The Three Comrades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Three Comrades.

The Three Comrades eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Three Comrades.

Title:  The Three Comrades

Author:  Kristina Roy

Release Date:  April 25, 2004 [EBook #12143]

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

THE THREE COMRADES

by Kristina Roy

of Stara Tura, Slovakia.

Translated by Charles Lukesh

First Edition, 3,000—­November, 1941

THE THREE COMRADES

CHAPTER ONE

In the whole wide world there were no comrades who loved each other better than Petrik,[1] Ondrejko,[2] and Fido.  All three were orphans and had had a hard time in the world thus far.  Both parents of Petrik had died of a malignant fever.  He became a public charge and was sent from place to place, till finally he was placed in charge of “Bacha"[3] Filina, who was his father’s uncle, and had charge of the sheep pasturing on the mountain clearings of the estate of Lord Gemer.  There was but a poor hut, but to mistreated Petrik it was like a paradise.  Ondrejko, whom they called at home Andreas de Gemer, came to the old “Bacha” at the order of the doctor, that he might grow stronger in the mountain air, drinking whey and eating black bread.  As it was, Ondrejko did, and did not, have a father—­at least he could not remember him.  He was but two years old when his parents separated for ever.  His mother took him with her when she left, but even then he did not live with her.  She left him with strange people whom she paid to keep him, and went alone into the world.  The people talked about her; said that she was a famous singer, and that many went from distant places to hear her.

[Footnote 1:  Diminutive for Peter.]

[Footnote 2:  Diminutive for Andreas.]

[Footnote 3:  “Bacha”—­shepherd overseer.]

Ondrejko remembered only one of her visits, and that she was very beautiful, and brought him a box full of chocolates, a rocking-horse, a trumpet—­and who knows what more?  After that he never saw her again, and probably would never see her any more.  The lady with whom he stayed talked about a law-suit, at the conclusion of which it came about that he belonged neither to the mother nor the father.  Finally, he came to the castle of Lord Gemer, and from there the doctor sent him to the mountains because he was like a candle that was ready to go out.  About his father he knew only that he was somewhere far away, and had already a second wife and two boys.  It seemed to him he was as much of an orphan as Petrik.  The dog Fido didn’t remember his mother either, because he had hardly begun to run about the kennel when a wild boar killed her.  Thus it is not surprising that all three loved each other.

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The Three Comrades from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.