Short Fiction by Vsevolod Garshin (always you kirsty moseley TXT) ๐
Description
Vsevolod Garshinโs literary career followed a stint as a infantry soldier and later an officer, and he received both public and critical acclaim in the 1880s. Before his sadly early death at the age of thirty-three after a lifelong battle with mental illness he wrote and published nineteen short stories. He drew on his military career and life in St. Petersburg as initial source material, and his varied cast of characters includes soldiers, painters, architects, madmen, bears, frogs and even flowers and trees. All are written with a depth of feeling and sympathy that marks Garshin out from his contemporaries.
Collected here are the seventeen translations into English by Rowland Smith of Garshinโs short stories and novellas, in chronological order of the original Russian publication.
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- Author: Vsevolod Garshin
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The sun was already high when I opened my eyes. Troops, transport, and parks were swarming over the sandy shore. At the very edge of the water they had already dug out gun-pits and trenches for the riflemen. Across the Danube, on its steep cliff could be discerned gardens and vineyards in which our troops swarmed. Behind these the land rose higher and higher, abruptly restricting the horizon. To the right, three versts from us, and showing white on the hills, were the houses and minarets of Sistovo. A steamer with a barge in tow was transferring battalion after battalion to the other side. On our side a little torpedo-boat was noisily blowing off steam.
โA successful crossing, Vladimir Mikhailich,โ said Feodoroff to me gaily.
โThe same to you. Only we have not crossed yet.โ
โWe shall directly. Look; the steamer will soon take us over. They say a Turkish ironclad is not far away. This little samovar is ready for it.โ He pointed to the torpedo-boat.
โGreat God! but what a number have been killed,โ he continued, changing his tone. โThey are already bringing and bringing them over from that side.โ โโ โฆโ
And he related to me the well-known details of the Battle of Sistovo.
โNow it is our turn. We shall cross over to that side.โ โโ โฆ The Turks will attack us.โ โโ โฆ Well, anyhow, we have had a respite. We at least are alive, but those thereโ โโ โฆโ He nodded his head to a group of men and officers standing not far from us, who were crowded round some object not visible to us at which they were all gazing.
โWhat is it?โ
โThey have brought over our killed. Go and look, Mikhailich. How terrible!โ
I went up to the group. All were silent, and with heads bared were gazing at the bodies lying side by side on the sand. Ivan Platonich, Stebelkoff, and Ventzel were also there. Ivan Platonich was frowning angrily, clearing his throat and breathing heavily. Stebelkoff, with frank horror, was stretching out his thin neck. Ventzel was standing wrapped in thought.
There were two of them lying on the sand. One was a full-grown, handsome Guardsman of the Finland Regiment, from the Composite Guards half-companyโ โthe same half-company which had lost half its strength during the attack. He had been wounded in the stomach, and must have suffered long agonies before he died. Suffering had left a faint impression of something spiritual, had left a shadow of refinement and something painfully tender on his face. His eyes were closed, and his arms were crossed on his chest. Had he himself adopted this position before death, or had his comrade tended him? His appearance did not excite terror or revulsion, but only infinite pity for the life so full of energy which had perished.
Ivan Platonich bent over the body and taking up the manโs cap lying near the head, read on the peak, โIvan Jurenko, 3rd Company.โ โThe poor chap was a Little Russian,โ he said quietly. It recalled to me my birthplace, the warm wind of the Steppe, the village nestling in the ravine, the gullies, the overgrow willows, the little white mud hut with its red shutters.โ โโ โฆ Who is waiting you there?
The other was a linesman of the Volhynia Regiment. Death had taken him suddenly. He was running madly to the attack, breathless from shouting. The bullet had struck the bridge of his nose and had penetrated into his head, leaving a black gaping wound. He lay with wide-opened eyes, now dimmed, with gaping mouth, and face already discoloured, but still distorted with rage.
โThey have paid their accounts,โ said Ivan Platonich; โthey are in peace and want nothing more.โ
He turned away. The soldiers hurriedly parted to let him through. I and Stebelkoff followed him. Ventzel caught us up.
โWell, Ivanoff,โ he said, โdid you see?โ
โI have seen, Peter Nicolaievitch,โ I replied.
โAnd what did you think as you looked at them?โ he inquired moodily.
A sudden rage rose within me against this man and a mad desire to say something hard to him.
โMuch. And most of all I thought that they were no longer โfood for powder,โ that they no longer needed welding and discipline, and that nobody would now bully them for the sake of this welding. I thought that they are no longer soldiers, no longer subordinates,โ I said in a trembling voiceโ โโthey are men!โ
Ventzelโs eyes flashed, A sound came from his throat and broke off. No doubt he wished to answer me, but once more restrained himself. He walked by my side with lowered head, and after taking a few paces, not looking at me, said:
โYes, Ivanoff, you are right.โ โโ โฆ They are men.โ โโ โฆ Dead men.โ
IXThey took us across the Danube. For some days we halted near Sistovo awaiting the Turks. Then the troops started off into the heart of the country. We, too, started off. For a long time they sent us first here, then there. We were near Timova and not far from Plevna. Three weeks passed by, and still we had not been in action. At length we were told off to form part of a special division whose duties were to hold the advance of a large Turkish army. Forty thousand were stretched over seventy versts of country. There were about one hundred thousand Turks in front of us, and only the cautious movements of our commanderโ โwho would not risk his men but contented himself by opposing the advance of the enemyโ โand the dilatoriness of the Turkish Pacha enabled us to carry out our taskโ โnot to allow the Turks to break through and cut off our main army from the Danube.
We were few and our line was enormous; consequently we were seldom able to have a rest. We marched round numbers of villages, appearing first in one place, then in another, in order to meet the anticipated attack. We penetrated into such remote parts of Bulgaria that the transport
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