MOTHER (Russian Literature Classic). Максим Горький
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Название: MOTHER (Russian Literature Classic)

Автор: Максим Горький

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4057664560605

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СКАЧАТЬ but when I came to recognize that there is truth in the world, people became better." He smiled again and added: "I do not know how it happened myself! From childhood I feared everybody; as I grew up I began to hate everybody, some for their meanness, others—well, I do not know why—just so! And now I see all the people in a different way. I am grieved for them all! I cannot understand it; but my heart turned softer when I recognized that there is truth in men, and that not all are to blame for their foulness and filth."

      He was silent as if listening to something within himself. Then he said in a low voice and thoughtfully:

      "That's how truth lives."

      She looked at him tenderly.

      "May God protect you!" she sighed. "It is a dangerous change that has come upon you."

      When he had fallen asleep, the mother rose carefully from her bed and came gently into her son's room. Pavel's swarthy, resolute, stern face was clearly outlined against the white pillow. Pressing her hand to her bosom, the mother stood at his bedside. Her lips moved mutely, and great tears rolled down her cheeks.

      CHAPTER III

       Table of Contents

      Again they lived in silence, distant and yet near to each other. Once, in the middle of the week, on a holiday, as he was preparing to leave the house he said to his mother:

      "I expect some people here on Saturday."

      "What people?" she asked.

      "Some people from our village, and others from the city."

      "From the city?" repeated the mother, shaking her head. And suddenly she broke into sobs.

      "Now, mother, why this?" cried Pavel resentfully. "What for?"

      Drying her face with her apron, she answered quietly:

      "I don't know, but it is the way I feel."

      He paced up and down the room, then halting before her, said:

      "Are you afraid?"

      "I am afraid," she acknowledged. "Those people from the city—who knows them?"

      He bent down to look in her face, and said in an offended tone, and, it seemed to her, angrily, like his father:

      "This fear is what is the ruin of us all. And some dominate us; they take advantage of our fear and frighten us still more. Mark this: as long as people are afraid, they will rot like the birches in the marsh. We must grow bold; it is time!

      "It's all the same," he said, as he turned from her; "they'll meet in my house, anyway."

      "Don't be angry with me!" the mother begged sadly. "How can I help being afraid? All my life I have lived in fear!"

      "Forgive me!" was his gentler reply, "but I cannot do otherwise," and he walked away.

      For three days her heart was in a tremble, sinking in fright each time she remembered that strange people were soon to come to her house. She could not picture them to herself, but it seemed to her they were terrible people. It was they who had shown her son the road he was going.

      On Saturday night Pavel came from the factory, washed himself, put on clean clothes, and when walking out of the house said to his mother without looking at her:

      "When they come, tell them I'll be back soon. Let them wait a while. And please don't be afraid. They are people like all other people."

      She sank into her seat almost fainting.

      Her son looked at her soberly. "Maybe you'd better go away somewhere," he suggested.

      The thought offended her. Shaking her head in dissent, she said:

      "No, it's all the same. What for?"

      It was the end of November. During the day a dry, fine snow had fallen upon the frozen earth, and now she heard it crunching outside the window under her son's feet as he walked away. A dense crust of darkness settled immovably upon the window panes, and seemed to lie in hostile watch for something. Supporting herself on the bench, the mother sat and waited, looking at the door.

      It seemed to her that people were stealthily and watchfully walking about the house in the darkness, stooping and looking about on all sides, strangely attired and silent. There around the house some one was already coming, fumbling with his hands along the wall.

      A whistle was heard. It circled around like the notes of a fine chord, sad and melodious, wandered musingly into the wilderness of darkness, and seemed to be searching for something. It came nearer. Suddenly it died away under the window, as if it had entered into the wood of the wall. The noise of feet was heard on the porch. The mother started, and rose with a strained, frightened look in her eyes.

      The door opened. At first a head with a big, shaggy hat thrust itself into the room; then a slender, bending body crawled in, straightened itself out, and deliberately raised its right hand.

      "Good evening!" said the man, in a thick, bass voice, breathing heavily.

      The mother bowed in silence.

      "Pavel is not at home yet?"

      The stranger leisurely removed his short fur jacket, raised one foot, whipped the snow from his boot with his hat, then did the same with the other foot, flung his hat into a corner, and rocking on his thin legs walked into the room, looking back at the imprints he left on the floor. He approached the table, examined it as if to satisfy himself of its solidity, and finally sat down and, covering his mouth with his hand, yawned. His head was perfectly round and close-cropped, his face shaven except for a thin mustache, the ends of which pointed downward.

      After carefully scrutinizing the room with his large, gray, protuberant eyes, he crossed his legs, and, leaning his head over the table, inquired:

      "Is this your own house, or do you rent it?"

      The mother, sitting opposite him, answered:

      "We rent it."

      "Not a very fine house," he remarked.

      "Pasha will soon be here; wait," said the mother quietly.

      "Why, yes, I am waiting," said the man.

      His calmness, his deep, sympathetic voice, and the candor and simplicity of his face encouraged the mother. He looked at her openly and kindly, and a merry sparkle played in the depths of his transparent eyes. In the entire angular, stooping figure, with its thin legs, there was something comical, yet winning. He was dressed in a blue shirt, and dark, loose trousers thrust into his boots. She was seized with the desire to ask him who he was, whence he came, and whether he had known her son long. But suddenly he himself put a question, leaning forward with a swing of his whole body.

      "Who made that hole in your forehead, mother?"

      His question was uttered in a kind voice and with a СКАЧАТЬ