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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βA forester and no money!β laughed the hunter. βYou get wages every month, and Iβll be bound you sell timber on the sly.β
Artyom took a timid sideway glance at his visitor and twitched his beard as a magpie twitches her tail.
βYou are still young to say a thing like that to me,β he said. βYou will have to answer to God for those words. Whom may your people be? Where do you come from?β
βI am from Vyazovka. I am the son of Nefed the village elder.β
βYou have gone out for sport with your gun. I used to like sport, too, when I was young. Hβm! Ah, our sins are grievous,β said Artyom, with a yawn. βItβs a sad thing! There are few good folks, but villains and murderers no endβ βGod have mercy upon us.β
βYou seem to be frightened of me, too.β ββ β¦β
βCome, what next! What should I be afraid of you for? I see.β ββ β¦ I understand.β ββ β¦ You came in, and not just anyhow, but you made the sign of the cross, you bowed, all decent and proper.β ββ β¦ I understand.β ββ β¦ One can give you bread.β ββ β¦ I am a widower, I donβt heat the stove, I sold the samovar.β ββ β¦ I am too poor to keep meat or anything else, but bread you are welcome to.β
At that moment something began growling under the bench: the growl was followed by a hiss. Artyom started, drew up his legs, and looked enquiringly at the hunter.
βItβs my dog worrying your cat,β said the hunter. βYou devils!β he shouted under the bench. βLie down. Youβll be beaten. I say, your catβs thin, mate! She is nothing but skin and bone.β
βShe is old, it is time she was dead.β ββ β¦ So you say you are from Vyazovka?β
βI see you donβt feed her. Though sheβs a cat sheβs a creatureβ ββ β¦ every breathing thing. You should have pity on her!β
βYou are a queer lot in Vyazovka,β Artyom went on, as though not listening. βThe church has been robbed twice in one yearβ ββ β¦ To think that there are such wicked men! So they fear neither man nor God! To steal what is the Lordβs! Hangingβs too good for them! In old days the governors used to have such rogues flogged.β
βHowever you punish, whether it is with flogging or anything else, it will be no good, you will not knock the wickedness out of a wicked man.β
βSave and preserve us, Queen of Heaven!β The forester sighed abruptly. βSave us from all enemies and evildoers. Last week at Volovy Zaimishtchy, a mower struck another on the chest with his scytheβ ββ β¦ he killed him outright! And what was it all about, God bless me! One mower came out of the tavernβ ββ β¦ drunk. The other met him, drunk too.β
The young man, who had been listening attentively, suddenly started, and his face grew tense as he listened.
βStay,β he said, interrupting the forester. βI fancy someone is shouting.β
The hunter and the forester fell to listening with their eyes fixed on the window. Through the noise of the forest they could hear sounds such as the strained ear can always distinguish in every storm, so that it was difficult to make out whether people were calling for help or whether the wind was wailing in the chimney. But the wind tore at the roof, tapped at the paper on the window, and brought a distinct shout of βHelp!β
βTalk of your murderers,β said the hunter, turning pale and getting up. βSomeone is being robbed!β
βLord have mercy on us,β whispered the forester, and he, too, turned pale and got up.
The hunter looked aimlessly out of window and walked up and down the hut.
βWhat a night, what a night!β he muttered. βYou canβt see your hand before your face! The very time for a robbery. Do you hear? There is a shout again.β
The forester looked at the icon and from the icon turned his eyes upon the hunter, and sank on to the bench, collapsing like a man terrified by sudden bad news.
βGood Christian,β he said in a tearful voice, βyou might go into the passage and bolt the door. And we must put out the light.β
βWhat for?β
βBy ill-luck they may find their way here.β ββ β¦ Oh, our sins!β
βWe ought to be going, and you talk of bolting the door! You are a clever one! Are you coming?β
The hunter threw his gun over his shoulder and picked up his cap.
βGet ready, take your gun. Hey, Flerka, here,β he called to his dog. βFlerka!β
A dog with long frayed ears, a mongrel between a setter and a house-dog, came out from under the bench. He stretched himself by his masterβs feet and wagged his tail.
βWhy are you sitting there?β cried the hunter to the forester. βYou mean to say you are not going?β
βWhere?β
βTo help!β
βHow can I?β said the forester
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