The lamps burned dimly in the suffocating
atmosphere of the crowded rail way-carriage, shedding
their fitful light on grimy, ragged passengers wedged
tightly together, and wreathed in smoke. Sanine
sat next to three peasants. As he got in, they
were engaged in talk, and one half-hidden by the gloom,
said:
“Things are bad, you say?”
“Couldn’t be worse,”
replied Sanine’s neighbour, an old grey-haired
moujik, in a high, feeble voice. “They only
think of themselves; they don’t trouble about
us. You may say what you like, but when it comes
to fighting for your skin, the stronger always gets
the best of it.”
“Then, why make a fuss?”
asked Sanine, who had guessed what was the subject
of their grumbling.
The old man turned to him with a questioning
wave of the hand.
“What else can we do?”
Sanine got up and changed his seat.
He knew these peasants only too well, who lived like
beasts, unable either to cope with their oppression
or to destroy their oppressors. Vaguely hoping
that some miracle might occur, in waiting for which
millions and millions of their fellow-slaves had perished,
they continued to lead their brutish existence.
Night had come. All were asleep
except a little tradesman sitting opposite to Sanine,
who was bullying his wife. She said nothing, but
looked about her with fear in her eyes.
“Wait a bit, you cow, I’ll soon show you!”
he hissed.
Sanine had fallen asleep when a cry
from the woman awoke him. The fellow quickly
removed his hand, but not before Sanine could see that
he had been maltreating his wife.
“What a brute you are!” exclaimed Sanine,
angrily.
The man started backwards in alarm,
as he blinked his small, wicked eyes, and grinned.
Sanine in disgust went out on to the
platform at the rear of the train. As he passed
through the corridor-carriages he saw crowds of passengers
lying prostrate across each other. It was daybreak
and their weary faces looked livid in the grey dawn-light
which gave them a helpless, pained expression.
Standing on the platform Sanine drank
in draughts of the cool morning air.
“What a vile thing man is!”
he thought. To get away, if only for a short
while, from all his fellow-men, from the train, with
its foul air, and smoke, and din—it was
for that he longed.
Eastward the dawn flamed red.
Night’s last pale, sickly shadows were merged
and lost in the grey-blue horizon-line beyond the steppe.
Sanine did not waste time in reflection, but, leaving
his valise behind him, jumped off the foot-board.
With a noise like thunder the train
rushed past him as he fell on to the soft, wet sand
of the embankment. The red lamp on the last carriage
was a long way off when he rose, laughing.
Sanine uttered a cry of joy. “That’s
good!” he exclaimed.
All around him was so free, so vast.
Broad, level fields of grass lay on either side, stretching
away to the misty horizon. Sanine drew a deep
breath, as with bright eyes he surveyed the spacious
landscape. Then he strode forward, facing the
jocund, lustrous dawn; and, as the plain, awaking,
assumed magic tints of blue and green beneath the wide
dome of heaven; as the first eastern beams broke on
his dazzled sight, it seemed to Sanine that he was
moving onward; onward to meet the sun.
THE
END