Short Fiction by Anton Chekhov (libby ebook reader .txt) π
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Anton Chekhov is widely considered to be one of the greatest short story writers in history. A physician by day, heβs famously quoted as saying, βMedicine is my lawful wife, and literature is my mistress.β Chekhov wrote nearly 300 short stories in his long writing career; while at first he wrote mainly to make a profit, as his interest in writingβand his skillβgrew, he wrote stories that heavily influenced the modern development of the form.
His stories are famous for, among other things, their ambiguous morality and their often inconclusive nature. Chekhov was a firm believer that the role of the artist was to correctly pose a question, but not necessarily to answer it.
This collection contains all of his short stories and two novellas, all translated by Constance Garnett, and arranged by the date they were originally published.
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- Author: Anton Chekhov
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βOh! how awful it is! My God, how fearful!β
Next day, however, she was back at the Renaissance, and dancing there. She had on an enormous new red hat, a new fashionable jacket, and bronze shoes. And she was taken out to supper by a young merchant up from Kazan.
A Happy ManThe passenger train is just starting from Bologoe, the junction on the Petersburgβ ββ Moscow line. In a second-class smoking compartment five passengers sit dozing, shrouded in the twilight of the carriage. They had just had a meal, and now, snugly ensconced in their seats, they are trying to go to sleep. Stillness.
The door opens and in there walks a tall, lanky figure straight as a poker, with a ginger-coloured hat and a smart overcoat, wonderfully suggestive of a journalist in Jules Verne or on the comic stage.
The figure stands still in the middle of the compartment for a long while, breathing heavily, screwing up his eyes and peering at the seats.
βNo, wrong again!β he mutters. βWhat the deuce! Itβs positively revolting! No, the wrong one again!β
One of the passengers stares at the figure and utters a shout of joy:
βIvan Alexyevitch! what brings you here? Is it you?β
The poker-like gentleman starts, stares blankly at the passenger, and recognizing him claps his hands with delight.
βHa! Pyotr Petrovitch,β he says. βHow many summers, how many winters! I didnβt know you were in this train.β
βHow are you getting on?β
βI am all right; the only thing is, my dear fellow, Iβve lost my compartment and I simply canβt find it. What an idiot I am! I ought to be thrashed!β
The poker-like gentleman sways a little unsteadily and sniggers.
βQueer things do happen!β he continues. βI stepped out just after the second bell to get a glass of brandy. I got it, of course. Well, I thought, since itβs a long way to the next station, it would be as well to have a second glass. While I was thinking about it and drinking it the third bell rang.β ββ β¦ I ran like mad and jumped into the first carriage. I am an idiot! I am the son of a hen!β
βBut you seem in very good spirits,β observes Pyotr Petrovitch. βCome and sit down! Thereβs room and a welcome.β
βNo, no.β ββ β¦ Iβm off to look for my carriage. Goodbye!β
βYouβll fall between the carriages in the dark if you donβt look out! Sit down, and when we get to a station youβll find your own compartment. Sit down!β
Ivan Alexyevitch heaves a sigh and irresolutely sits down facing Pyotr Petrovitch. He is visibly excited, and fidgets as though he were sitting on thorns.
βWhere are you travelling to?β Pyotr Petrovitch enquires.
βI? Into space. There is such a turmoil in my head that I couldnβt tell where I am going myself. I go where fate takes me. Ha-ha! My dear fellow, have you ever seen a happy fool? No? Well, then, take a look at one. You behold the happiest of mortals! Yes! Donβt you see something from my face?β
βWell, one can see youβre a bitβ ββ β¦ a tiny bit so-so.β
βI dare say I look awfully stupid just now. Ach! itβs a pity I havenβt a looking-glass, I should like to look at my countinghouse. My dear fellow, I feel I am turning into an idiot, honour bright. Ha-ha! Would you believe it, Iβm on my honeymoon. Am I not the son of a hen?β
βYou? Do you mean to say you are married?β
βToday, my dear boy. We came away straight after the wedding.β
Congratulations and the usual questions follow. βWell, you are a fellow!β laughs Pyotr Petrovitch. βThatβs why you are rigged out such a dandy.β
βYes, indeed.β ββ β¦ To complete the illusion, Iβve even sprinkled myself with scent. I am over my ears in vanity! No care, no thought, nothing but a sensation of something or otherβ ββ β¦ deuce knows what to call itβ ββ β¦ beatitude or something? Iβve never felt so grand in my life!β
Ivan Alexyevitch shuts his eyes and waggles his head.
βIβm revoltingly happy,β he says. βJust think; in a minute I shall go to my compartment. There on the seat near the window is sitting a being who is, so to say, devoted to you with her whole being. A little blonde with a little noseβ ββ β¦ little fingers.β ββ β¦ My little darling! My angel! My little poppet! Phylloxera of my soul! And her little foot! Good God! A little foot not like our beetle-crushers, but something miniature, fairylike, allegorical. I could pick it up and eat it, that little foot! Oh, but you donβt understand! Youβre a materialist, of course, you begin analyzing at once, and one thing and another. You are cold-hearted bachelors, thatβs what you are! When you get married youβll think of me. βWhereβs Ivan Alexyevitch now?β youβll say. Yes; so in a minute Iβm going to my compartment. There she is waiting for me with impatienceβ ββ β¦ in joyful anticipation of my appearance. Sheβll have a smile to greet me. I sit down beside her and take her chin with my two fingers.β
Ivan Alexyevitch waggles his head and goes off into a chuckle of delight.
βThen I lay my noddle on her shoulder and put my arm round her waist. Around all is silence, you knowβ ββ β¦ poetic twilight. I could embrace the whole world at such a moment. Pyotr Petrovitch, allow me to embrace you!β
βDelighted, Iβm sure.β The two friends embrace while the passengers laugh in chorus. And the happy bridegroom continues:
βAnd to complete the idiocy, or, as the novelists say, to complete the illusion, one goes to the refreshment room and tosses off two or three glasses. And then something happens in your head and your heart, finer than you can read of in a fairy tale. I am a man of no importance, but I feel as though I were limitless: I embrace the whole world!β
The passengers, looking at the tipsy and blissful bridegroom, are infected by his cheerfulness and no longer feel sleepy. Instead of one listener,
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