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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βThe time will come and we shall die too,β said the porter, walking away with the fish-hawker, and at once they both vanished from sight in the darkness.
The coachman, and Alyoshka after him, somewhat timidly went up to the lighted windows. A very pale lady with large tear stained eyes, and a fine-looking gray headed man were moving two card-tables into the middle of the room, probably with the intention of laying the dead man upon them, and on the green cloth of the table numbers could still be seen written in chalk. The cook who had run about the yard wailing in the morning was now standing on a chair, stretching up to try and cover the looking glass with a towel.
βGrandfather what are they doing?β asked Alyoshka in a whisper.
βThey are just going to lay him on the tables,β answered his grandfather. βLet us go, child, it is bedtime.β
The coachman and Alyoshka went back to the coach-house. They said their prayers, and took off their boots. Stepan lay down in a corner on the floor, Alyoshka in a sledge. The doors of the coach house were shut, there was a horrible stench from the extinguished lantern. A little later Alyoshka sat up and looked about him; through the crack of the door he could still see a light from those lighted windows.
βGrandfather, I am frightened!β he said.
βCome, go to sleep, go to sleep!β ββ β¦β
βI tell you I am frightened!β
βWhat are you frightened of? What a baby!β
They were silent.
Alyoshka suddenly jumped out of the sledge and, loudly weeping, ran to his grandfather.
βWhat is it? Whatβs the matter?β cried the coachman in a fright, getting up also.
βHeβs howling!β
βWho is howling?β
βI am frightened, grandfather, do you hear?β
The coachman listened.
βItβs their crying,β he said. βCome! there, little silly! They are sad, so they are crying.β
βI want to go home,β ββ β¦β his grandson went on sobbing and trembling all over. βGrandfather, let us go back to the village, to mammy; come, grandfather dear, God will give you the heavenly kingdom for it.β ββ β¦β
βWhat a silly, ah! Come, be quiet, be quiet! Be quiet, I will light the lantern,β ββ β¦ silly!β
The coachman fumbled for the matches and lighted the lantern. But the light did not comfort Alyoshka.
βGrandfather Stepan, letβs go to the village!β he besought him, weeping. βI am frightened here; oh, oh, how frightened I am! And why did you bring me from the village, accursed man?β
βWhoβs an accursed man? You mustnβt use such disrespectable words to your lawful grandfather. I shall whip you.β
βDo whip me, grandfather, do; beat me like Sidorβs goat, but only take me to mammy, for Godβs mercy!β ββ β¦β
βCome, come, grandson, come!β the coachman said kindly. βItβs all right, donβt be frightened.β ββ β¦ I am frightened myself.β ββ β¦ Say your prayers!β
The door creaked and the porterβs head appeared. βArenβt you asleep, Stepan?β he asked. βI shanβt get any sleep all night,β he said, coming in. βI shall be opening and shutting the gates all night.β ββ β¦ What are you crying for, Alyoshka?β
βHe is frightened,β the coachman answered for his grandson.
Again there was the sound of a wailing voice in the air. The porter said:
βThey are crying. The mother canβt believe her eyes.β ββ β¦ Itβs dreadful how upset she is.β
βAnd is the father there?β
βYes.β ββ β¦ The father is all right. He sits in the corner and says nothing. They have taken the children to relations.β ββ β¦ Well, Stepan, shall we have a game of trumps?β
βYes,β the coachman agreed, scratching himself, βand you, Alyoshka, go to sleep. Almost big enough to be married, and blubbering, you rascal. Come, go along, grandson, go along.β ββ β¦β
The presence of the porter reassured Alyoshka. He went, not very resolutely, towards the sledge and lay down. And while he was falling asleep he heard a half-whisper.
βI beat and cover,β said his grandfather.
βI beat and cover,β repeated the porter.
The bell rang in the yard, the door creaked and seemed also saying: βI beat and cover.β When Alyoshka dreamed of the gentleman and, frightened by his eyes, jumped up and burst out crying, it was morning, his grandfather was snoring, and the coach-house no longer seemed terrible.
ZinotchkaThe party of sportsmen spent the night in a peasantβs hut on some newly mown hay. The moon peeped in at the window; from the street came the mournful wheezing of a concertina; from the hay came a sickly sweet, faintly troubling scent. The sportsmen talked about dogs, about women, about first love, and about snipe. After all the ladies of their acquaintance had been picked to pieces, and hundreds of stories had been told, the stoutest of the sportsmen, who looked in the darkness like a haycock, and who talked in the mellow bass of a staff officer, gave a loud yawn and said:
βIt is nothing much to be loved; the ladies are created for the purpose of loving us men. But, tell me, has any one of you fellows been hatedβ βpassionately, furiously hated? Has any one of you watched the ecstasies of hatred? Eh?β
No answer followed.
βHas no one, gentlemen?β asked the staff officerβs bass voice. βBut I, now, have been hated, hated by a pretty girl, and have been able to study the symptoms of first hatred directed against myself. It was the first, because it was something exactly the converse of first love. What I am going to tell, however, happened when I knew nothing about love or hate. I was eight at the time, but that made no difference; in this case it was not he but she that mattered. Well, I beg your attention. One fine summer evening, just before sunset, I was sitting in the nursery, doing my lesson with my governess, Zinotchka, a very charming and poetical creature who had left boarding school not long before. Zinotchka looked absentmindedly towards the window and said:
βββYes. We breathe in oxygen;
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