Further Foolishness eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Further Foolishness.

Further Foolishness eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about Further Foolishness.

“How many should there be?” said Serge.

“I know not,” said Itch.  “You must count them and see.”

Then Yump said, “Here is a pudding, little son, and a fish, and a duck and a cheese and garlic.”

So that night Itch and Yump stayed in the house of Madame Vasselitch.

“You are tired,” said Itch.  “You must sleep.”

“I am not tired,” said Yump.  “It is only that my head aches and my face burns from the wind and the sun.”

“I will go forth,” said Itch, “and find a fisski, or drug-store, and get something for your face.”

“Stay where you are,” said Yump.  And Itch stayed.

Meantime Serge had gone upstairs with the fish and the duck and the cheese and the pudding.  As he went up he thought.  “It is selfish to eat alone.  I will give part of the fish to the others.”  And when he got a little further up the steps he thought, “I will give them all of the fish.”  And when he got higher still he thought, “They shall have everything.”

Then he opened the door and came into the big room where the students were playing with matches at the big table and drinking golgol out of cups.  “Here is food, brothers,” he said.  “Take it.  I need none.”

The students took the food and they cried, “Rah, Rah,” and beat the fish against the table.  But the pudding they would not take.  “We have no axe,” they said.  “Keep it.”

Then they poured out golgol for Serge and said, “Drink it.”

But Serge would not.

“I must work,” he said, and all the students laughed.  “He wants to work!” they cried.  “Rah, Rah.”

But Serge went up to his room and lighted his taper, made of string dipped in fat, and set himself to study.  “I must work,” he repeated.

So Serge sat at his books.  It got later and the house grew still.  The noise of the students below ceased and then everything was quiet.

Serge sat working through the night.  Then presently it grew morning and the dark changed to twilight and Serge could see from his window the great building with the barred windows across the street standing out in the grey mist of the morning.

Serge had often studied thus through the night and when it was morning he would say, “It is morning,” and would go down and help Madame Vasselitch unbar the iron shutters and unchain the door, and remove the bolts from the window casement.

But on this morning as Serge looked from his window his eyes saw a figure behind the barred window opposite to him.  It was the figure of a girl, and she was kneeling on the floor and she was in prayer, for Serge could see that her hands were before her face.  And as he looked all his blood ran warm to his head, and his limbs trembled even though he could not see the girl’s face.  Then the girl rose from her knees and turned her face towards the bars, and Serge knew that it was Olga Ileyitch and that she had seen and known him.

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Project Gutenberg
Further Foolishness from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.