A Russian Proprietor, and Other Stories

Part 22

Chapter 223,429 wordsPublic domain

"Good-by," says he. "Dínushka, I shall always remember you."

Dina clung to him, reached with her hands for a place to stow away some cakes. He took the cakes.

"Thank you," said he: "you are a thoughtful darling. Who will make you dolls after I am gone?" and he stroked her hair.

Dina burst into tears, hid her face in her hands, and scrambled up the hillside like a kid. He could hear, in the darkness, the jingling of the coins on her braids.

Zhilin crossed himself, picked up the lock of his clog so that it might not make a noise, and started on his way, dragging his leg all the time, and keeping his eyes constantly on the glow where the moon was rising.

He knew the way. He had eight versts to go in a direct course, but he would have to strike into the forest before the moon came entirely up. He crossed the stream, and now the light was increasing behind the mountain.

He proceeded along the valley: it was growing light. He walks along, constantly glancing around; but still the moon was not visible. The glow was now changing to white light, and one side of the valley grew brighter and brighter. The shadow crept away from the mountain till it reached its very foot.

Zhilin still hurried along, all the time keeping to the shadow.

He hurries as fast as he can, but the moon rises still faster; and now, at the right, the mountain-tops are illuminated.

He struck into the forest just as the moon rose above the mountains. It became as light and white as day. On the trees all the leaves were visible. It was warm and bright on the mountain-side; every thing seemed as though it were dead. The only sound was the roaring of a torrent far below. He walked along in the forest; he had met no one. Zhilin found a little spot in the forest where it was still darker, and began to rest.

While he rested he ate one of his cakes. He procured a stone and once more tried to break the padlock, but he only bruised his hands, and failed to break the lock.

He arose and went on his way. When he had gone a verst his strength gave out, his feet were sore. He had to walk ten steps at a time, and then rest.

"There's nothing to be done for it," says he to himself. "I will push on as long as my strength holds out; for if I sit down, then I shall not get up again. If I do not reach the fortress before it is daylight, then I will lie down in the woods and spend the day, and start on to-morrow night again."

He walked all night. Once he passed two Tatars on horseback, but he heard them at some distance, and hid behind a tree.

Already the moon was beginning to pale, the dew had fallen, it was near dawn, and Zhilin had not reached the end of the forest.

"Well," says he to himself, "I will go thirty steps farther, strike into the forest, and sit down."

He went thirty steps, and sees the end of the forest. He went to the edge; it was broad daylight. Before him, as on the palm of his hand, were the steppe and the fortress; and on the left, not far away on the mountain-side, fires were burning, or dying out; the smoke rose, and men were moving around the watch-fires.

He looks, and sees the gleaming of fire-arms: Cossacks, soldiers!

Zhilin was overjoyed.

He gathered his remaining strength, and walked down the mountain. And he says to himself, "God help me, if a mounted Tatar should get sight of me on this bare field! I should not escape him, even though I am so near." Even while these thoughts are passing through his mind, he sees at the left, on a hillock not fourteen hundred feet away, three Tatars on the watch. They caught sight of him,--bore down upon him. Then his heart failed within him. Waving his arms, he shouted at the top of his voice, "Brothers! help, brothers!"

Our men heard him,--mounted Cossacks dashed out toward him. The Cossacks were far off, the Tatars near. And now Zhilin collected his last remaining energies, seized his clog with his hand, ran toward the Cossacks, and, without any consciousness of feeling, crossed himself and cried, "Brothers, brothers, brothers!"

The Cossacks were fifteen in number.

The Tatars were dismayed. Before they reached him, they stopped short. And Zhilin reached the Cossacks.

The Cossacks surrounded him, and questioned him: "Who are you?" "What is your name?" "Where did you come from?"

But Zhilin was almost beside himself; he wept, and kept on shouting, "Brothers, brothers!"

The soldiers hastened up, and gathered around him; one brought him bread, another kasha-gruel, another vodka, another threw a cloak around him, still another broke his chains.

