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    Part 2 - Chapter 25

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    Chapter 25

    There were seventeen officers in all riding in this race. The
    race course was a large three-mile ring of the form of an ellipse
    in front of the pavilion. On this course nine obstacles had been
    arranged: the stream, a big and solid barrier five feet high,
    just before the pavilion, a dry ditch, a ditch full of water, a
    precipitous slope, an Irish barricade (one of the most difficult
    obstacles, consisting of a mound fenced with brushwood, beyond
    which was a ditch out of sight for the horses, so that the horse
    had to clear both obstacles or might be killed); then two more
    ditches filled with water, and one dry one; and the end of the
    race was just facing the pavilion. But the race began not in the
    ring, but two hundred yards away from it, and in that part of the
    course was the first obstacle, a dammed-up stream, seven feet in
    breadth, which the racers could leap or wade through as they
    preferred.

    Three times they were ranged ready to start, but each time some
    horse thrust itself out of line, and they had to begin again.
    The umpire who was starting them, Colonel Sestrin, was beginning
    to lose his temper, when at last for the fourth time he shouted
    "Away!" and the racers started.

    Every eye, every opera glass, was turned on the brightly colored
    group of riders at the moment they were in line to start.

    "They're off! They're starting!" was heard on all sides after
    the hush of expectation.

    And little groups and solitary figures among the public began
    running from place to place to get a better view. In the very
    first minute the close group of horsemen drew out, and it could
    be seen that they were approaching the stream in two's and
    three's and one behind another. To the spectators it seemed as
    though they had all started simultaneously, but to the racers
    there were seconds of difference that had great value to them.

    Frou-Frou, excited and over-nervous, had lost the first moment,
    and several horses had started before her, but before reaching
    the stream, Vronsky, who was holding in the mare with all his
    force as she tugged at the bridle, easily overtook three, and
    there were left in front of him Mahotin's chestnut Gladiator,
    whose hind-quarters were moving lightly and rhythmically up and

    down exactly in front of Vronsky, and in front of all, the dainty
    mare Diana bearing Kuzovlev more dead than alive.

    For the first instant Vronsky was not master either of himself or
    his mare. Up to the first obstacle, the stream, he could not
    guide the motions of his mare.

    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
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