It was getting dark; it would soon be night.
Gusev, a discharged soldier, sat up in his hammock and said in an undertone:
âI say, Pavel Ivanitch. A soldier at Sutchan told me: while they were sailing a big fish came into collision with their ship and stove a hole in it.â
The nondescript individual whom he was addressing, and whom everyone in the shipâs hospital called Pavel Ivanitch, was silent, as though he had not heard.
And again a stillness followedâ ââ ⌠The wind frolicked with the rigging, the screw throbbed, the waves lashed, the hammocks creaked, but the ear had long ago become accustomed to these sounds, and it seemed that everything around was asleep and silent. It was dreary. The three invalidsâ âtwo soldiers and a sailorâ âwho had been playing cards all the day were asleep and talking in their dreams.
It seemed as though the ship were beginning to rock. The hammock slowly rose and fell under Gusev, as though it were heaving a sigh, and this was repeated once, twice, three times.â ââ ⌠Something crashed on to the floor with a clang: it must have been a jug falling down.
âThe wind has broken loose from its chainâ ââ âŚâ said Gusev, listening.
This time Pavel Ivanitch cleared his throat and answered irritably:
âOne minute a vesselâs running into a fish, the next, the windâs breaking loose from its chain. Is the wind a beast that it can break loose from its chain?â
âThatâs how christened folk talk.â
âThey are as ignorant as you are then. They say all sorts of things. One must keep a head on oneâs shoulders and use oneâs reason. You are a senseless creature.â