The Forged Coupon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 211 pages of information about The Forged Coupon.

The Forged Coupon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 211 pages of information about The Forged Coupon.

The discussion came to nothing, and all would have ended well if Missael had not preached the next day at mass, denouncing the wicked seducers of the faithful and saying that they deserved the worst punishment.  Coming out of the church, the crowd of peasants began to consult whether it would not be well to give the infidels a good lesson for disturbing the minds of the community.  The same day, just when Missael was enjoying some salmon and gangfish, dining at the village priest’s in company with the inspector, a violent brawl arose in the village.  The peasants came in a crowd to Chouev’s cottage, and waited for the dissenters to come out in order to give them a thrashing.

The dissenters assembled in the cottage numbered about twenty men and women.  Missael’s sermon and the attitude of the orthodox peasants, together with their threats, aroused in the mind of the dissenters angry feelings, to which they had before been strangers.  It was near evening, the women had to go and milk the cows, and the peasants were still standing and waiting at the door.

A boy who stepped out of the door was beaten and driven back into the house.  The people within began consulting what was to be done, and could come to no agreement.  The tailor said, “We must bear whatever is done to us, and not resist.”  Chouev replied that if they decided on that course they would, all of them, be beaten to death.  In consequence, he seized a poker and went out of the house.  “Come!” he shouted, “let us follow the law of Moses!” And, falling upon the peasants, he knocked out one man’s eye, and in the meanwhile all those who had been in his house contrived to get out and make their way home.

Chouev was thrown into prison and charged with sedition and blasphemy.

XXI

Two years previous to those events a strong and handsome young girl of an eastern type, Katia Turchaninova, came from the Don military settlements to St. Petersburg to study in the university college for women.  In that town she met a student, Turin, the son of a district governor in the Simbirsk province, and fell in love with him.  But her love was not of the ordinary type, and she had no desire to become his wife and the mother of his children.  He was a dear comrade to her, and their chief bond of union was a feeling of revolt they had in common, as well as the hatred they bore, not only to the existing forms of government, but to all those who represented that government.  They had also in common the sense that they both excelled their enemies in culture, in brains, as well as in morals.  Katia Turchaninova was a gifted girl, possessed of a good memory, by means of which she easily mastered the lectures she attended.  She was successful in her examinations, and, apart from that, read all the newest books.  She was certain that her vocation was not to bear and rear children, and even looked on such a task with disgust and contempt.  She thought herself

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The Forged Coupon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.