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<h2> CHAPTER VI THE HOURS ARE RUSHING </h2>
<p>On the fortress where the condemned terrorists were imprisoned there was a
steeple with an old-fashioned clock upon it. At every hour, at every
half-hour, and at every quarter-hour the clock rang out in long-drawn,
mournful chimes, slowly melting high in the air, like the distant and
plaintive call of migrating birds. In the daytime, this strange and sad
music was lost in the noise of the city, of the wide and crowded street
which passed near the fortress. The cars buzzed along, the hoofs of the
horses beat upon the pavements, the rocking automobiles honked in the
distance, peasant izvozchiks had come especially from the outskirts of the
city for the Shrovetide season and the tinkling of the bells upon the
necks of their little horses filled the air. The prattle of voices—an
intoxicated, merry Shrovetide prattle of voices arose everywhere. And in
the midst of these various noises there was the young thawing spring, the
muddy pools on the meadows, the trees of the squares which had suddenly
become black. From the sea a warm breeze was blowing in broad, moist
gusts. It was almost as if one could have seen the tiny fresh particles of
air carried away, merged into the free, endless expanse of the atmosphere—could
have heard them laughing in their flight.</p>
<p>At night the street grew quiet in the lonely light of the large, electric
sun. And then, the enormous fortress, within whose walls there was not a
single light, passed into darkness and silence, separating itself from the
ever living, stirring city by a wall of silence, motionlessness and
darkness. Then it was that the strokes of the clock became audible. A
strange melody, foreign to earth, was slowly and mournfully born and died
out up in the heights. It was born again; deceiving the ear, it rang
plaintively and softly—it broke off—and rang again. Like
large, transparent, glassy drops, hours and minutes descended from an
unknown height into a metallic, softly resounding bell.</p>
<p>This was the only sound that reached the cells, by day and night, where
the condemned remained in solitary confinement. Through the roof, through
the thickness of the stone walls, it penetrated, stirring the silence—it
passed unnoticed, to return again, also unnoticed. Sometimes they awaited
it in despair, living from one sound to the next, trusting the silence no
longer. Only important criminals were sent to this prison. There were
special rules there, stern, grim and severe, like the corner of the
fortress wall, and if there be nobility in cruelty, then the dull, dead,
solemnly mute silence, which caught the slightest rustle and breathing,
was noble.</p>
<p>And in this solemn silence, broken by the mournful tolling of the
departing minutes, separated from all that lives, five human beings, two
women and three men, waited for the advent of night, of dawn and the
execution, and all of them prepared for it, each in his or her own way.</p>
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