Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume XI).djvu/13

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THE TORRENTS OF SPRING

   'Years of gladness,
     Days of joy,
   Like the torrents of spring
     They hurried away.'

From an Old Ballad.

. . .At two o'clock in the night he had gone back to his study. He had dismissed the servant after the candles were lighted, and throwing himself into a low chair by the hearth, he hid his face in both hands.

Never had he felt such weariness of body and of spirit. He had passed the whole evening in the company of charming ladies and cultivated men; some of the ladies were beautiful, almost all the men were distinguished by intellect or talent; he himself had talked with great success, even with brilliance . . . and, for all that, never yet had the taedium vitae of which the Romans talked of old, the 'disgust for life,' taken hold of him with such irresistible, such suffocating force. Had he been a little younger,

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