Short Fiction by Kate Chopin (love story books to read .txt) đ
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Kate Chopinâs most famous work nowadays is the novel The Awakening, but at the turn of the last century she was more famous for her short fiction, published in American magazines like the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Youthâs Companion, and Vogue. A prolific writer, over the course of fourteen years she penned nearly a hundred stories, although many didnât see publication until a new collection was released in 1963. The stories focus on life in 1890s Louisiana, a setting that she was living in as a resident of New Orleans and Natchitoches. Theyâre told from many different points of view, but always with empathy for the struggles, both big and small, of the protagonists.
This collection contains the forty-nine short stories of Kate Chopin verified to be in the U.S. public domain, including âDĂ©sirĂ©eâs Babyâ and âThe Dream of an Hour.â Theyâre presented in the order they were originally written.
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- Author: Kate Chopin
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âMontĂ©clin? Par exemple!â
AthĂ©naĂŻse, seated opposite to her husband, was attired in a white morning wrapper. She wore a somewhat abused, long face, it is trueâ âan expression of countenance familiar to some husbandsâ âbut the expression was not sufficiently pronounced to mar the charm of her youthful freshness. She had little heart to eat, only playing with the food before her, and she felt a pang of resentment at her husbandâs healthy appetite.
âYes, MontĂ©clin,â he reasserted. âHeâs developed into a firsâ-class nuisance; anâ you better tell him, AthĂ©naĂŻseâ âunless you want me to tell himâ âto confine his energies after this to matters that concern him. I have no use foâ him or foâ his interference in wâat regards you anâ me alone.â
This was said with unusual asperity. It was the little breach that AthĂ©naĂŻse had been watching for, and she charged rapidly: âItâs strange, if you detesâ MontĂ©clin so heartily, that you would desire to marry his sister.â She knew it was a silly thing to say, and was not surprised when he told her so. It gave her a little foothold for further attack, however. âI donât see, anyhow, wâat reason you had to marry me, wâen there were so many others,â she complained, as if accusing him of persecution and injury. âThere was Marianne running after you foâ the lasâ five years till it was disgraceful; anâ any one of the Dortrand girls would have been glad to marry you. But no, nothing would do; you musâ come out on the rigolet foâ me.â Her complaint was pathetic, and at the same time so amusing that Cazeau was forced to smile.
âI canât see wâat the Dortrand girls or Marianne have to do with it,â he rejoined; adding, with no trace of amusement, âI married you because I loved you; because you were the woman I wanted to marry, anâ the only one. I reckon I tole you that befoâ. I thoughtâ âof coâse I was a fool foâ taking things foâ grantedâ âbut I did think that I might make you happy in making things easier anâ moâ comfortable foâ you. I expectedâ âI was even that big a foolâ âI believed that yoâ coming yere to me would be like the sun shining out of the clouds, anâ that our days would be like wâat the storybooks promise after the wedding. I was mistaken. But I canât imagine wâat induced you to marry me. Wâatever it was, I reckon you founâ out you made a mistake, too. I donâ see anything to do but make the best of a bad bargain, anâ shake hanâs over it.â He had arisen from the table, and, approaching, held out his hand to her. What he had said was commonplace enough, but it was significant, coming from Cazeau, who was not often so unreserved in expressing himself.
Athénaïse ignored the hand held out to her. She was resting her chin in her palm, and kept her eyes fixed moodily upon the table. He rested his hand, that she would not touch, upon her head for an instant, and walked away out of the room.
She heard him giving orders to workmen who had been waiting for him out on the gallery, and she heard him mount his horse and ride away. A hundred things would distract him and engage his attention during the day. She felt that he had perhaps put her and her grievance from his thoughts when he crossed the threshold; whilst sheâ â
Old Félicité was standing there holding a shining tin pail, asking for flour and lard and eggs from the storeroom, and meal for the chicks.
AthĂ©naĂŻse seized the bunch of keys which hung from her belt and flung them at FĂ©licitĂ©âs feet.
âTiens! tu vas les garder comme tu as jadis fait. Je ne veux plus de ce train lĂ , moi!â
The old woman stooped and picked up the keys from the floor. It was really all one to her that her mistress returned them to her keeping, and refused to take further account of the ménage.
IVIt seemed now to AthĂ©naĂŻse that MontĂ©clin was the only friend left to her in the world. Her father and mother had turned from her in what appeared to be her hour of need. Her friends laughed at her, and refused to take seriously the hints which she threw outâ âfeeling her way to discover if marriage were as distasteful to other women as to herself. MontĂ©clin alone understood her. He alone had always been ready to act for her and with her, to comfort and solace her with his sympathy and his support. Her only hope for rescue from her hateful surroundings lay in MontĂ©clin. Of herself she felt powerless to plan, to act, even to conceive a way out of this pitfall into which the whole world seemed to have conspired to thrust her.
She had a great desire to see her brother, and wrote asking him to come to her. But it better suited MontĂ©clinâs spirit of adventure to appoint a meeting-place at the turn of the lane, where AthĂ©naĂŻse might appear to be walking leisurely for health and recreation, and where he might seem to be riding along, bent on some errand of business or pleasure.
There had been a shower, a sudden downpour, short as it was sudden, that had laid the dust in the road. It had freshened the pointed leaves of the live-oaks, and brightened up the big fields of cotton on either side of the lane till they seemed carpeted with green, glittering gems.
Athénaïse walked along the grassy edge of the road, lifting her crisp skirts with one hand, and with the other twirling a gay sunshade over her bare head. The scent of the fields after the rain was delicious. She inhaled long breaths of their freshness and perfume, that soothed and quieted her for the moment. There were birds splashing and spluttering in the pools, pluming themselves on the fence-rails, and sending out little sharp cries,
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