Gladiator and Diana came up to it together and almost at the same

instant; simultaneously they rose above the stream and flew

across to the other side; Frou-Frou darted after them, as if

flying; but at the very moment when Vronsky felt himself in the

air, he suddenly saw almost under his mare's hoofs Kuzovlev, who

was floundering with Diana on the further side of the stream.

(Kuzovlev had let go the reins as he took the leap, and the mare

had sent him flying over her head.) Those details Vronsky learned

later; at the moment all he saw was that just under him, where

Frou-Frou must alight, Diana's legs or head might be in the way.

But Frou-Frou drew up her legs and back in the very act of

leaping, like a falling cat, and, clearing the other mare,

alighted beyond her.

"O the darling!" thought Vronsky.

After crossing the stream Vronsky had complete control of his

mare, and began holding her in, intending to cross the great

barrier behind Mahotin, and to try to overtake him in the clear

ground of about five hundred yards that followed it.

The great barrier stood just in front of the imperial pavilion.

The Tsar and the whole court and crowds of people were all gazing

at them--at him, and Mahotin a length ahead of him, as they drew

near the "devil," as the solid barrier was called. Vronsky was

aware of those eyes fastened upon him from all sides, but he saw

nothing except the ears and neck of his own mare, the ground

racing to meet him, and the back and white legs of Gladiator

beating time swiftly before him, and keeping always the same

distance ahead. Gladiator rose, with no sound of knocking

against anything. With a wave of his short tail he disappeared

from Vronsky's sight.

"Bravo!" cried a voice.

At the same instant, under Vronsky's eyes, right before him

flashed the palings of the barrier. Without the slightest change

in her action his mare flew over it; the palings vanished, and he

heard only a crash behind him. The mare, excited by Gladiator's

keeping ahead, had risen too soon before the barrier, and grazed

it with her hind hoofs. But her pace never changed, and Vronsky,

feeling a spatter of mud in his face, realized that he was once

more the same distance from Gladiator. Once more he perceived in

front of him the same back and short tail, and again the same

swiftly moving white legs that got no further away.

At the very moment when Vronsky thought that now was the time to

overtake Mahotin, Frou-Frou herself, understanding his thoughts,

without any incitement on his part, gained ground considerably,

and began getting alongside of Mahotin on the most favorable

side, close to the inner cord. Mahotin would not let her pass

that side. Vronsky had hardly formed the thought that he could

perhaps pass on the outer side, when Frou-Frou shifted her pace

and began overtaking him on the other side. Frou-Frou's

shoulder, beginning by now to be dark with sweat, was even with

Gladiator's back. For a few lengths they moved evenly. But

before the obstacle they were approaching, Vronsky began working

at the reins, anxious to avoid having to take the outer circle,

and swiftly passed Mahotin just upon the declivity. He caught a

glimpse of his mud-stained face as he flashed by. He even

fancied that he smiled. Vronsky passed Mahotin, but he was

immediately aware of him close upon him, and he never ceased

hearing the even-thudding hoofs and the rapid and still quite

fresh breathing of Gladiator.




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