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Show 94 Till", lllllh' l'HlCl"\'l‘ SPRING IN THE TRAIN lhad never. in my luur:liwwlii'w< WWW v . (liSPUHllkiTl. l v i. "renter l lvwlu‘il :sl le llill l:.? ill. .l ‘l w .‘ :9". llilll'll heyoud the windows. ::l \ fl 311W, ll w l » lg -l~ 4".le nevertheless so pwriu-l'} wit‘Ur‘,;l ‘1. ,ml ,' \- ,{v-m; Vas- silievitvh‘s short flit our. \\l l h uh». i M Mr ,. : pmm‘. uneoml‘orlalih‘: l sun"? 1‘ w v‘.:l»lui:'u~. ll .- <l, ‘. flin8(‘(Wl81 lil‘sl one ln'lu' ill"ll :i! "ll.' i' J1"l i il. 'i'i‘lomir in I‘m» "+va ,,f my hack there \vas :ill frziwh-v~.il~'w irM x: .‘;l n- :z‘l. them was in my l‘i‘lllll some >ll'Jll't'i' ll‘\: Tv't [a . "whim". as though some one were turning r." Tu W rm ".lH‘l'l .- within: that I had forget: u. or 12> Ilwiuh J.L'..lll . ‘u- xxm- lure- warning me of slime pv ril wr «w-inpiimiiimi. l l wl very distinctly. that iitipiw «fun. so turf"; r W all 1;: ul‘ pluing through some (‘pr‘r‘ir'tir‘v ‘ early lumen: l lull seen 4, . _ . . already the dim lamp. the square piiwh wt wwni'w' sky Nikitin, Andrey \vassilim'ih-li. l hm llxl i'i " mo ment lrenrharrl . . . llo- dill. . . . llr- lirllt'l ll‘rl my arm. "(‘an you sleep {n he whispered. "No," I answered. "It‘s terrihly hot, (-losw smell. . sleep ?" .\ re ‘mu L'"ln{.' t0 l l i "No," I whispered liar}. again. "Let us move into the m-rriilor. lt will he enoh‘r ilIOFP-l‘ There seemed to me quite :l m \\' smm il «it ill-wrininnfiml and resolve in his \‘uir-e. llis m»ri,~.,u\m-\_\ - hall hvl't him with the daylight. He led the way will ul‘ ihw carriage. turned down the little seats in the corridor . prim irlwl ('iu'ni‘i‘W‘S"It isn't much better here. hut we‘ll have the \ViN‘lOW Open. It'll get better. 'l‘his is really war. isn‘t it Wins so uncomfortable as this? I feel as though things "we really beginning." ‘ h. a Wel l, "e shall he there to-murrow night." I ans wered 1m. " ,* . . ' . . I hope 5"" 1‘8 not going to he disappoin letl.' 25 "Disappointed in What '3" Ilis voice was quite sharp as he spoke to me. "You don't know what I want." "I suppose you're like the rest of us. You want to see what war really is. You want to do some good if you can. You want to be seriously occupied in it to prevent your thinking too much about it. Then, because you're English, you want to see what the Russians are really like. You're curious and sympathetic, inquisitive and, perhaps, a little sentimental about it. . . . Am I right ?" "No, not quite-there are other things. I'd like to tell you. Do you mind," he said suddenly looking up straight into my face with a confiding smile that was especially his own, "if I talk, if I tell you why I've come? I've no right, I don't know you-but I'm so happy to-night that I must talk--I'm so happy that I feel as though I shall never get through the night alive." Of our conversation after this, or rather of his talk, excited, eager, intimate and shy, old and wise and very, very young, I remember now, I think, every word with especial vividness. After events were to fix it all in my brain with peculiar accuracy, but his narration had that night of itself its own individual quality. His vas no ordinary personality, or, at any rate, the especial circum- stances of the time drove it into no ordinary shape, and I believe that never before in all his days had he spoken freely and eagerly to any one. It was simply to-night his exultation and happiness that impelled him, perhaps also some sense of high adventure that his romantic character would, most inevitably, extract from our expedition and its purposes. At any rate, I listened, saying a word now and then, whilst the hour grew dark, lit only by the stars, then trembled into a pale dawn overladen with grey dense clouds, |