sat down to supper. Elisaveta glanced at him curiouslyâ âas if she expected another person there instead of him.
âIâve come late,â said Piotr confusedly. âI donât know how I managed to wander off so far.â
He could not understand why he was so flustered. He barely recognized Elisaveta dressed up as a boy in her sailor jacket and short breeches. She sat so erect there, and smiled her abstract, indifferent smile.
Elena, blushing for some unknown reason, moved silently closerâ âand there was a strange timorousness in her movementâ âa timorous desire. Piotr complied with her wish, and sat down at her side. She looked at him tenderly, lovingly. Her glances touched him. He thought:
âWhy do I not love Elena? Or is it she alone that I really love? Perhaps some mistake of the will had dimmed my eyes?â
He conversed with her gently and tenderly, and as he looked at her again and again, a new love took spark in him. It was as if by some prodigious power the strange being at the riverbank had instilled this new love into him. Elenaâs heart beat joyfully.
XIXAfter that evening Trirodov, suppressing his devotion to quiet loneliness, once more began to visit the Rameyevs. He resisted no longer the all-powerful desire to see Elisaveta, to look into the depth of her blue eyes, to listen to the golden sonorousness of her words, and to feel the breathing and the witchery of her fresh, primitive strength. It was so pleasant to look upon her simple attire, upon the trusting openness of her shoulders, upon the light tan of her feet, and upon the austere outlines of her face.
Elisavetaâs sunlit depth became transformed for Trirodov into a blue, fathomless height. Elisavetaâs love grew stronger; to grow stronger was its desire, and it wished to surmount all intolerable obstacles.
Rameyev looked at Elisaveta and Trirodov, and he was consumed by a strange, mature joy. He seemed to think:
âThey will marry and bring me grandchildren.â
There were already certain hours in which they expected him. He and Elisaveta often remained alone. Something in their natures drew them apart from other people, whether strangers or kin. They would go off somewhere into a neglected part of the garden, where under the spread net of superb black poplars the agreeable aroma of thyme reached them with a gentle poignancyâ âand here they loved to chat with one another.
Had he been alone instead of with Elisaveta, he could not have expressed his thoughts more simply or more candidly. They spoke of so many thingsâ âthey tried, as it were, to contain the whole world within the rigid bounds of rapid words.
As they strolled along the high bank of the river, under the broad shadows of the mighty black poplars and strange black maples, and listened to the loud, cheerful twitter of the birds that came to the bushes, Elisaveta said:
âThe sensation of existence and of the fullness and joy of life is delicious. A new sky seems to have opened above my head, and for the first time the violets and the lilies of the valley besprinkled with their first dew have begun to bloom for me; and for the first time May-drinks made from herbs by young housewives taste delicious.â
Trirodov smiled sadly and said:
âI feel the heavy burden of life. But whatâs to be done? I donât know whether life can be made more easy and tranquil.â
âWhy desire ease and tranquillity in life?â asked Elisaveta. âI want fire and passion, even if I perish. Let me become consumed in the fire of rapture and revolt.â
âYes,â said Trirodov, âit is necessary to discover all the possibilities and forces within oneself, and then a new life may be created. I wonder if life is necessary?â
âAnd what is necessary?â asked Elisaveta.
âI donât know,â answered Trirodov sadly.
âWhat do you desire?â she asked again.
âPerhaps I desire nothing,â said Trirodov. âThere are moments when I seem to expect nothing from life; I do what I do unwillingly, as if it were a disagreeable action.â
âHow do you live then?â asked Elisaveta in astonishment.
He replied:
âI live in a strange and unreal world. I liveâ âbut life goes past me, always past me. Womanâs love, the fire of youth, the stirring of young hopes, remain forever within the forbidden boundaries of unrealized possibilitiesâ âwho knows?â âperhaps unrealizable.â
The sad, flaming moments of silence were marked by the heavy beats of Elisavetaâs heart. She felt intensely vexed by these sad words of weakness and of dejection, and she did not believe them. But Trirodov went on speaking, and his beautiful but hopelessly sad words sounded like a taunt to her:
âThere is so much labour and so little consolation. Life passes by like a dreamâ âa senseless, tormenting dream.â
âIf only a radiant dream! If only a tempestuous dream!â exclaimed Elisaveta.
Trirodov smiled and said:
âThe time of awakening is drawing nearer. Old age comes with its depression; and the empty, meaningless life wanders on towards unknown borders. You ask yourself, and it seems hopeless to find a worthy answer: âWhy do I live in this strange and chance form? Why have I chosen my present lot? Why have I done this?âââ
âWell, who is at fault here?â
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