[Foma Gordyeff by Maxim Gorky]@TWC D-Link book
Foma Gordyeff

CHAPTER I
23/31

He then began to realise that henceforth his wife would never yield to him in any matter, and that an obstinate strife for predominance must start between them.
"Very well! We'll see who will conquer," he thought the next day, watching his wife with stern curiosity; and in his soul a strong desire was already raging to start the strife, that he might enjoy his victory the sooner.
But about four days later, Natalya Fominichna announced to her husband that she was pregnant.
Ignat trembled for joy, embraced her firmly, and said in a dull voice: "You're a fine fellow, Natalya! Natasha, if it should be a son! If you bear me a son I'll enrich you! I tell you plainly, I'll be your slave! By God! I'll lie down at your feet, and you may trample upon me, if you like!" "This is not within our power; it's the will of the Lord," said she in a low voice.
"Yes, the Lord's!" exclaimed Ignat with bitterness and drooped his head sadly.
From that moment he began to look after his wife as though she were a little child.
"Why do you sit near the window?
Look out.

You'll catch cold in your side; you may take sick," he used to say to her, both sternly and mildly.

"Why do you skip on the staircase?
You may hurt yourself.

And you had better eat more, eat for two, that he may have enough." And the pregnancy made Natalya more morose and silent, as though she were looking still deeper into herself, absorbed in the throbbing of new life within her.

But the smile on her lips became clearer, and in her eyes flashed at times something new, weak and timid, like the first ray of the dawn.
When, at last, the time of confinement came, it was early on an autumn morning.


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