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Seven Who Were Hanged by Leonid Nikolayevich Andreyev
page 77 of 122 (63%)
Thus it went on until the trial and the terrible meeting with his
parents. When he awoke in his cell the next day he realized clearly
that everything between him and life was ended, that there were only a
few empty hours of waiting and then death would come, -and a strange
sensation took possession of him. He felt as though he had been
stripped, stripped entirely,-as if not only his clothes, but the sun,
the air, the noise of voices and his ability to do things had been
wrested from him. Death was not there as yet, but life was there no
longer,-there was something new, something astonishing, inexplicable,
not entirely reasonable and yet not altogether without
meaning,-something so deep and mysterious and supernatural that it was
impossible to understand.

"Fie, you devil!" wondered Sergey, painfully. "What is this? Where am
I? I- who am I?"

He examined himself attentively, with interest, beginning with his
large prison slippers, ending with his stomach where his coat
protruded. He paced the cell, spreading out his arms and continuing to
survey himself like a woman in a new dress which is too long for her.
He tried to turn his head, and it turned. And this strange,, terrible,
uncouth creature was he, Sergey Golovin, and soon he would be no more!

Everything became strange.

He tried to walk across the cell-and it seemed strange to him that he
could walk. He tried to sit down-and it seemed strange to him that he
could sit. He tried to drink some water-and it seemed strange to him
that he could drink, that he could swallow, that he could hold the
cup, that he had fingers and that those fingers were trembling. He
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