Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Ivan Bunin
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The schoolboyâ âso he thoughtâ âhad come to know these people well during the summer, had become attached to all of them in different waysâ âeven to Ivan, who unmercifully made fun of him. He was learning one thing or another from them, was adapting their pronounciationâ âabsolutely, as it proved, unlike the speech of the muzhiks in books; adopting their unexpected, absurd, but unshakable conclusions, the uniformity of their ready wisdom, their coarseness and indifference, their capacity for work and their dislike of it. And, had he gone to the city after the vacation, without reverting to his infatuation for the life of the muzhiks during the next summer, he would all his life have thought that he had observed the common people of Russia very wellâ âif, by accident, a lengthy, frank conversation had not sprung up among the farm hands on this night.
It was started by the old man who was lying alongside of the schoolboy and who was scratching more than anybody else.
âPestering the life out of you, young master, hey? Theyâre nothing but a misery, Khomut!â said heâ âthe word âKhomutâ he used to characterize not only his entire existence, but also all its weariness, all its unpleasantness.
âCanât stand it,â replied the schoolboy. âThe women and wenches now, the devil take them, they wonât touch. But who would you think they ought to be biting if not them?â
âMain thing is, whether a body wear drawers or no, it makes no difference to them fleas,â indifferently agreed the old man, giving off, as he tossed about, a strong odourâ âof a body long unwashed, and of a worn peasantâs coat that had become permeated with the smoke of a chimneyless hut.
The others kept silence. Usually, they were jocose before falling asleep, questioning Pashka about his conjugal life, while he answered them with such unperturbed and gay shamelessness that even the schoolboy, who was constantly entranced by him, never taking his eyes off his intelligent and animated face, was vexed over anyoneâs being able to speak so of oneâs own young wife. Now no one seemed about to begin questioning, and the student wanted to do so himself, in order to excite his imagination, forever empoisoned by the widow, and to hear the self-assured voice of Pashkaâ âwhen the latter stretched himself, sat up, and began rolling a crude cigarette. The old man raised up his head, covered with a cap, and shook it.
âEh, but youâll burn this place down some day, young fellow!â said he. âWatch out. It donât take much to bring on trouble.â
âWell, Iâll get out of it by blaminâ the young master,â answered Pashka, a trifle hoarse from a cold; and, having cleared his throat, he started laughing. âHeâs smoking all the time himself. Wonderful night tonight, young master,â said he, changing his tone to a serious one and turning around to the schoolboy. âWhatâs the only thing lacking on this night, you might say? Why, the moon.â
They all felt that he wanted to tell something. And, truly, having kept silent for a while, without eliciting any reply, he suddenly added:
âAre you asleep, young master? What hour might it be now?â
The schoolboy raised himself up, pulled his silver watch out of his trouserâs-pocket, and began inspecting it by the light of the stars.
âHalf-past ten,â said he, bending over.
âWell, now, I just knew it was that,â concurred Pashka, gaily and self-assuredly, lighting his cigarette, which was rolled somewhat in the form of a pipe; it was gripped in one corner of his mouth between his teeth, and he lit it with a stinking sulphur match flaming within his cupped hands. âJust exactly at this time last year I killed a man.â
And the schoolboy at once straightened up, letting his hands dropâ âand he seemed to be turned to stone during all the time that the others talked. At rare intervals he would put in a word, but it was as though it were not he, but some other who was talking in his stead. Then everything within him began to shiver in an icy ague fit inducive of senseless laughter, and his face began to burn, as though it were aflame.
IIIvan, as always, maintained a portentous silence. Kiriushka was not at all interested in whatever they were talking about; he lay thinking his own thoughtsâ âmostly about an accordion, the purchase of which was his most cherished dream. Theodot, too, who lay leaning upon his elbow, was silent for a long while. He was a strong, flat-chested muzhik, who at the beginning of the summer had not been considered by the farm hands as one of them, because he wore a short sheepskin coat, without a waistline and without folds in its skirtsâ âwhich was the kind worn by the Tartars of Kazan. He had seemed a stranger to the schoolboy as well. Just as he liked the cheerful composure of Pashka, the smoothness of his mannerisms, his sunburned face, so he was
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