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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βUnderstandβ ββ β¦ understand!β
βCome, drink!β he said, handing her some water.
She took the glass obediently and began drinking, but the water splashed over and was spilt on her arms, her throat and knees.
βI must look horribly unseemly,β she thought.
Pyotr Dmitritch put her back in bed without a word, and covered her with the quilt, then he took the candle and went out.
βFor Godβs sake!β Olga Mihalovna cried again. βPyotr, understand, understand!β
Suddenly something gripped her in the lower part of her body and back with such violence that her wailing was cut short, and she bit the pillow from the pain. But the pain let her go again at once, and she began sobbing again.
The maid came in, and arranging the quilt over her, asked in alarm:
βMistress, darling, what is the matter?β
βGo out of the room,β said Pyotr Dmitritch sternly, going up to the bed.
βUnderstandβ ββ β¦ understand!β ββ β¦β Olga Mihalovna began.
βOlya, I entreat you, calm yourself,β he said. βI did not mean to hurt you. I would not have gone out of the room if I had known it would have hurt you so much; I simply felt depressed. I tell you, on my honourβ ββ β¦β
βUnderstand!β ββ β¦ You were lying, I was lying.β ββ β¦β
βI understand.β ββ β¦ Come, come, thatβs enough! I understand,β said Pyotr Dmitritch tenderly, sitting down on her bed. βYou said that in anger; I quite understand. I swear to God I love you beyond anything on earth, and when I married you I never once thought of your being rich. I loved you immensely, and thatβs allβ ββ β¦ I assure you. I have never been in want of money or felt the value of it, and so I cannot feel the difference between your fortune and mine. It always seemed to me we were equally well off. And that I have been deceitful in little things, thatβ ββ β¦ of course, is true. My life has hitherto been arranged in such a frivolous way that it has somehow been impossible to get on without paltry lying. It weighs on me, too, now.β ββ β¦ Let us leave off talking about it, for goodnessβ sake!β
Olga Mihalovna again felt in acute pain, and clutched her husband by the sleeve.
βI am in pain, in pain, in painβ ββ β¦β she said rapidly. βOh, what pain!β
βDamnation take those visitors!β muttered Pyotr Dmitritch, getting up. βYou ought not to have gone to the island today!β he cried. βWhat an idiot I was not to prevent you! Oh, my God!β
He scratched his head in vexation, and, with a wave of his hand, walked out of the room.
Then he came into the room several times, sat down on the bed beside her, and talked a great deal, sometimes tenderly, sometimes angrily, but she hardly heard him. Her sobs were continually interrupted by fearful attacks of pain, and each time the pain was more acute and prolonged. At first she held her breath and bit the pillow during the pain, but then she began screaming on an unseemly piercing note. Once seeing her husband near her, she remembered that she had insulted him, and without pausing to think whether it were really Pyotr Dmitritch or whether she were in delirium, clutched his hand in both hers and began kissing it.
βYou were lying, I was lyingβ ββ β¦β she began justifying herself. βUnderstand, understand.β ββ β¦ They have exhausted me, driven me out of all patience.β
βOlya, we are not alone,β said Pyotr Dmitritch.
Olga Mihalovna raised her head and saw Varvara, who was kneeling by the chest of drawers and pulling out the bottom drawer. The top drawers were already open. Then Varvara got up, red from the strained position, and with a cold, solemn face began trying to unlock a box.
βMarya, I canβt unlock it!β she said in a whisper. βYou unlock it, wonβt you?β
Marya, the maid, was digging a candle end out of the candlestick with a pair of scissors, so as to put in a new candle; she went up to Varvara and helped her to unlock the box.
βThere should be nothing lockedβ ββ β¦β whispered Varvara. βUnlock this basket, too, my good girl. Master,β she said, βyou should send to Father Mihail to unlock the holy gates! You must!β
βDo what you like,β said Pyotr Dmitritch, breathing hard, βonly, for Godβs sake, make haste and fetch the doctor or the midwife! Has Vassily gone? Send someone else. Send your husband!β
βItβs the birth,β Olga Mihalovna thought. βVarvara,β she moaned, βbut he wonβt be born alive!β
βItβs all right, itβs all right, mistress,β whispered Varvara. βPlease God, he will be alive! he will be alive!β
When Olga Mihalovna came to herself again after a pain she was no longer sobbing nor tossing from side to side, but moaning. She could not refrain from moaning even in the intervals between the pains. The candles were still burning, but the morning light was coming through the blinds. It was probably about five oβclock in the morning. At the round table there was sitting some unknown woman with a very discreet air, wearing a white apron. From her whole appearance it was evident she had been sitting there a long time. Olga Mihalovna guessed that she was the midwife.
βWill it soon be over?β she asked, and in her voice she heard a peculiar and unfamiliar note which had never been there before. βI must be dying in childbirth,β she thought.
Pyotr Dmitritch came cautiously into the bedroom, dressed for the day, and stood at the window with his back to his wife. He lifted the blind and looked out of window.
βWhat rain!β he said.
βWhat time is it?β asked Olga Mihalovna, in order to hear the unfamiliar note in her voice again.
βA quarter to six,β answered the midwife.
βAnd what if I really am dying?β thought Olga Mihalovna, looking at her husbandβs head and the windowpanes on which the rain was beating. βHow will he live without me? With whom will he have tea and dinner, talk in the evenings, sleep?β
And he seemed
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