Best Russian Short Stories by - (ebook reader wifi txt) đ
The Cloak N.V. Gogol
The District Doctor I.S. Turgenev
The Christmas Tree And The Wedding F.M. Dostoyevsky
God Sees The Truth, But Waits L.N. Tolstoy
How A Muzhik Fed Two Officials M.Y. Saltykov
The Shades, A Phantasy V.G. Korolenko
The Signal V.N. Garshin
The Darling A.P. Chekhov
The Bet A.P. Chekhov
Vanka A.P. Chekhov
Hide and Seek F.K. Sologub
Dethroned I.N. Potapenko
The Servant S.T. Semyonov
One Autumn Night M. Gorky
Her Lover M. Gorky
Lazarus L.N. Andreyev
The Revolutionist M.P. Artzybashev
The Outrage A.I. Kuprin
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At this point the doctor again took snuff with exasperated energy, and for a moment seemed stupefied by its effects.
âHowever,â he continued, âthe next day, contrary to my expectations, the patient was no better. I thought and thought, and suddenly decided to remain there, even though my other patients were expecting me... And you know one canât afford to disregard that; oneâs practice suffers if one does. But, in the first place, the patient was really in danger; and secondly, to tell the truth, I felt strongly drawn to her. Besides, I liked the whole family. Though they were really badly off, they were singularly, I may say, cultivated people... Their father had been a learned man, an author; he died, of course, in poverty, but he had managed before he died to give his children an excellent education; he left a lot of books too. Either because I looked after the invalid very carefully, or for some other reason; anyway, I can venture to say all the household loved me as if I were one of the family... Meantime the roads were in a worse state than ever; all communications, so to say, were cut off completely; even medicine could with difficulty be got from the town... The sick girl was not getting better... Day after day, and day after day ... but ... here...â (The doctor made a brief pause.) âI declare I donât know how to tell you.â... (He again took snuff, coughed, and swallowed a little tea.) âI will tell you without beating about the bush. My patient ... how should I say?... Well she had fallen in love with me ... or, no, it was not that she was in love ... however ... really, how should one say?â (The doctor looked down and grew red.) âNo,â he went on quickly, âin love, indeed! A man should not over-estimate himself. She was an educated girl, clever and well-read, and I had even forgotten my Latin, one may say, completely. As to appearanceâ (the doctor looked himself over with a smile) âI am nothing to boast of there either. But God Almighty did not make me a fool; I donât take black for white; I know a thing or two; I could see very clearly, for instance that Aleksandra Andreyevnaâthat was her nameâdid not feel love for me, but had a friendly, so to say, inclinationâa respect or something for me. Though she herself perhaps mistook this sentiment, anyway this was her attitude; you may form your own judgment of it. But,â added the doctor, who had brought out all these disconnected sentences without taking breath, and with obvious embarrassment, âI seem to be wandering ratherâyou wonât understand anything like this ... There, with your leave, I will relate it all in order.â
He drank off a glass of tea, and began in a calmer voice.
âWell, then. My patient kept getting worse and worse. You are not a doctor, my good sir; you cannot understand what passes in a poor fellowâs heart, especially at first, when he begins to suspect that the disease is getting the upper hand of him. What becomes of his belief in himself? You suddenly grow so timid; itâs indescribable. You fancy then that you have forgotten everything you knew, and that the patient has no faith in you, and that other people begin to notice how distracted you are, and tell you the symptoms with reluctance; that they are looking at you suspiciously, whispering... Ah! itâs horrid! There must be a remedy, you think, for this disease, if one could find it. Isnât this it? You tryâno, thatâs not it! You donât allow the medicine the necessary time to do good... You clutch at one thing, then at another. Sometimes you take up a book of medical prescriptionsâhere it is, you think! Sometimes, by Jove, you pick one out by chance, thinking to leave it to fate... But meantime a fellow-creatureâs dying, and another doctor would have saved him. âWe must have a consultation,â you say; âI will not take the responsibility on myself.â And what a fool you look at such times! Well, in time you learn to bear it; itâs nothing to you. A man has diedâbut itâs not your fault; you treated him by the rules. But whatâs still more torture to you is to see blind faith in you, and to feel yourself that you are not able to be of use. Well, it was just this blind faith that the whole of Aleksandra Andreyevnaâs family had in me; they had forgotten to think that their daughter was in danger. I, too, on my side assure them that itâs nothing, but meantime my heart sinks into my boots. To add to our troubles, the roads were in such a state that the coachman was gone for whole days together to get medicine. And I never left the patientâs room; I could not tear myself away; I tell her amusing stories, you know, and play cards with her. I watch by her side at night. The old mother thanks me with tears in her eyes; but I think to myself, âI donât deserve your gratitude.â I frankly confess to youâthere is no object in concealing it nowâI was in love with my patient. And Aleksandra Andreyevna had grown fond of me; she would not sometimes let any one be in her room but me. She began to talk to me, to ask me questions; where I had studied, how I lived, who
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