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Show .‘thtt 'l‘lll‘, lt\l(l{ THE DOOR CLOSES l'ttlil‘iF'l‘ so I :upnow that w she": in" in the thiwl. of it very shortly. its; lint. i‘ :t 'i t' .~ . :‘ -- till has liven li;|ti:;ll|".§ 2 way ;,i' ilzt‘..~1‘:-?.;. "‘f'nm .; t'. i .i .' 'lilll "7.: an old pump iaxi iHll~i|lt il' .11?» t‘n'm": "Urine. 'liltt'l'l‘..\' a litter of tl]It\ pawn.» lll\‘lti'li.l(lll.llulllilll‘\hll1l(r1lJLlll(I.: , ..y i. "v ‘VV ‘ . 1 I ‘1'Y"‘.' } | " 1 'l‘lmre's an will l.,l.‘| away to the right where some horses are and (no t ouk, l l;.\e to lit-(p i iy mind on tlll‘>(‘tlli1]t§fi luwauw l kn -\. they‘re real. You (-an IHW'll them with your hand-\ will they‘ll :ztill it there own if you no away- thwy won‘t walk with you as you niove. So I must fasten on to thew things almut \\hi<'h there can't he any doubt. In the same way l like to rememlw-r that hook in the sitting- room-hklr. (liars who lectured on "Fools," the lluysdael, and the Normal l'upils who aeted (/f/H‘f/U. They‘re real enough and are prohahly somewhere now quietly studying, or teaehiue‘. or sleeping" I envy them. . . . -\ thing that happened this morning disturbed us all. hour soldiers came out of the Forest quite mad. They :‘een‘ied rational enough at first and said that they'd been sent out: of the lirst line trenches with eontusion-~-one of them had a bleeding linger, hut the others were untouched. Tlien one of them. a middle-aged man with a black heard, heean quite gravely to tell us that the Forest was moving. They had seen it with their own eyes. They had watched all the trees march slowly forward like columns of soldiers and soon the whole Forest would move and would crush every one in it. It was all very well fighting Austrians, hut whole fm'ests was more than any one could expect of them. Then suddenly one of then] cried out, pointing with his finger: "See, Your IIonoul'iwthCl'e it comes! . . . Alll let us run! let us run I" One of them henan to cry. It was very disagreeable. .I saw Andrey Vassilieviteh who was present glanee anxiously through the window at the F01" 301 est. and then gravely eheek himself and look at me nervously to see, whether I had noticed. The men, afterwards fell intii a strange kind of apathy. We sent them off to Mittovo in the afternoon. I want now to rcrnemher as exactly as possible a strange eonversation I had this evening with Semyonov. I came up when it was getting dusk to the bedroom. One of the Austrian hatteries was spittngr away over the hill but we were not replying. I‘Ivei‘ytl‘iing this afternoon has looked as though they were preparing for a heavy attack. Our little, window was open and the sky beyond was a sort of very pale green. and against this you could see a flush of colour risinn‘ and falling; like the opening and shutting of a door. ,liverything quite silent exeept the Austrian cannon and a soldier, (,lelirious, downstairs, singing. The Forest was deep black; but you could see the sol- diers' tires gleaming here and there like beasts' eyes. Our room was almost dark and I was very startled to find Seniyonov sitting on his bed and staring in front of him. He looked like a wooden figure sitting there, and he didn't move as I came in. I'm glad that although I‘m still awkward and clumsy with him (as I am, and always will he, I suppose, with every one) I'm not afraid of him any more. The room was so dark that he looked like a shadow. I had intended to fetch something and go away, but instead of that I sat down on my bed, feeling suddenly very tired and lethargic. "Well, M12," he said in the ironieal voice he alwayrt uses to me. ( I would wish now to repeat if I can every word of our conversation.) "KUJOV has been again." I said. we ought to go "to-night. "He told Nikitin that Nikitin asked him Whether $110 |