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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The deceitfulness of man!
The FishA summer morning. The air is still; there is no sound but the churring of a grasshopper on the river bank, and somewhere the timid cooing of a turtledove. Feathery clouds stand motionless in the sky, looking like snow scattered about.β ββ β¦ Gerassim, the carpenter, a tall gaunt peasant, with a curly red head and a face overgrown with hair, is floundering about in the water under the green willow branches near an unfinished bathing shed.β ββ β¦ He puffs and pants and, blinking furiously, is trying to get hold of something under the roots of the willows. His face is covered with perspiration. A couple of yards from him, Lubim, the carpenter, a young hunchback with a triangular face and narrow Chinese-looking eyes, is standing up to his neck in water. Both Gerassim and Lubim are in shirts and linen breeches. Both are blue with cold, for they have been more than an hour already in the water.
βBut why do you keep poking with your hand?β cries the hunchback Lubim, shivering as though in a fever. βYou blockhead! Hold him, hold him, or else heβll get away, the anathema! Hold him, I tell you!β
βHe wonβt get away.β ββ β¦ Where can he get to? Heβs under a root,β says Gerassim in a hoarse, hollow bass, which seems to come not from his throat, but from the depths of his stomach. βHeβs slippery, the beggar, and thereβs nothing to catch hold of.β
βGet him by the gills, by the gills!β
βThereβs no seeing his gills.β ββ β¦ Stay, Iβve got hold of something.β ββ β¦ Iβve got him by the lipβ ββ β¦ Heβs biting, the brute!β
βDonβt pull him out by the lip, donβtβ βor youβll let him go! Take him by the gills, take him by the gills.β ββ β¦ Youβve begun poking with your hand again! You are a senseless man, the Queen of Heaven forgive me! Catch hold!β
βCatch hold!β Gerassim mimics him. βYouβre a fine one to give orders.β ββ β¦ Youβd better come and catch hold of him yourself, you hunchback devil.β ββ β¦ What are you standing there for?β
βI would catch hold of him if it were possible. But can I stand by the bank, and me as short as I am? Itβs deep there.β
βIt doesnβt matter if it is deep.β ββ β¦ You must swim.β
The hunchback waves his arms, swims up to Gerassim, and catches hold of the twigs. At the first attempt to stand up, he goes into the water over his head and begins blowing up bubbles.
βI told you it was deep,β he says, rolling his eyes angrily. βAm I to sit on your neck or what?β
βStand on a rootβ ββ β¦ there are a lot of roots like a ladder.β The hunchback gropes for a root with his heel, and tightly gripping several twigs, stands on it.β ββ β¦ Having got his balance, and established himself in his new position, he bends down, and trying not to get the water into his mouth, begins fumbling with his right hand among the roots. Getting entangled among the weeds and slipping on the mossy roots he finds his hand in contact with the sharp pincers of a crayfish.
βAs though we wanted to see you, you demon!β says Lubim, and he angrily flings the crayfish on the bank.
At last his hand feels Gerassimβs arm, and groping its way along it comes to something cold and slimy.
βHere he is!β says Lubim with a grin. βA fine fellow! Move your fingers, Iβll get him directlyβ ββ β¦ by the gills. Stop, donβt prod me with your elbow.β ββ β¦ Iβll have him in a minute, in a minute, only let me get hold of him.β ββ β¦ The beggar has got a long way under the roots, there is nothing to get hold of.β ββ β¦ One canβt get to the headβ ββ β¦ one can only feel its bellyβ ββ β¦ kill that gnat on my neckβ βitβs stinging! Iβll get him by the gills, directly.β ββ β¦ Come to one side and give him a push! Poke him with your finger!β
The hunchback puffs out his cheeks, holds his breath, opens his eyes wide, and apparently has already got his fingers in the gills, but at that moment the twigs to which he is holding on with his left hand break, and losing his balance he plops into the water! Eddies race away from the bank as though frightened, and little bubbles come up from the spot where he has fallen in. The hunchback swims out and, snorting, clutches at the twigs.
βYouβll be drowned next, you stupid, and I shall have to answer for you,β wheezes Gerassim. βClamber out, the devil take you! Iβll get him out myself.β
High words follow.β ββ β¦ The sun is baking hot. The shadows begin to grow shorter and to draw in on themselves, like the horns of a snail.β ββ β¦ The high grass warmed by the sun begins to give out a strong, heavy smell of honey. It will soon be midday, and Gerassim and Lubim are still floundering under the willow tree. The husky bass and the shrill, frozen tenor persistently disturb the stillness of the summer day.
βPull him out by the gills, pull him out! Stay, Iβll push him out! Where are you shoving your great ugly fist? Poke him with your fingerβ βyou pigβs face! Get round by the side! get to the left, to the left, thereβs a big hole on the right! Youβll be a supper for the water-devil! Pull it by the lip!β
There is the sound of the flick of a whip.β ββ β¦ A herd of cattle, driven by Yefim, the shepherd, saunter lazily down the sloping bank to drink. The shepherd, a decrepit old man, with one eye and a crooked mouth, walks with his head bowed,
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