The Diary of a Superfluous Man and Other Stories by Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev
page 48 of 235 (20%)
page 48 of 235 (20%)
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I stared at him, as though I were turned to stone, and did not stir. 'Go up to the barrier, if you please!' Koloberdyaev observed severely. I obeyed. 'Is the duel to go on?' he added, addressing Bizmyonkov. Bizmyonkov made him no answer. But the prince, without taking the handkerchief from the wound, without even giving himself the satisfaction of tormenting me at the barrier, replied with a smile. 'The duel is at an end,' and fired into the air. I was almost crying with rage and vexation. This man by his magnanimity had utterly trampled me in the mud; he had completely crushed me. I was on the point of making objections, on the point of demanding that he should fire at me. But he came up to me, and held out his hand. 'It's all forgotten between us, isn't it?' he said in a friendly voice. I looked at his blanched face, at the blood-stained handkerchief, and utterly confounded, put to shame, and annihilated, I pressed his hand. 'Gentlemen!' he added, turning to the seconds, 'everything, I hope, will be kept secret?' 'Of course!' cried Koloberdyaev; 'but, prince, allow me ...' And he himself bound up his head. |
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