The officers recognized him, they brought him into the fortress. The soldiers were delighted, his comrades pressed into Zhilin's room.

Zhilin told them what had happened to him, and he ended his tale with the words,--

"That's the way I went home and got married! No, I see that such is not to be my fate."

And he remained in the service in the Caucasus.

At the end of a month Kostuilin was ransomed for five thousand rubles.

He was brought home scarcely alive.

* * * * *

COUNT TOLSTOÏ'S WORKS.

ANNA KARÉNINA $1.75

CHILDHOOD, BOYHOOD, AND YOUTH 1.50

IVAN ILYITCH 1.25

MY RELIGION 1.00

MY CONFESSION 1.00

WHAT TO DO? 1.25

THE INVADERS 1.25

A RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR 1.50

THOMAS Y CROWELL & CO., PUBLISHERS.

13 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORK.

* * * * *

COUNT TOLSTOI'S WORKS.

The demand for these Russian stories has but just fairly begun; but it is a literary movement more widespread, more intense, than anything this country has probably seen within the past quarter of a century.--_Boston Traveller._

ANNA KARÉNINA. 12mo, $1.75.

"Will take rank among the great works of fiction of the age."--_Portland Transcript._

"As you read on, you say not, 'This is _like_ life' but 'This _is_ life.'"--_W. D. Howells._

IVÁN ILYITCH, AND OTHER STORIES. 12mo, $1.25.

"No living author surpasses him, and only one or two approach him, in the power of picturing not merely places but persons, with minute and fairly startling fidelity."--_Congregationalist._

"Both the personal character and the literary art of Tolstoi are manifested with simpler and clearer power in these writings than in his novels, and the book becomes necessary to an adequate understanding of Tolstoi's mission and work."--_Globe._

CHILDHOOD, BOYHOOD, YOUTH. With Portrait of the Author. 12mo, $1.50.

A series of reminiscences and traditions of the author's early life.

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MY CONFESSION AND THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST'S TEACHING. 12mo, $1.00.

An autobiographical account of the changes in the author's religious opinions, and the various causes by which it was brought about; all of which is told in the most delightful manner, and will enable the reader to understand more clearly his "My Religion," which is the sequel to this volume.

"Like the writings of Bunyan and Thomas à Kempis, Tolstoi's Confession will be read eagerly and become spiritual tonic and daily food to little children in the Kingdom of Christ, whatever be their 'church,' tongue, or nation."--_Critic_, New York.

MY RELIGION. A companion book to My Confession. 12mo, $1.00.

"Should go to every household where the New Testament is read. * * * Every man whose eyes are lifted above the manger and the trough should take 'My Religion' to his home. Let him read it with no matter what hostile prepossessions, let him read it to confute it, but still read, and 'he that is able to receive it, let him receive it.'"--_New York Sun._

WHAT TO DO. Thoughts Evoked by the Census of Moscow. Containing passages excluded by the Press Censor of Russia. 12mo, $1.25. A sequel to "My Confession" and "My Religion."

"Fascinating and startling."--_Boston Daily Advertiser._

"A very thoughtful and instructive work."--_Zion's Herald._

THE INVADERS, AND OTHER STORIES. Tales of the Caucasus, 12mo, $1.25.

"Marked by the wonderful dramatic power which has made his name so popular with an immense circle of readers in this country and in Europe."--_Portland Press._

A RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR, AND OTHER STORIES. (_In Press._) 12mo, $1.50.

* * * * *

THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.

13 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORK.

* * * * *

IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS

PUBLISHED BY

THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO., 13 Astor Place, New York.

COUNT TOLSTOI'S WORKS.--The remarkable interest recently awakened by this "great writer of the Russian land" has caused a constantly growing demand for the English translations of his works. The following are now ready:--

ANNA KARÉNINA 12mo, $1.75 CHILDHOOD, BOYHOOD AND YOUTH 12mo, $1,50 THE INVADERS " $1.25 MY CONFESSION 12mo, $1.00 MY RELIGION " $1.00 IVAN ILYITCH, &c. " $1.25 WHAT TO DO " $1.25 A RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR (_in press_).

