Short Fiction Leo Tolstoy (interesting books to read for teens txt) đ
- Author: Leo Tolstoy
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âCome along. Well, whatâs happened?â
âThe lodgments have been attackedâ âand occupiedâ âthe French brought up tremendous reservesâ âattacked usâ âwe had only two battalions,â said the officer, panting. He was the same officer who had been there that evening, but though he was now out of breath, he walked with full self-possession to the door.
âWell, have we retreated?â asked KaloĂșgin.
âNo,â angrily replied the officer; âanother battalion came up in timeâ âwe drove them back, but the Colonel is killed and many officers. I have orders to ask for reinforcements.â
And, saying this, he went with KaloĂșgin to the Generalâs, where we shall not follow him.
Five minutes later KaloĂșgin was already on his Cossack horse (again in the semi-Cossack manner which I have noticed that all Adjutants, for some reason, seem to consider the proper thing), and rode off at a trot towards the bastion to deliver some orders and await the final result of the affair. Prince GĂĄltsin, under the influence of that oppressive excitement usually produced in a spectator by proximity to an action in which he is not engaged, went out and began aimlessly pacing up and down the street.
VISoldiers passed, carrying the wounded on stretchers or leading them under their arms. It was quite dark in the streets; only here and there one saw lights, in the hospital windows or where some officers were sitting up. From the bastions still came the thunder of cannon and the rattle of muskets,42 and the lights continued to flash in the dark sky as before. From time to time you heard trampling hoofs as an orderly galloped past, or the groans of a wounded man, the steps and voices of stretcher-bearers, or the words of some frightened women who had come out into their porches to watch the cannonade.
Among the spectators were our friend NikĂta, the old sailorâs widow, with whom he had again made friends, and her ten-year-old daughter.
âO Lord God! Holy Mary, Mother of God!â said the old woman, sighing, as she looked at the bombs that kept flying across from side to side like balls of fire; âwhat horrors! what horrors! Ah, ah! oh, oh! Even at the first bandagement it wasnât like that. Look now, where the cursed thing has burst, just over our house in the suburb.â
âNo, thatâs further, they keep tumbling into Aunt Irenaâs garden,â said the girl.
âAnd where, where is master now?â drawled NikĂta, who was not quite sober yet. âOh! how I love that âere master of mine even I myself donât know. I love him so that, should he be killed in a sinful way, which God forbid, then, would you believe it, granny, after that I myself donât know what I wouldnât do to myself! Sâelp me, I donât!â ââ ⊠My master is that sort, thereâs only one word for it. Could one change him for such as them there, playing cards? What are they? Ugh! thereâs only one word for it!â concluded NikĂta, pointing to the lighted window of his masterâs room, to which, in the absence of the Lieutenant-Captain, the Junker ZhvadchĂ©vsky had invited Sublieutenants OugrĂłvich and NepshisĂ©tsky (whose face was swollen), and was having a spree in honour of a medal he had received.
âLook at the stars, look at âem, how theyâre rolling!â The little girl broke the silence that followed NikĂtaâs words. She stood gazing at the sky. âHereâs another rolled down. What is it a sign of, eh, mother?â
âTheyâll smash up our hut altogether,â said the old woman with a sigh, leaving her daughter unanswered.
âAs we went there today with uncle, mother,â continued, in a singsong tone, the little girl, who had become talkative, âthere was such a bâ âiâ âg cannonball inside the room, close to the cupboard. Aâspose it had smashed in through the passage, and right into the room, such a big oneâ âyou couldnât lift it.â
âThose who had husbands and money all moved away,â said the old woman, âand thereâs the hut, all that was left me, and thatâs been smashed. Just look at him blazing away! The fiend!â ââ ⊠O Lord, O Lord!â
âAnd just as we were going out, comes a bomb flyâ âing, and goes and burâ âsts and coâ âoâ âvers us with dust. A bit of it nearly hit me and uncle.â
VIIMore and more wounded, carried on stretchers, or walking supported by others and talking loudly, passed Prince GĂĄltsin.
âUp they sprang, friends,â said the bass voice of a tall soldier, carrying two guns over his shoulder, âup they sprang, shouting âAllah! Allah!â43 and just climbing one over another. You kill one, and anotherâs there, you couldnât do anything; no end of âemâ ââ
But at this point in the story GĂĄltsin interrupted him.
âYou are from the bastion?â
âJust so, yâr honour!â
âWell, what happened, tell me?â
âWhat happened? Well, yâr honour, such a force of âem poured down on us over the rampart, it was all up. They quite overpowered us, yâr honour!â
âOverpowered?â ââ ⊠but you repulsed them?â
âHowâs one to repulse âem, when his whole force came on, killed all our men, and no reâforcements are given?â
The soldier was mistaken, the trench remained ours; but it is a curious fact, which anyone may notice, that a soldier wounded in action always thinks the affair lost, and imagines it to have been a very bloody fight.
âHow is that? I was told they had been repulsed,â said GĂĄltsin irritably. âPerhaps they were driven back after you left? Is it long since you came away?â
âI am straight from there, yâr honour!â answered the soldier; âit is hardly possible; they must have kept the trench, he overpowered us quite.â
âHow are you not ashamed to have lost the trench? Itâs awful!â said GĂĄltsin, provoked at such indifference.
âWhat if heâd the force?â muttered the soldier.
âAh, yâr honour,â began a soldier from a stretcher which had just come up to them, âhow could we help giving it up when he had killed almost all our men? If we had the force we wouldnât have given it up, not
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