Yama Aleksandr Kuprin (smart ebook reader txt) š
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
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The homely, but pleasant-looking face of Liubka, all spotted from freckles, like a cuckooās egg, lengthened and paled a little.
āWell, for Godās sake, donāt you be angry at meā āā ā¦ Youāre called Vassil Vassilich, isnāt that so? Donāt get angry, darling Vassil Vassilich. Really, now, Iāll learn fast, Iām quick. And why do you say you and you24 to me all the time? It seems that we arenāt strangers now?ā
She looked at him kindly. And truly, she had this morning, for the first time in all her brief but distorted life, given her body to a manā āeven though without enjoyment but more out of gratitude and pity, yet voluntarilyā ānot for money, not under compulsion, not under threat of dismissal and scandal. And her feminine heart, always unwithering, always drawn to love, like a sunflower to the sun, was at this moment pure and inclined to tenderness.
But Likhonin suddenly felt a prickling, shameful awkwardness and something inimical toward this woman, yesterday unknown to him, today his chance mistress. āThe charms of the family hearth have begun,ā he thought involuntarily; still, he got up from his chair, walked up to Liubka, and having taken her by the hand, drew her to him and patted her on the head.
āMy dear, my darling sister,ā he said touchingly and falsely; āthat which has happened today must never more be repeated. In everything only I alone am guilty, and, if you desire, I am ready to beg forgiveness of you on my knees. Understandā āoh, understand, that all this came about against my will, somehow elementally, suddenly, unexpectedly. And I myself didnāt think that it would be like that! You understand, for a very long timeā āā ā¦ I have not known woman intimatelyā āā ā¦ A repulsive, unbridled beast awoke within meā āā ā¦ andā āā ā¦ But, Lord, is my fault so great, then? Holy people, anchorites, recluses, ascetics, stylites, hermits in deserts, are no match for me in fortitude of spiritā āyet even they fell in the struggle with the temptation of the diabolical flesh. But then, I swear by whatever you wish, that this wonāt be repeated any moreā āā ā¦ Isnāt that so?ā
Liubka was stubbornly trying to pull his hand away from hers. Her lips had become a little stuck out and the lowered lids began to wink frequently.
āYe-es,ā she drawled, like a child that stubbornly refuses to āmake up.ā āWell, I can see that I donāt please you. Well, then, youād best tell me so straight and give me a little for a cab, and some more, now; as much as you wantā āā ā¦ The money for the night is paid anyway, and I only have to ride up toā āā ā¦ there.ā
Likhonin seized his hair, flung himself about the room and began to declaim:
āAh, not that, not that, not that! Just understand me, Liuba! To go on with that which happened in the morningā āthatāsā āā ā¦ thatās swinishness, bestiality, and unworthy of a man who respects himself. Love! Loveā āthis is a full blending of minds, thoughts, souls, interests, and not of the bodies alone. Love is a tremendous, great emotion, mighty as the universe, and not the sprawling in bed. Thereās no such love between us, Liubochka. If itāll come, it will be wonderful happiness both for you and for me. But in the meantimeā āIām your friend, your faithful comrade, on the path of life. And thatās enough, and that will doā āā ā¦ And though Iām no stranger to human frailties, still, I count myself an honest man.ā
Liubka seemed to wilt. āHe thinks I want him to marry me. And I absolutely donāt need that,ā she thought sadly. āItās possible to live just so. There are others, now, living on maintenance. And, they say, far better than if they had twirled around an altar. Whatās so bad about that? Peaceful, quiet, genteelā āā ā¦ Iād darn socks for him, wash floors, cookā āā ā¦ the plainer dishes. Of course, heāll be in line to get married to a rich girl some time. Well, now, to be sure, he wouldnāt throw me out in the street just so, mother-naked. Although heās a little simpleton, and chatters a lot, still itās easy to tell heās a decent man. Heāll provide for me with something, somehow. And, perhaps, heāll get to like me, will get used to me? Iām a simple girl, modest, and would never consent to be false to him. For, they say, things do fall out that wayā āā ā¦ Only I mustnāt let him see anything. But that heāll come again into my bed, and will come this very nightā āthatās as sure as God is holy.ā
And Likhonin also fell into thought, grew quiet and sad; he was already feeling the weight of a great deed which he had undertaken beyond his powers. That was why he was even glad when someone knocked on the door, and to his answer, āCome in!ā, two students entered: Soloviev, and Nijeradze, who had slept that night at his place.
Soloviev, well-grown and already obese, with a broad, ruddy Volga face and a light, scandent little beard, belonged to those kindly, merry and simple fellows, of which there are sufficiently many in any university. He divided his leisureā āand of leisure he had twenty-four hours in the dayā ābetween the beer-shop and rambling over the boulevards; among billiards, whist, the theatre, reading of newspapers and novels, and the spectacles of circus wrestling; while the short intervals in between he used for eating, sleeping, the home repair of his wardrobe, with the aid of thread, cardboard, pins and ink; and for succinct, most realistic love with the chance woman from the kitchen, the anteroom or the street. Like all the youths of his circle, he deemed himself a revolutionary, although he was oppressed by political disputes, dissensions, and mutual reproaches; and not being able to stand the reading of revolutionary brochures and journals,
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