The Duel Aleksandr Kuprin (best inspirational books .txt) đ
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
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Romashov shipped his oars, and it was only by observing the green shore gently stealing by that one could tell that the boat was moving onwards.
âYesâ âannihilation,â Romashov repeated slowly, in a dreamy tone.
âBut why cudgel your brains over this? Gaze instead at the living landscape around you. How exquisite is life!â shouted Nasanski, with a powerful and eloquent gesture. âOh, thou beauty of the Godheadâ âthou infinite beauty! Look at this blue sky, this calm and silent water, and you will tremble with joy and rapture. Look at yon water-mill far in the distance, softly moving its sails. Look at the fresh verdure of the bank and the mischievous play of the sunbeams on the water. How wonderfully lovely and peaceful is all this!â Nasanski suddenly buried his face in his hands and burst out weeping; but he recovered his self-possession immediately, and, without any shame for his tears, he went on to say, while looking at Romashov with moist, glistening eyes:
âNo, even if I were to fall under the railway train, and were left lying on the line with broken and bleeding limbs, and anyone were to ask me if life were beautiful, I should none the less, and even by summoning my last remains of strength, answer enthusiastically, âAh, yes, even now life is glorious.â How much joy does not sight alone give us, and so, too, music, the scent of flowers, and womanâs love? And then the human understanding: thought which alone is our lifeâs golden sunâ âthe eternal source of noble pleasure and imperishable bliss. Yurochkaâ âpardon me calling you so, my friendââ âNasanski held out his trembling hand to Romashov as though entreating forgivenessâ ââsuppose you were shut up in prison, and you were doomed all your life to stare at crumbling bricks of the wall of your cellâ âno, let us suppose that in your prison dungeon there never penetrated a ray of light or a sound from the outer world. Well, what more? What would that be in comparison with all the mysterious terrors of death? Yet if thought, memory, imagination, the spiritâs faculty of creation remained, you would not only be able to live, but even find moments of enthusiasm and the joy of life.â
âYes, life is priceless,â exclaimed Romashov, interrupting him.
âItâs magnificent,â Nasanski went on to say hotly, âyet people wish two rational creatures to kill each other for a womanâs sake, or to reestablish their so-called honour! But who is it then he kills?â âthis miserable living clod of earth that arrogates to himself the proud name of man? Is it himself or his neighbour? No, he kills the gracious warmth and life-giving sun, the bright sky, and all nature with its infinite beauty and charm. He kills that which never, never, never will return. Oh, what madmen!â
Nasanski ceased, shook his head sorrowfully, and collapsed. The boat glided into the reeds. Romashov again took the oars. High, hard, green stalks bowed slowly and gravely, gently scraping the boatâs gunwale. Amid the tall rushes there was shade and coolness.
âWhat shall I do?â asked Romashov, scowling and angry. âShall I enter the reserves? Where shall I go?â
Nasanski looked at him with a gentle smile.
âListen, Romashov, and look me straight in the faceâ âthatâs right. No, donât turn away, look at me, and answer on your honour and conscience. Do you really think that you are now serving any good, useful, and reasonable purposes? I know you much better than all the restâ âyes, I know your inmost soul, and I know you do not think so.â
âNo,â replied Romashov, in a firm voice, âyou are right. But what will become of me?â
âWell, be calm. Only look at our officers. Oh, Iâm not talking now of the fops of the Emperorâs lifeguards who dance at the Court balls, talk French, and are kept by their parents or by their more or less lawful wives. No, Iâm thinking of ourselvesâ âpoor officers in the line who, nevertheless, constitute the very âpickâ of the irresistible and glorious Russian Army. What are we? Well, mere fag-endsâ âle beau reste, despised pariahs; at best the sons of poor, poverty-stricken infantry Captains, ruined in body and soul, but for, by far, the most part consisting of collegians, seminarists, etc., who have failed. Look, for instance, at our regiment. What are they who remain for any time in the service? Poor devils burdened with large families, veritable beggars ready for every villainy and crueltyâ âah, even for murderâ âand are not even ashamed of abstracting the poor soldierâs scanty pay so that, at any rate, cabbage soup may not be lacking on their table at home. Such an individual is commanded to shoot. Whom? And for what? It is all the same to him. He only knows that at home there are hungry mouths, dirty, scrofulous, rickety children, and with dull countenance he splutters, like another woodpecker, his eternal, unvarying answer, âMy oath.â And if thereâs a spark of ability or talent in anyone, it is extinguished in schnapps. Seventy-five percent of our officers are diseased through vice. If anyone in the regiment happens to scrape through his entrance examination for the Staff Collegeâ âwhich, by the way, hardly happens with us once in five yearsâ âhe is pursued by hatred.
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