第9部分 (第4/7頁)
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same
time; very 〃European〃。
They had two children。 Then came the great rebellion。 Lensky;
very ardent and full of words; went about inciting his
countrymen。 Little Poles flamed down the streets of Warsaw; on
the way to shoot every Muscovite。 So they crossed into the south
of Russia; and it was mon for six little insurgents to ride
into a Jewish village; brandishing swords and words; emphasizing
the fact that they were going to shoot every living
Muscovite。
Lensky was something of a fire…eater also。 Lydia; tempered by
her German blood; ing of a different family; was obliterated;
carried along in her husband's emphasis of declaration; and his
whirl of patriotism。 He was indeed a brave man; but no bravery
could quite have equalled the vividness of his talk。 He worked
very hard; till nothing lived in him but his eyes。 And Lydia; as
if drugged; followed him like a shadow; serving; echoing。
Sometimes she had her two children; sometimes they were left
behind。
She returned once to find them both dead of diphtheria。 Her
husband wept aloud; unaware of everybody。 But the war went on;
and soon he was back at his work。 A darkness had e over
Lydia's mind。 She walked always in a shadow; silenced; with a
strange; deep terror having hold of her; her desire was to seek
satisfaction in dread; to enter a nunnery; to satisfy the
instincts of dread in her; through service of a dark religion。
But she could not。
Then came the flight to London。 Lensky; the little; thin man;
had got all his life locked into a resistance and could not
relax again。 He lived in a sort of insane irritability; touchy