LES MISÉRABLES.--By VICTOR HUGO. Translated from the French by Isabel F. Hapgood. With 160 full-page illustrations, printed on fine calendered paper, and bound in neat and attractive style. 5 vols., cloth, gilt top, $7.50; half calf, $15.00. Popular edition in one volume, 12mo, $1.50.

The name of the translator is sufficient guaranty that the work has been skilfully and conscientiously performed. It is by far the completest and best translation of this masterpiece. The type is clear and attractive, the illustrations are by famous artists, and the volumes are in every way desirable.

MRS. SHILLABER'S COOK-BOOK.--A Practical Guide for Housekeepers. By Mrs. LYDIA SHILLABER. With an Introduction by Mrs. PARTINGTON. 12mo, cloth, $1.25. Kitchen Edition, in oil-cloth, $1.25. First and second editions sold before publication. Fourth edition now ready.

The connection between laughter and good digestion is proverbial. It is therefore auspicious for the phenomenal success of this sensible and practical work that the genial Mrs. Partington is its sponsor.

TENNYSON'S WORKS.--HANDY VOLUME EDITION. Complete. Large type. From the latest text, including Earlier Poems. Cloth, gilt top, 8 vols., $6.00; parchment, gilt top, $10.50; half calf, gilt edges, $12.00; American seal russia, gilt edge, round corners, $15.00; full calf, flexible, gilt edges, round corners, $21.00; full calf, gilt edges, padded, round corners, $25.00; tree calf, gilt edge, $30.00.

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An admirable library edition of an American classic.

POEMS IN COLOR.--With 56 exquisite illustrations from original designs by W. J. Whittemore.

SEA PICTURES, by Tennyson. SUNRISE ON THE HILLS, by Longfellow. THE WORSHIP OF NATURE, by Whittier. I REMEMBER, by Hood. TO A WATERFOWL, by Bryant. TO A MOUNTAIN DAISY, by Burns.

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INITIALS AND PSEUDONYMS.--A Dictionary of Literary Disguises. By WILLIAM CUSHING and ALBERT R. FREY. A new edition, enlarged and revised. Royal, 8vo, cloth, $5.00; half morocco, $7.50; interleaved, cloth, $7.50; interleaved, half morocco, $10.00.

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CHRIST AND CHRISTIANITY SERIES.--By Rev. H. R. HAWEIS. 5 vols., 12mo, each $1.25.

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ST. PAUL'S PROBLEM AND ITS SOLUTION.--Dedicated to the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor, and setting forth under the guise of fiction the work of this Society. By FAYE HUNTINGTON, author of "Transformed," "What Fide Remembers," etc. 12mo. $1.25.

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SIGRID.--An Icelandic Love Story. Translated from the Danish of JON THORDSSON THORODDSEN. 12mo. $1.25.

A charming picture of manners and customs in "Ultima Thule."

* * * * *

WHAT THE CRITICS SAY OF

CROWELL'S ILLUSTRATED EDITION

OF

LES MISÉRABLES.

"This translation of Victor Hugo's masterpiece is the best one that has been made."--_N. Y. Observer._

"Can hardly fail to be accepted by critical authorities as the permanent Standard."--_Boston Traveller._

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"The most spirited rendering of Hugo's masterpiece into English, and the illustrations and the letter-press are just as deserving of praise."--_Phila. Press._

"The translation will no doubt supersede all others."--_Cin-Times-Star._

"The publishers have made this book very attractive. They are to be commended not only for the edition before us, but more especially for a popular edition which will make this great work accessible to a wider class of readers."--_Boston Advertiser._

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ASK YOUR BOOKSELLER FOR

CROWELL'S ILLUSTRATED EDITION

OF

LES MISÉRABLES.

By VICTOR HUGO. Translated from the French by ISABEL F. HAPGOOD. With 160 full-page illustrations, printed on fine calendered paper, and bound in neat and attractive style.

