[Foma Gordyeff by Maxim Gorky]@TWC D-Link bookFoma Gordyeff CHAPTER III 42/119
Or suddenly his heart began to tremble with the desire to express his gratitude to God, to bow before Him; the words of the prayer flashed through his memory, and beholding the sky, he whispered them for a long time, one by one, and his heart grew lighter, breathing into prayer the excess of his power. The father patiently and carefully introduced him into commercial circles, took him on the Exchange, told him about his contracts and enterprises, about his co-associates, described to him how they had made their way, what fortunes they now possessed, what natures were theirs. Foma soon mastered it, regarding everything seriously and thoughtfully. "Our bud is blooming into a blood-red cup-rose!" Mayakin smiled, winking to Ignat. And yet, even when Foma was nineteen years old, there was something childish in him, something naive which distinguished him from the boys of his age.
They were laughing at him, considering him stupid; he kept away from them, offended by their relations toward him.
As for his father and Mayakin, who were watching him vigilantly, this uncertainty of Foma's character inspired them with serious apprehensions. "I cannot understand him!" Ignat would say with contrite heart.
"He does not lead a dissipated life, he does not seem to run after the women, treats me and you with respect, listens to everything--he is more like a pretty girl than a fellow! And yet he does not seem to be stupid!" "No, there's nothing particularly stupid about him," said Mayakin. "It looks as though he were waiting for something--as though some kind of shroud were covering his eyes.
His late mother groped on earth in the same way. "Just look, there's Afrikanka Smolin, but two years older than my boy--what a man he has become! That is, it is difficult to tell whether he is his father's head or his father his.
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