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 policeman laughed, but, noticing that no one else was laughing, became serious and said:
βThatβs Molokanism. I have heard they are all like that in the Caucasus.β
βBut I was not killed by a thunderbolt,β Matvey went on, crossing himself before the icon and moving his lips. βMy dead mother must have been praying for me in the other world. When everyone in the town looked upon me as a saint, and even the ladies and gentlemen of good family used to come to me in secret for consolation, I happened to go into our landlord, Osip Varlamitch, to ask forgivenessβ βit was the Day of Forgivenessβ βand he fastened the door with the hook, and we were left alone face to face. And he began to reprove me, and I must tell you Osip Varlamitch was a man of brains, though without education, and everyone respected and feared him, for he was a man of stern, God-fearing life and worked hard. He had been the mayor of the town, and a warden of the church for twenty years maybe, and had done a great deal of good; he had covered all the New Moscow Road with gravel, had painted the church, and had decorated the columns to look like malachite. Well, he fastened the door, andβ ββI have been wanting to get at you for a long time, you rascal,β ββ β¦β he said. βYou think you are a saint,β he said. βNo you are not a saint, but a backslider from God, a heretic and an evildoer!β ββ β¦β And he went on and on.β ββ β¦ I canβt tell you how he said it, so eloquently and cleverly, as though it were all written down, and so touchingly. He talked for two hours. His words penetrated my soul; my eyes were opened. I listened, listened andβ βburst into sobs! βBe an ordinary man,β he said, βeat and drink, dress and pray like everyone else. All that is above the ordinary is of the devil. Your chains,β he said, βare of the devil; your fasting is of the devil; your prayer room is of the devil. It is all pride,β he said. Next day, on Monday in Holy Week, it pleased God I should fall ill. I ruptured myself and was taken to the hospital. I was terribly worried, and wept bitterly and trembled. I thought there was a straight road before me from the hospital to hell, and I almost died. I was in misery on a bed of sickness for six months, and when I was discharged the first thing I did I confessed, and took the sacrament in the regular way and became a man again. Osip Varlamitch saw me off home and exhorted me: βRemember, Matvey, that anything above the ordinary is of the devil.β And now I eat and drink like everyone else and pray like everyone else.β ββ β¦ If it happens now that the priest smells of tobacco or vodka I donβt venture to blame him, because the priest, too, of course, is an ordinary man. But as soon as I am told that in the town or in the village a saint has set up who does not eat for weeks, and makes rules of his own, I know whose work it is. So that is how I carried on in the past, gentlemen. Now, like Osip Varlamitch, I am continually exhorting my cousins and reproaching them, but I am a voice
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