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Bitterly disappointed, Flyora walks into the forest weeping and comes across someone else who has been left behind – Glafira (or Glasha, played by Olga Mironova), a beautiful girl infatuated with Kosach. When the partisans are ready to move on, their commander, Kosach (played by Liubomiras Lauciavicius and dubbed by Valeriy Kravchenko), orders Flyora to remain behind at the camp in reserve and exchange boots with one of his fellows. Flyora joins their forces as a low-rank militiaman and is ordered to do all the labor in the detachment.
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The partisans converge in a forest and prepare to confront the Germans.
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She fears that the loss of her son, like his father before him, will lessen her and her daughters' chances of survival. The next day partisans arrive at his house and take Flyora with them, to the dismay of Flyora's mother. One of the boys, Flyora (Aleksei Kravchenko), finds an SVT-40 rifle. Yustin, an old man, warns them not to dig (using sarcasm and reverse psychology). In 1943 two Belarusian boys are digging in a sand field looking for abandoned rifles in order to join the Soviet partisan forces. Chapter 6, verses 7–8 have been cited as being particularly relevant to the film: The film's title derives from Chapter 6 of The Apocalypse of John, in which "Come and see" is said in the first, third, fifth, and seventh verses as an invitation to look upon the destruction caused by the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.