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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βI really must, I really must.β ββ β¦ Goodbye, dear. Take care of yourself. In your condition, you knowβ ββ β¦β
And the ladies kissed each other. After seeing the departing guest to her carriage, Olga Mihalovna went in to the ladies in the drawing room. There the lamps were already lighted and the gentlemen were sitting down to cards.
IVThe party broke up after supper about a quarter past twelve. Seeing her visitors off, Olga Mihalovna stood at the door and said:
βYou really ought to take a shawl! Itβs turning a little chilly. Please God, you donβt catch cold!β
βDonβt trouble, Olga Mihalovna,β the ladies answered as they got into the carriage. βWell, goodbye. Mind now, we are expecting you; donβt play us false!β
βWo-o-o!β the coachman checked the horses.
βReady, Denis! Goodbye, Olga Mihalovna!β
βKiss the children for me!β
The carriage started and immediately disappeared into the darkness. In the red circle of light cast by the lamp in the road, a fresh pair or trio of impatient horses, and the silhouette of a coachman with his hands held out stiffly before him, would come into view. Again there began kisses, reproaches, and entreaties to come again or to take a shawl. Pyotr Dmitritch kept running out and helping the ladies into their carriages.
βYou go now by Efremovshtchina,β he directed the coachman; βitβs nearer through Mankino, but the road is worse that way. You might have an upset.β ββ β¦ Goodbye, my charmer. Mille compliments to your artist!β
βGoodbye, Olga Mihalovna, darling! Go indoors, or you will catch cold! Itβs damp!β
βWo-o-o! you rascal!β
βWhat horses have you got here?β Pyotr Dmitritch asked.
βThey were bought from Haidorov, in Lent,β answered the coachman.
βCapital horses.β ββ β¦β
And Pyotr Dmitritch patted the trace horse on the haunch.
βWell, you can start! God give you good luck!β
The last visitor was gone at last; the red circle on the road quivered, moved aside, contracted and went out, as Vassily carried away the lamp from the entrance. On previous occasions when they had seen off their visitors, Pyotr Dmitritch and Olga Mihalovna had begun dancing about the drawing room, facing each other, clapping their hands and singing: βTheyβve gone! Theyβve gone!β But now Olga Mihalovna was not equal to that. She went to her bedroom, undressed, and got into bed.
She fancied she would fall asleep at once and sleep soundly. Her legs and her shoulders ached painfully, her head was heavy from the strain of talking, and she was conscious, as before, of discomfort all over her body. Covering her head over, she lay still for three or four minutes, then peeped out from under the bedclothes at the lamp before the icon, listened to the silence, and smiled.
βItβs nice, itβs nice,β she whispered, curling up her legs, which felt as if they had grown longer from so much walking. βSleep, sleep.β ββ β¦β
Her legs would not get into a comfortable position; she felt uneasy all over, and she turned on the other side. A big fly blew buzzing about the bedroom and thumped against the ceiling. She could hear, too, Grigory and Vassily stepping cautiously about the drawing room, putting the chairs back in their places; it seemed to Olga Mihalovna that she could not go to sleep, nor be comfortable till those sounds were hushed. And again she turned over on the other side impatiently.
She heard her husbandβs voice in the drawing room. Someone must be staying the night, as Pyotr Dmitritch was addressing someone and speaking loudly:
βI donβt say that Count Alexey Petrovitch is an impostor. But he canβt help seeming to be one, because all of you gentlemen attempt to see in him something different from what he really is. His craziness is looked upon as originality, his familiar manners as good-nature, and his complete absence of opinions as Conservatism. Even granted that he is a Conservative of the stamp of β84, what after all is Conservatism?β
Pyotr Dmitritch, angry with Count Alexey Petrovitch, his visitors, and himself, was relieving his heart. He abused both the Count and his visitors, and in his vexation with himself was ready to speak out and to hold forth upon anything. After seeing his guest to his room, he walked up and down the drawing room, walked through the dining room, down the corridor, then into his study, then again went into the drawing room, and came into the bedroom. Olga Mihalovna was lying on her back, with the bedclothes only to her waist (by now she felt hot), and with an angry face, watched the fly that was thumping against the ceiling.
βIs someone staying the night?β she asked.
βYegorov.β
Pyotr Dmitritch undressed and got into his bed.
Without speaking, he lighted a cigarette, and he, too, fell to watching the fly. There was an uneasy and forbidding look in his eyes. Olga Mihalovna looked at his handsome profile for five minutes in silence. It seemed to her for some reason that if her husband were suddenly to turn facing her, and to say, βOlga, I am unhappy,β she would cry or laugh, and she would be at ease. She fancied that her legs were aching and her body was uncomfortable all over because of the strain on her feelings.
βPyotr, what are you thinking of?β she said.
βOh, nothingβ ββ β¦β her husband answered.
βYou have taken to having secrets from me of late: thatβs not right.β
βWhy is it not right?β answered Pyotr Dmitritch drily and not at once. βWe all have our personal life, every one of us, and we are bound to have our secrets.β
βPersonal life, our secretsβ ββ β¦ thatβs all words! Understand you are wounding me!β said Olga Mihalovna, sitting up in bed. βIf you have a load on your heart, why do you hide it from me? And why do you find it more suitable to open your heart to women who are nothing to you, instead of to your wife? I overheard your outpourings to Lubotchka by the beehouse
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