Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol (moboreader .txt) ๐
Description
Dead Souls is Nikolai Gogolโs last novel, and follows the tale of Pavel Chichikov, a down-on-his-luck gentleman determined to improve his lot in life. The story charts his scheme to purchase dead soulsโthe titles of deceased serfsโfrom wealthy landowners.
The novelโs satirical take on the state of Russian society at the time leads Chichikov into increasingly difficult circumstances, in his attempts to cheat both the system and the cavalcade of townspeople he meets along the way.
Originally planned as a trilogy, Gogol apparently only completed the first two parts, and destroyed the latter half of the second part before his death. The novel as it stands ends in mid sentence but is regarded as complete.
Read free book ยซDead Souls by Nikolai Gogol (moboreader .txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Nikolai Gogol
Read book online ยซDead Souls by Nikolai Gogol (moboreader .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Nikolai Gogol
โHow can I do that? So to do I should need to procure the setting aside of a law. Again, even if I were to make the attempt, the Prince is a strict administrator, and would refuse on any consideration to release you.โ
โYes, but for you all things are possible. It is not the law that troubles me: with that I could find a means to deal. It is the fact that for no offence at all I have been cast into prison, and treated like a dog, and deprived of my papers and dispatch-box and all my property. Save me if you can.โ
Again clasping the old manโs knees, he bedewed them with his tears.
โPaul Ivanovitch,โ said Murazov, shaking his head, โhow that property of yours still seals your eyes and ears, so that you cannot so much as listen to the promptings of your own soul!โ
โAh, I will think of my soul, too, if only you will save me.โ
โPaul Ivanovitch,โ the old man began again, and then stopped. For a little while there was a pause.
โPaul Ivanovitch,โ at length he went on, โto save you does not lie within my power. Surely you yourself see that? But, so far as I can, I will endeavour to, at all events, lighten your lot and procure your eventual release. Whether or not I shall succeed I do not know; but I will make the attempt. And should I, contrary to my expectations, prove successful, I beg of you, in return for these my efforts, to renounce all thought of benefit from the property which you have acquired. Sincerely do I assure you that, were I myself to be deprived of my property (and my property greatly exceeds yours in magnitude), I should not shed a single tear. It is not the property of which men can deprive us that matters, but the property of which no one on Earth can deprive or despoil us. You are a man who has seen something of lifeโ โto use your own words, you have been a barque tossed hither and thither by tempestuous waves: yet still will there be left to you a remnant of substance on which to live, and therefore I beseech you to settle down in some quiet nook where there is a church, and where none but plain, good-hearted folk abide. Or, should you feel a yearning to leave behind you posterity, take in marriage a good woman who shall bring you, not money, but an aptitude for simple, modest domestic life. But this lifeโ โthe life of turmoil, with its longings and its temptationsโ โforget, and let it forget you; for there is no peace in it. See for yourself how, at every step, it brings one but hatred and treachery and deceit.โ
โIndeed, yes!โ agreed the repentant Chichikov. โGladly will I do as you wish, since for many a day past have I been longing to amend my life, and to engage in husbandry, and to reorder my affairs. A demon, the tempter Satan himself, has beguiled me and led me from the right path.โ
Suddenly there had recurred to Chichikov long-unknown, long-unfamiliar feelings. Something seemed to be striving to come to life again in himโ โsomething dim and remote, something which had been crushed out of his boyhood by the dreary, deadening education of his youthful days, by his desolate home, by his subsequent lack of family ties, by the poverty and niggardliness of his early impressions, by the grim eye of fateโ โan eye which had always seemed to be regarding him as through a misty, mournful, frost-encrusted windowpane, and to be mocking at his struggles for freedom. And as these feelings came back to the penitent a groan burst from his lips, and, covering his face with his hands, he moaned: โIt is all true, it is all true!โ
โOf little avail are knowledge of the world and experience of men unless based upon a secure foundation,โ observed Murazov. โThough you have fallen, Paul Ivanovitch, awake to better things, for as yet there is time.โ
โNo, no!โ groaned Chichikov in a voice which made Murazovโs heart bleed. โIt is too late, too late. More and more is the conviction gaining upon me that I am powerless, that I have strayed too far ever to be able to do as you bid me. The fact that I have become what I am is due to my early schooling; for, though my father taught me moral lessons, and beat me, and set me to copy maxims into a book, he himself stole land from his neighbours, and forced me to help him. I have even known him to bring an unjust suit, and defraud the orphan whose guardian he was! Consequently I know and feel that, though my life has been different from his, I do not hate roguery as I ought to hate it, and that my nature is coarse, and that in me there is no real love for what is good, no real spark of that beautiful instinct for well-doing which becomes a second nature, a settled habit. Also, never do I yearn to strive for what is right as I yearn to acquire property. This is no more than the truth. What else could I do but confess it?โ
The old man sighed.
โPaul Ivanovitch,โ he said, โI know that you possess willpower, and that you possess also perseverance. A medicine may be bitter, yet the patient will gladly take it when assured that only by its means can he recover. Therefore, if it really be that you have no genuine love for doing good, do good by forcing yourself to do so. Thus you will benefit yourself even more than you will benefit him for whose sake the act is performed. Only force yourself to do good just once and again, and, behold, you will suddenly conceive the true love for well-doing. That is so, believe me. โA kingdom is to be won only by striving,โ says the proverb. That is to
Comments (0)