Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Ivan Bunin
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âWell, wench, Iâm my own master now; letâs save up some money. As soon as we save it up, weâll go to the city, buy a house all to our own selves; Iâll marry you off to a fine gentleman, and live like a king. As for our masters, itâs no use sticking here with themâ âthey ainât worth it.â
Our masters, nowâ âalthough, to tell the truth, they were good and kindâ âwas the poorest of the poor; actual beggars, you might say. And so we went away from them to another settlement; as for the house, the cattle, and whatever household goods we had, we sold them. We moved right near to the city, and hired a cabbage patch from a lady by the name of Meshcherina. She had been a frĂ€ulein in the Tsarâs court; she was plain, freckled, and had grown gray as a maidâ ânobody would take her to wife, so she lived in retirement. So, then, we hired the meadows from her, and settled down in our little hut, all peaceful and quiet. The weatherâs chill; fall is coming onâ âbut little we care! We sit and wait for good profits and never feel trouble coming along. But the trouble was right thereâ âand what trouble, at that! Our venture was drawing near the winding up, when suddenly something terrible happens. We had had our tea in the morningâ âit was a holidayâ âso I stood, just so, near the hut, watching the folks coming from church over the meadow. As for my daddy, he had gone to see about the cabbages. It was a sort of a bright day, even though it was windy, and so I was gaping and didnât notice that there was two men approaching me. One was the priestâ âso tall, you know, in a gray cassock and carrying a stick; his face was dark, earthy; heâs got a mane like any fine horse, just simply spreading out in the wind. The other was just a common peasantâ âhis farm hand. They walked right up to the hut; I got confused, made him a bow, and says:
âHow do you do, Father? Thanks for thinking of us and calling.â
But he, I see, is angry, sullen, doesnât even look at me; he just stands and breaks up clods with his stock.
âAnd where,â says he, âis your father?â
âTheyâve gone to the cabbage field,â says I. âIf you like, now, I can call them. But there heâs coming, himself.â
âWell, you just tell him to take away whatever goods heâs got, together with this dinky little samovar, and get away from here. My watchman is coming here today.â
âWhat do you mean, a watchman? Why, we have already given the lady the money, ninety roubles it was. What do you mean, Father?â (Though I was young, I knew just what was what in such things.) âAre you joking, or something?â I says. âYou ought to produce some proper paper,â I says.
âNo talk out of you!â he yells. âThe owner is going to live in the city; Iâve bought the meadows from her, and now the land is my own property!â
But he, himself, waves his arms about, knocks his stick against the groundâ âlike as not to hit you in the snout any minute.
Father sees these goings-on, and starts running toward usâ âhe was awful hotheaded. He runs up and asks:
âWhatâs all this noise about? What are you yelling at her for, Father, without knowing yourself whatâs what? You oughtnât to be shaking your stick, but ought to come right out and explain by what sort of right the cabbages have come to be yours? We are poor folks, now, we can go to court about it. You,â he says, âare a person in holy orders; you canât hold no enmity against nobody; your kind canât touch the holy sacrament if you do.â
Father, you understand, hadnât said as much as one saucy word to him; but the other, though he was a pastor, was as wicked as the most ordinary drab muzhik; and so, when he heard that kind of talk, he just grew paleâ ânot a word could he say, but you could just see his legs quivering under his cassock. And then, donât he let out a squeal, and donât he go for fatherâ âto hit him over the head, you understand! But father got from under it, grabbed the stick, tore it out of the priestâs hands, and then went smash! over his knee with it. The other tried to grapple with him, but father breaks it in halves, flings the pieces away as far as he can and calls out:
âDonât come near me, for Godâs sake, your reverence! You,â he calls out, âare black and like a beetle, but I am still more of a beetle than you be.â
And then he grabs him by the arms!
What with courts and law, father was sent to a convict colony for this here thing. I was left all alone in this world, and thinks I, what am I to do now? Plainly, you canât get through the world on righteousness alone; plainly, you must needs keep your eyes open. I figured it out a whole year, living with my aunt; then I saw there was nowhere for me to goâ âI had to marry fast as I could. My dad had a good friend in town, a harness makerâ âwell, him it was that courted me. You couldnât say as how he made a striking bridegroomâ âbut still he was a good catch, at that. There was, to tell the truth, one man that I likedâ âand liked right well; but then he was poor too, about as bad off as I was, also living with strangers, like me; but the other was his own master, after all. I didnât have a copper of dowry, and here, I see, he is taking me without anythingâ âhow could I let a chance like that pass by? I thought, and I thought, and went and married himâ âalthough, of course, I knew that he
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