Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) š
- Author: Ivan Bunin
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The elder son was in good health, but also a sort of innocent, not fit for any business. They gave him away for instruction into all sorts of schoolsā āand he was chased out of all of them; they couldnāt learn him anything. Come nightā āheād get full some place or other, and be gone until dawn. Still, he really was afraid of his mother, and would not come in through the front door for anything. Iād get through with my work in the evening, and wait until the master and mistress would be asleep; then Iād steal through the rooms, open the window in his little den, and then go back to my place again. Heād take his boots off in the street, crawl through the window in only his stocking-feet, and never a squeak or a creak out of him. The next day heād get up like heād never been any place, and in some spot where we couldnāt be seen heād shove what was coming to me into my hand. It wasnāt none of my worry, and Iād take it right gladly! If he was to break his neck, that would be his lookout.ā āā ā¦ And then I started in having an income from the younger, from Nicanor Matveich.
I was after what I wanted day and night, you might say. Once I took into my head that one idea, to absolutely provide for myself and to marry a decent party, I had taken a fresh hold on life. I used to save every little copper, now; money, you know, has little wings, once you let it out of your hands!
I got rid of this here Veraā ābut she, to tell the truth, was there really without need; I just put it that way to the master and mistress: āI can get along all by my own self,ā I says; āyou just add any trifle you like to my wage, and youāll do better nor now.ā So, then, I was left alone and managing everything myself. I wouldnāt even take the wages in my handsā āsoon as twenty or twenty-five roubles would gather, Iād beg the mistress to go to the bank and put it away in my name. Clothes, and shoes, and everything else went with the placeā āwhat was I to spend money for? The only expenses I had was to put up a little stone at my husbandās graveā āI paid two roubles seventy, soās people wouldnāt talk. And right here, the Lord forgive usā āsuch was my luck and his misfortuneā āthis poor wretch had to go and fall in love with me.ā āā ā¦
Of course, now I often think: maybe it was on account of him that God punished me through my son. Sometimes I canāt get it out of my headā āIāll tell you right away what he went and done to himself. And besides, just consider that it really was very hardā āI used to look at this big-headed fellow, and what a vexation would take hold on me! āMay this and that befall you,ā Iād think, āyou was born, with a silver spoon in your mouth! Even though you be a cripple, yet how rich you live.ā āā ā¦ Whereas mine is all sound, and yet he donāt eat or drink as much on a holiday as you do on a weekday, just so.ā Then I started in to noticeā āit looked like heād fallen in love with me; well, now, he just wouldnāt take his eyes off my face. By that time he was already sixteen, and had taken to wearing wide trousers, and to belting his blouse; a red-haired moustache started cropping out. But he was homely, tow-haired, green-eyedā āGod deliver me! His face was broad, but he himself was as thin as a bone. At first, evidently, he got it into his head that he could be pleasingā āhe began to dress up, to buy polly-seeds, and used to play on his accordion so fine that you could listen to him for hours. He played well, to tell the truth. When he seen that his affair werenāt coming along, he grew quiet and thoughtful-like. Once I was standing in the balcony, and I see him crawling through the yard with a new German accordion. He had shaved and combed himself once more; had put on a three-buttoned blouse with a high collar, fastening at the side; his head was thrown backā ālooking for me, that is. He looked and he looked; his eyes became longing-like and dim, and then he began a polka:
āLet us go, let us go,
I would dance a polka through;
Dancing makes one braver; so
I can speak my love for you.ā āā ā¦ā
But, like as if I hadnāt noticed him, I took and threw down a slop-bowl, with water! I threw it down, and then was scared myself. But he crawls, he struggles up the stairs, drying himself with one
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