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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βYou are a Petchenyeg,5 my good sir!β
From this came the nickname, the Petchenyegsβ farm, which stuck to the place even more when Zhmuhinβs boys grew up and began to make raids on the orchards and kitchen-gardens. Ivan Abramitch was called βYou Know,β as he usually talked a very great deal and frequently made use of that expression.
In the yard near a barn Zhmuhinβs sons were standing, one a young man of nineteen, the other a younger lad, both barefoot and bareheaded. Just at the moment when the trap drove into the yard the younger one flung high up a hen which, cackling, described an arc in the air; the elder shot at it with a gun and the hen fell dead on the earth.
βThose are my boys learning to shoot birds flying,β said Zhmuhin.
In the entry the travellers were met by a little thin woman with a pale face, still young and beautiful; from her dress she might have been taken for a servant.
βAnd this, allow me to introduce her,β said Zhmuhin, βis the mother of my young cubs. Come, Lyubov Osipovna,β he said, addressing her, βyou must be spry, mother, and get something for our guest. Let us have supper. Look sharp!β
The house consisted of two parts: in one was the parlour and beside it old Zhmuhinβs bedroom, both stuffy rooms with low ceilings and multitudes of flies and wasps, and in the other was the kitchen in which the cooking and washing was done and the labourers had their meals; here geese and turkey-hens were sitting on their eggs under the benches, and here were the beds of Lyubov Osipovna and her two sons. The furniture in the parlour was unpainted and evidently roughly made by a carpenter; guns, game-bags, and whips were hanging on the walls, and all this old rubbish was covered with the rust of years and looked grey with dust. There was not one picture; in the corner was a dingy board which had at one time been an icon.
A young Little Russian woman laid the table and handed ham, then beetroot soup. The visitor refused vodka and ate only bread and cucumbers.
βHow about ham?β asked Zhmuhin.
βThank you, I donβt eat it,β answered the visitor, βI donβt eat meat at all.β
βWhy is that?β
βI am a vegetarian. Killing animals is against my principles.β
Zhmuhin thought a minute and then said slowly with a sigh:
βYesβ ββ β¦ to be sure.β ββ β¦ I saw a man who did not eat meat in town, too. Itβs a new religion theyβve got now. Well, itβs good. We canβt go on always shooting and slaughtering, you know; we must give it up some day and leave even the beasts in peace. Itβs a sin to kill, itβs a sin, there is no denying it. Sometimes one kills a hare and wounds him in the leg, and he cries like a child.β ββ β¦ So it must hurt him!β
βOf course it hurts him; animals suffer just like human beings.β
βThatβs true,β Zhmuhin assented. βI understand that very well,β he went on, musing, βonly there is this one thing I donβt understand: suppose, you know, everyone gave up eating meat, what would become of the domestic animalsβ βfowls and geese, for instance?β
βFowls and geese would live in freedom like wild birds.β
βNow I understand. To be sure, crows and jackdaws get on all right without us. Yes.β ββ β¦ Fowls and geese and hares and sheep, all will live in freedom, rejoicing, you know, and praising God; and they will not fear us, peace and concord will come. Only there is one thing, you know, I canβt understand,β Zhmuhin went on, glancing at the ham. βHow will it be with the pigs? What is to be done with them?β
βThey will be like all the restβ βthat is, they will live in freedom.β
βAh! Yes. But allow me to say, if they were not slaughtered they would multiply, you know, and then goodbye to the kitchen-gardens and the meadows. Why, a pig, if you let it free and donβt look after it, will ruin everything in a day. A pig is a pig, and it is not for nothing it is called a pig.β ββ β¦β
They finished supper. Zhmuhin got up from the table and for a long while walked up and down the room, talking and talking.β ββ β¦ He was fond of talking of something important or serious and was fond of meditating, and in his old age he had a longing to reach some haven, to be reassured, that he might not be so frightened of dying. He had a longing for meekness, spiritual calm, and confidence in himself, such as this guest of theirs had, who had satisfied his hunger on cucumbers and bread, and believed that doing so made him more perfect; he was sitting on a chest, plump and healthy, keeping silent and patiently enduring his boredom, and in the dusk when one glanced at him from the entry he looked like a big round stone which one could not move from its place. If a man has something to lay hold of in life he is all right.
Zhmuhin went through the entry to the porch, and then he could be heard sighing and saying reflectively to himself: βYes.β ββ β¦ To be sure.β ββ β¦ By now it was dark, and here and there stars could be seen in the
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