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 am not young!β said Nikitin, offended. βI am in my twenty-seventh year.β
βPapa, the farrier has come!β cried Varya from the other room.
And the conversation broke off. Varya, Masha, and Polyansky saw Nikitin home. When they reached his gate, Varya said:
βWhy is it your mysterious Metropolit Metropolititch never shows himself anywhere? He might come and see us.β
The mysterious Ippolit Ippolititch was sitting on his bed, taking off his trousers, when Nikitin went in to him.
βDonβt go to bed, my dear fellow,β said Nikitin breathlessly. βStop a minute; donβt go to bed!β
Ippolit Ippolititch put on his trousers hurriedly and asked in a flutter:
βWhat is it?β
βI am going to be married.β
Nikitin sat down beside his companion, and looking at him wonderingly, as though surprised at himself, said:
βOnly fancy, I am going to be married! To Masha Shelestov! I made an offer today.β
βWell? She seems a good sort of girl. Only she is very young.β
βYes, she is young,β sighed Nikitin, and shrugged his shoulders with a careworn air. βVery, very young!β
βShe was my pupil at the high school. I know her. She wasnβt bad at geography, but she was no good at history. And she was inattentive in class, too.β
Nikitin for some reason felt suddenly sorry for his companion, and longed to say something kind and comforting to him.
βMy dear fellow, why donβt you get married?β he asked. βWhy donβt you marry Varya, for instance? She is a splendid, first-rate girl! Itβs true she is very fond of arguing, but a heartβ ββ β¦ what a heart! She was just asking about you. Marry her, my dear boy! Eh?β
He knew perfectly well that Varya would not marry this dull, snub-nosed man, but still persuaded him to marry herβ βwhy?
βMarriage is a serious step,β said Ippolit Ippolititch after a momentβs thought. βOne has to look at it all round and weigh things thoroughly; itβs not to be done rashly. Prudence is always a good thing, and especially in marriage, when a man, ceasing to be a bachelor, begins a new life.β
And he talked of what everyone has known for ages. Nikitin did not stay to listen, said goodnight, and went to his own room. He undressed quickly and quickly got into bed, in order to be able to think the sooner of his happiness, of Masha, of the future; he smiled, then suddenly recalled that he had not read Lessing.
βI must read him,β he thought. βThough, after all, why should I? Bother him!β
And exhausted by his happiness, he fell asleep at once and went on smiling till the morning.
He dreamed of the thud of horsesβ hoofs on a wooden floor; he dreamed of the black horse Count Nulin, then of the white Giant and its sister Maika, being led out of the stable.
IIβIt was very crowded and noisy in the church, and once someone cried out, and the head priest, who was marrying Masha and me, looked through his spectacles at the crowd, and said severely: βDonβt move about the church, and donβt make a noise, but stand quietly and pray. You should have the fear of God in your hearts.β
βMy best men were two of my colleagues, and Mashaβs best men were Captain Polyansky and Lieutenant Gernet. The bishopβs choir sang superbly. The sputtering of the candles, the brilliant light, the gorgeous dresses, the officers, the numbers of gay, happy faces, and a special ethereal look in Masha, everything togetherβ βthe surroundings and the words of the wedding prayersβ βmoved me to tears and filled me with triumph. I thought how my life had blossomed, how poetically it was shaping itself! Two years ago I was still a student, I was living in cheap furnished rooms, without money, without relations, and, as I fancied then, with nothing to look forward to. Now I am a teacher in the high school in one of the best provincial towns, with a secure income, loved, spoiled. It is for my sake, I thought, this crowd is collected, for my sake three candelabra have been lighted, the deacon is booming, the choir is doing its best; and itβs for my sake that this young creature, whom I soon shall call my wife, is so young, so elegant, and so joyful. I recalled our first meetings, our rides into the country, my declaration of love and the weather, which, as though expressly, was so exquisitely fine all the summer; and the happiness which at one time in my old rooms seemed to me possible only in novels and stories, I was now experiencing in realityβ βI was now, as it were, holding it in my hands.
βAfter the ceremony they all crowded in disorder round Masha and me, expressed their genuine pleasure, congratulated us and wished us joy. The brigadier-general, an old man of seventy, confined himself to congratulating Masha, and said to her in a squeaky, aged voice, so loud that it could be heard all over the church:
βββI hope that even after you are married you may remain the rose you are now, my dear.β
βThe officers, the director, and all the teachers smiled from politeness, and I was conscious of an agreeable artificial smile on my face, too. Dear Ippolit Ippolititch, the teacher of history and geography, who always says what everyone has heard before, pressed my hand warmly and said with feeling:
βββHitherto you have been unmarried and have lived alone, and now you are married and no longer single.β
βFrom the church we went to a two-storied house which I am receiving as part of the dowry. Besides that house Masha is bringing me twenty thousand roubles, as well as a piece of waste land with
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