
In this stark fragment of a lost manuscript, a weary soldier narrates a relentless march through a blistering landscape that feels more nightmare than battlefield. The sun burns like a crucible, turning metal and flesh into trembling shadows, while the troops move in a mute, mechanical procession that blurs the line between living men and ghostly silhouettes. The prose captures the suffocating heat, the deafening silence, and the disorienting sense that time and reality are unraveling beneath the relentless march.
As the narrator’s thoughts drift to a quiet room, a faded blue wallpaper and a solitary water‑bottle, a fragile thread of domestic memory pulls him back from the brink of madness. This juxtaposition of ordinary life against the infernal desert creates a psychological horror that is as much about inner terror as about external war. The fragment invites listeners to feel the oppressive atmosphere and to wonder how far a mind can stretch before it shatters.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (131K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Carlos Colón, the University of California and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2020-06-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1871–1919
A major voice in early 20th-century Russian literature, this novelist, short-story writer, and dramatist became known for dark, psychologically charged stories about fear, suffering, and the strain of modern life. His work bridges realism and symbolism, giving even brief tales an intense, haunted energy.
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