[Taras Bulba and Other Tales by Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol]@TWC D-Link book
Taras Bulba and Other Tales

CHAPTER XII
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Brave as he was in the office and in the presence of inferiors generally, and although, at the sight of his manly form and appearance, every one said, "Ugh! how much character he had!" at this crisis, he, like many possessed of an heroic exterior, experienced such terror, that, not without cause, he began to fear an attack of illness.

He flung his cloak hastily from his shoulders and shouted to his coachman in an unnatural voice, "Home at full speed!" The coachman, hearing the tone which is generally employed at critical moments and even accompanied by something much more tangible, drew his head down between his shoulders in case of an emergency, flourished his whip, and flew on like an arrow.

In a little more than six minutes the prominent personage was at the entrance of his own house.

Pale, thoroughly scared, and cloakless, he went home instead of to Karolina Ivanovna's, reached his room somehow or other, and passed the night in the direst distress; so that the next morning over their tea his daughter said, "You are very pale to-day, papa." But papa remained silent, and said not a word to any one of what had happened to him, where he had been, or where he had intended to go.
This occurrence made a deep impression upon him.

He even began to say: "How dare you?
do you realise who stands before you ?" less frequently to the under-officials, and if he did utter the words, it was only after having first learned the bearings of the matter.


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