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The Man Who Was Afraid

The Man Who Was Afraid

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Introductory Note 

Word Count: 429    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

r, humbly imploring for a crust in the name of the Lord, nor like the jeweller displaying his precious stones to dazzle and tempt the eye, he comes to the world,- nay, in accents of Tyrtaeus thi

bridled, powerful voice, as he sings of the "madness of the brave," of the barefooted dreamers, who are proud of

t voice of Tolstoy, the preacher: it is the roaring of a lion, the crash of thunder. In its elementary power is the heart. rending cry of a sincere but suffering s

that he finds the vagabond, the outcast of societ

acy of his soul, and in his constant thirst for Freedom, Gorky sees the rebellious and irreconcilable spirit of man, of future man,- in these he sees something beautiful, something powerful, somethi

the storms of fate, bruised and wounded in the battl

As though the storm

ne voice he cr

age with greater

N BER

ber 20

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The Man Who Was Afraid
The Man Who Was Afraid
“OUT of the darkest depths of life, where vice and crime and misery abound, comes the Byron of the twentieth century, the poet of the vagabond and the proletariat, Maxim Gorky. Not like the beggar, humbly imploring for a crust in the name of the Lord, nor like the jeweller displaying his precious stones to dazzle and tempt the eye, he comes to the world,— nay, in accents of Tyrtaeus this commoner of Nizhni Novgorod spurs on his troops of freedom-loving heroes to conquer, as it were, the placid, self- satisfied literatures of to-day, and bring new life to pale, bloodless frames.”
1 Introductory Note2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 1012 Chapter 1113 Chapter 1214 Chapter 13