5 vols., cloth, gilt top, $7.50; half calf, $15.00.

Popular edition in one vol., 12mo, $1.50.

THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.

13 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORK.

* * * * *

_Count Tolstoï's Greatest Work of Fiction_,

ANNA KARÉNINA.

By COUNT LEO. TOLSTOÏ.

Translated from the Russian by NATHAN HASKELL DOLE.

Royal 12mo, 750 pp., $1.75.

"As you read on you say, not, 'This is like life,' but, 'This is life.' It has not only the complexion, the very hue, of life, but its movement, its advances, its strange pauses, its seeming reversions to former conditions, and its perpetual change, its apparent isolations, its essential solidarity. It is a world, and you live in it while you read, and long afterward; but at no step have you been betrayed, not because your guide has warned or exhorted you, but because he has been true, and has shown you all things as they are."--_W. D. Howells, in Harpers' Monthly._

"The power of this book lies in the author's supreme control of the influences which affect human action, in his vivid apprehension of the operation of inexorable law, in his intuitive knowledge of the action and reaction of spiritual conditions. With a noble art he throws against the shadow, that deepens ever to the end, a radiant soul development that serenely grows brighter till we know it is Tolstoï himself, his experience, his best. It is a great book, and of such creations the most sincere admiration falls sadly short of fitting expression."--_Washington Post._

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* * * * *

THE LABOR MOVEMENT IN AMERICA.

By RICHARD T. ELY, Ph.D.,

Associate in Political Economy, Johns Hopkins University; author of "French and German Socialism," "The Past and the Present of Political Economy," etc.

12mo. Price, $1.50.

CONTENTS.

Survey of the Field. Early American Communism. The Growth and Present Condition of Labor Organizations in America. The Economic Value of Labor Organizations. The Educational Value of Labor Organizations. Other Aspects of Labor Organizations. Co-operation in America. The Beginnings of Modern Socialism in America. The Internationalists. The Propaganda of Deed and the Educational Campaign. The Socialistic Labor Party. The Strength of Revolutionary Socialism.--Its Significance. Remedies. Platform of Principles of the National Labor Union. Pledge and Preamble of the Journeymen Bricklayers' Association of Philadelphia. Declaration of Principles and Objects of the Cigar Makers' Progressive Union of America. Extracts from the Constitution of the National Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers of the United States. Manifesto of the International Working People's Association. Letter to Tramps, reprinted from the "Alarm" of Chicago. Platform and Present Demands of the Socialistic Labor Party. Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1886, by an American Socialist.

NOTICES OF THE PRESS.

"The subject has been his specialty for probably a dozen years, and it is safe to say that he is more thoroughly and intimately acquainted with it than any other man in the country."--_Lancaster Intelligencer, Pa._

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_For Sale by all Booksellers._

THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO., 13 Astor Place, New York.

* * * * *

MRS. SHILLABER'S COOK-BOOK.

_A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR HOUSEKEEPERS._

By Mrs. LYDIA SHILLABER. With an Introduction by Mrs. PARTINGTON.

12mo, cloth, $1.25. Kitchen Edition, In Oilcloth, $1.25. Fourth Edition now ready.

_Extract from Mrs. Partington's Introduction._

"Well, well," said Mrs. Partington, her spectacles beaming with delight as she turned over the leaves of the new cookery book, "I declare it excites my salivation glands even to read the names of these good things. It seems as though the greatest epicac might find something among all these meats and cosmetics to give a jest to appetite.... Now a book like this will come into a house like an oasis in the desert of the great Sahara, and be a quarantine of perpetual peace."

"Has the best characteristic of simplicity, variety, and usefulness."--_Boston Journal._

"A thoroughly intelligible and practical guide for young housekeepers."--_Boston Advertiser._

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"Numerous household hints in the book, which of themselves make it valuable."--_Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph._

"The work will certainly commend itself to the housekeeper."--_American Hebrew._

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"A formidable rival of the numerous works of its kind."--_Christian Index._

THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.

13 ASTOR PLACE, NEW YORK.

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