Yama Aleksandr Kuprin (smart ebook reader txt) š
- Author: Aleksandr Kuprin
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āFor instance?ā asked the Prince.
āWell, for instanceā āā ā¦ for instanceā āā ā¦ well, now, for instance, making artificial flowers. Yes, and still better, to get a place as a flower clerk. A charming business, clean and nice.ā
āTaste is necessary,ā Simanovsky dropped carelessly.
āThere are no inborn tastes, as well as abilities. Otherwise talents would be born only in refined, highly educated society; while artists would be born only to artists, and singers to singers; but we donāt see this. However, I wonāt argue. Well, if not a flower girl, then something else. I, for instance, saw not long ago in a store show window a miss sitting, and some sort of a little machine with foot-power before her.ā
āV-va! Again a little machine!ā said the Prince, smiling and looking at Likhonin.
āStop it, Nijeradze,ā answered Likhonin, quietly but sternly. āYou ought to be ashamed.ā
āBlockhead!ā Soloviev threw at him, and continued.
āSo, then, the machine moves back and forth, while upon it, on a square frame, is stretched a thin canvas, and really, I donāt know how itās contrivedā āI didnāt grasp it: only the miss guides some metallic thingamajig over the screen, and there comes out a fine drawing in varicoloured silks. Just imagine, a lake, all grown over with pond-lilies with their white corollas and yellow stamens, and great green leaves all around. And on the water two white swans are floating toward each other, and in the background is a dark park with an alley; and all this shows finely, distinctly, as on a picture from life. And I became so interested that I went in on purpose to find out how much it costs. It proved to be just the least bit dearer than an ordinary sewing machine, and itās sold on terms. And anyone who can sew a little on a common machine can learn this art in an hour. And thereās a great number of charming original designs. And the main thing is that such work is very readily taken for fire-screens, albums, lampshades, curtains and other rubbish, and the pay is decent.ā
āAfter all, thatās a sort of a trade, too,ā agreed Likhonin, and stroked his beard in meditation. āBut, to confess, hereās what I wanted to do. I wanted to open up for herā āā ā¦ to open up a little cook-shop or dining room, the very tiniest to start with, of course, but one in which all the food is cheap, clean and tasty. For itās absolutely all the same to many students where they dine and what they eat. There are almost never enough places to go round in the studentsā dining room. And so we may succeed, perhaps, in pulling in all our acquaintances and friends, somehow.ā
āThatās true,ā said the Prince, ābut impractical as well; weāll begin to board on credit. And you know what accurate payers we are. A practical man, a knave, is needed for such an undertaking; and if a woman, then one with a pikeās teeth; and even then a man must absolutely stick right at her back. Really, itās not for Likhonin to stand at the counter and to watch that somebody shouldnāt suddenly slip away, after duly dining and wining.ā
Likhonin looked straight at him, insolently, but only set his jaws and let it pass in silence.
Simanovsky began in his measured, incontrovertible tone, toying with the glasses of his pince-nez:
āYour intention is splendid, gentlemen, beyond dispute. But have you turned your attention to a certain shady aspect, so to speak? For to open a dining room, to start some businessā āall this in the beginning demands money, assistanceā āsomebody elseās back, so to speak. The money is not grudgedā āthat is true, I agree with Likhonin; but then, does not such a beginning of an industrious life, when every step is provided forā ādoes it not lead to inevitable laxity and negligence, and, in the very end, to an indifferent disdain for business? Even a child does not learn to walk until it has flopped down some fifty times. No; if you really want to help this poor girl, you must give her a chance of getting on her feet at once, like a toiling being, and not like a drone. True, there is a great temptation hereā āthe burden of labour, temporary need; but then, if she will surmount this, she will surmount the rest as well.ā
āWhat, then, according to you, is she to becomeā āa dishwasher?ā asked Soloviev with unbelief.
āWell, yes,ā calmly retorted Simanovsky. āA dishwasher, a laundress, a cook. All toil elevates a human being.ā
Likhonin shook his head.
āWords of gold. Wisdom itself speaks with your lips, Simanovsky. Dishwasher, cook, maid, housekeeperā āā ā¦ but, in the first place, itās doubtful if sheās capable for that; in the second place, she has already been a maid and has tasted all the sweets of mastersā bawlings out, and mastersā pinches behind doors, in the corridor. Tell me, is it possible you donāt know that ninety percent, of prostitution is recruited from the number of female servants? And, therefore, poor Liuba, at the very first injustice, at the first rebuff, will the more easily and readily go just there where I have gotten her out of; if not even worse, because for her thatās customary and not so frightful; and, perhaps, it will even seem desirable after the mastersā treatment. And besides that, is it worth while for meā āthat is, I want to sayā āis it worth while for all of us, to go
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