[Foma Gordyeff by Maxim Gorky]@TWC D-Link bookFoma Gordyeff CHAPTER X 120/121
It seemed as though the breast was trembling, as the blood coursed down in burning streams. Embraced in dense gloom from all sides the people seemed on the background of the forest, like little children; they, too, seemed to burn, illuminated by the blaze of the bonfire.
They waved their hands and sang their songs loudly, powerfully. And Yozhov, standing beside Foma, spoke excitedly: "You hard-hearted blockhead! Why do you repulse me? You ought to listen to the song of the dying soul, and weep over it, for, why was it wounded, why is it dying? Begone from me, begone! You think I am drunk? I am poisoned, begone!" Without lifting his eyes off the forest and the fire, so beautiful in the darkness, Foma made a few steps aside from Yozhov and said to him in a low voice: "Don't play the fool.
Why do you abuse me at random ?" "I want to remain alone, and finish singing my song." Staggering, he, too, moved aside from Foma, and after a few seconds again exclaimed in a sobbing voice: "My song is done! And nevermore Shall I disturb their sleep of death, Oh Lord, Oh Lord, repose my soul! For it is hopeless in its wounds, Oh Lord, repose my soul." Foma shuddered at the sounds of their gloomy wailing, and he hurried after Yozhov; but before he overtook him the little feuilleton-writer uttered a hysterical shriek, threw himself chest down upon the ground and burst out sobbing plaintively and softly, even as sickly children cry. "Nikolay!" said Foma, lifting him by the shoulders.
"Cease crying; what's the matter? Oh Lord.
Nikolay! Enough, aren't you ashamed ?" But Yozhov was not ashamed; he struggled on the ground, like a fish just taken from the water, and when Foma had lifted him to his feet, he pressed close to Foma's breast, clasping his sides with his thin arms, and kept on sobbing. "Well, that's enough!" said Foma, with his teeth tightly clenched. "Enough, dear." And agitated by the suffering of the man who was wounded by the narrowness of life, filled with wrath on his account, he turned his face toward the gloom where the lights of the town were glimmering, and, in an outburst of wrathful grief, roared in a deep, loud voice: "A-a-ana-thema! Be cursed! Just wait.
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