[A Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections by Isabel Florence Hapgood]@TWC D-Link book
A Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections

CHAPTER XII
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but where shall we find him, when he is not here ?" "What do you mean by saying that he is not to be found?
There are peasants everywhere, and all we have to do is to look him up! He is certainly hiding somewhere about because he is too lazy to work!" This idea cheered the Generals to such a degree that they sprang to their feet like men who had received a shock, and set out to find a peasant.
They roamed for a long time about the island without any success whatever, but at last the penetrating smell of bread-crust and sour sheepskin put them on the track.

Under a tree, flat on his back, with his fists under his head, lay a huge peasant fast asleep, and shirking work in the most impudent manner.

There were no bounds to the wrath of the Generals.
"Asleep, lazybones!" and they flung themselves upon him; "and you don't move so much as an ear, when here are two Generals who have been dying of hunger these two days! March off, this moment, to work!" The man rose; he saw that the Generals were stern.

He would have liked to give them the slip, but they had become fairly rigid when they grasped him.
And he began to work under their supervision.
First of all he climbed a tree and picked half a score of the ripest apples for the Generals, and took one, a sour one, for himself.

Then he dug in the earth and got some potatoes; then he took two pieces of wood, rubbed them together, and produced fire.


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