Summary Feast during the plague AS Pushkin
A. Pushkin
Feast during the plague.
There is a covered table on the street, followed by several young men and women. One of the feasting, the young man, addressing the chairman of the feast, recalls their mutual friend, the merry Jackson, whose jokes and witticisms amused everyone, revitalized the feast and dispelled the darkness that now sends the ferocious plague to the city. Jackson is dead, his chair at the table is empty, and the young man offers a drink in his memory. The chairman agrees, but believes that it is necessary to drink in silence, and everyone silently drinks in memory of Jackson.
The chairman of the feast appeals to a young woman named Mary and asks her to sing the dull and lingering song of her native Scotland, then to turn again to merriment. Mary sings about her native side, which flourished in contentment, until disaster struck her and the party of fun and work turned into the land of death and sorrow. The heroine of the song asks her darling
The Chairman thanked Mary for the plaintive song and suggests that once her region was visited by the same plague as the one that now mows all living things here. Mary remembers how she sang in her parents’ hut, how they loved to listen to their daughter… But suddenly Louise’s sarcastic and insolent words burst into the conversation with the words that now such songs are out of fashion, although there are still simple souls ready to melt from female tears and blindly believe them. Louise screams that she hates the yellowness of these Scottish hair. The chairman intervenes in the dispute, he calls on the feasting party to listen to the knocking of the wheels. A cart loaded with corpses is approaching. The cart is ruled by a Negro. At the sight of this spectacle, Louise becomes ill, and the chairman asks Mary to splash water in her face to bring her to life. With his fainting, the chairman assures, Louise proved that “
The young man explains to Louise that
While Walsingam sings, an old priest enters. He reproaches the feasts for their blasphemous feast, calling them atheists, the priest believes that by their feast they abuse “the horror of the sacred burial,” and their delights “confuse the silence of the coffins.” The feasts laugh at the gloomy words of the priest, and he conjures them with the Blood of the Savior to stop the monstrous feast, if they wish to meet the souls of the deceased loved ones in heaven, and go home. The chairman objects to the priest that they are sad at home, and youth loves joy. The priest rebukes Walsingham and reminds him how just three weeks ago he was on his knees embracing the corpse of his mother “and screaming with a scream over her grave.” He claims that now a poor woman is crying in heaven, looking at her feasting son. He tells Walsingham to follow him, but Walsingham refuses to do this, because he is held in despair and a terrible memory, as well as his own lawlessness, he is kept here by the horror of the dead emptiness of his home, even the shadow of his mother is not able to take him away from here, and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” Since he is kept here by despair and terrible remembering, as well as by the consciousness of his own lawlessness, he is kept here by the horror of the dead emptiness of his home, even the shadow of his mother is not able to take him away from here, and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” Since he is kept here by despair and terrible remembering, as well as by the consciousness of his own lawlessness, he is kept here by the horror of the dead emptiness of his home, even the shadow of his mother is not able to take him away from here, and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” as well as the consciousness of his own lawlessness, he is kept here by the horror of the dead emptiness of his home, even the shadow of his mother is not able to take him away from here, and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” as well as the consciousness of his own lawlessness, he is kept here by the horror of the dead emptiness of his home, even the shadow of his mother is not able to take him away from here, and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” and he asks the priest to retire. Many admire the bold rebuke of Walsingham to the priest, who conjures the wicked with the pure spirit of Matilda. This name leads the chairman into a mental turmoil, he says that he sees her where his fallen spirit will not reach. Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.” Some woman notices that Walsingham has gone mad and “raved about his wife buried.” The priest persuades Walsingham to leave, but Walsingham God’s name begs the priest to leave him and retire. Calling on the Holy Name, the priest leaves, the feast continues, but Walsingham “remains in deep thoughtfulness.”