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On the Eve: A Novel
Chapter 26
Ivan Turgenev
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       _ Chapter XXVI
       For eight whole days Insarov lay between life and death. The doctor was
       incessantly visiting him, interested as a young man in a difficult case.
       Shubin heard of Insarov's critical position, and made inquiries after
       him. His compatriots--Bulgarians--came; among them Bersenyev recognised
       the two strange figures, who had puzzled him by their unexpected visit
       to the cottage; they all showed genuine sympathy, some offered to take
       Bersenyev's place by the patient's bed-side; but he would not consent
       to that, remembering his promise to Elena. He saw her every day and
       secretly reported to her--sometimes by word of mouth, sometimes in a
       brief note--every detail of the illness. With what sinkings of the heart
       she awaited him, how she listened and questioned him! She was always on
       the point of hastening to Insarov herself; but Bersenyev begged her not
       to do this: Insarov was seldom alone. On the first day she knew of his
       illness she herself had almost fallen ill; directly she got home,
       she shut herself up in her room; but she was summoned to dinner, and
       appeared in the dining-room with such a face that Anna Vassilyevna was
       alarmed, and was anxious to put her to bed. Elena succeeded, however, in
       controlling herself. 'If he dies,' she repeated, 'it will be the end
       of me too.' This thought tranquillised her, and enabled her to seem
       indifferent. Besides no one troubled her much; Anna Vassilyevna was
       taken up with her swollen face; Shubin was working furiously; Zoya
       was given up to pensiveness, and disposed to read _Werther_; Nikolai
       Artemyevitch was much displeased at the frequent visits of 'the
       scholar,' especially as his 'cherished projects' in regard to
       Kurnatovsky were making no way; the practical chief secretary was
       puzzled and biding his time. Elena did not even thank Bersenyev; there
       are services for which thanks are cruel and shameful. Only once at her
       fourth interview with him--Insarov had passed a very bad night, the
       doctor had hinted at a consultation--only then she reminded him of his
       promise. 'Very well, then let us go,' he said to her. She got up and
       was going to get ready. 'No,' he decided, 'let us wait till to-morrow.'
       Towards evening Insarov was rather better.
       For eight days this torture was prolonged. Elena appeared calm; but she
       could eat nothing, and did not sleep at night. There was a dull ache in
       all her limbs; her head seemed full of a sort of dry burning smoke. 'Our
       young lady's wasting like a candle,' her maid said of her.
       At last by the ninth day the crisis was passing over. Elena was sitting
       in the drawing-room near Anna Vassilyevna, and, without knowing herself
       what she was doing, was reading her the _Moscow Gazette_; Bersenyev came
       in. Elena glanced at him--how rapid, and fearful, and penetrating, and
       tremulous, was the first glance she turned on him every time--and at
       once she guessed that he brought good news. He was smiling; he nodded
       slightly to her, she got up to go and meet him.
       'He has regained consciousness, he is saved, he will be quite well again
       in a week,' he whispered to her.
       Elena had stretched out her arm as though to ward off a blow, and she
       said nothing, only her lips trembled and a flush of crimson overspread
       her whole face. Bersenyev began to talk to Anna Vassilyevna, and Elena
       went off to her own room, dropped on her knees and fell to praying, to
       thanking God. Light, shining tears trickled down her cheeks. Suddenly
       she was conscious of intense weariness, laid her head down on the
       pillow, whispered 'poor Andrei Petrovitch!' and at once fell asleep with
       wet eheeks and eyelashes. It was long since she had slept or wept. _