Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) š
- Author: Ivan Bunin
Book online Ā«Short Fiction Ivan Bunin (world best books to read .TXT) šĀ». Author Ivan Bunin
I suffered for nine years with this husband. That citizen business was just a name; we was so poor really that we was about as bad off as the muzhiks! And then there was scrapping and rows every blessed day. Well, the Lord took pity on me, and took him away. The children I had by him all used to die on me; there was only two boys leftā āone was Vanniya, going on nine; the other was an infant in arms. He was an awful lively and healthy boy; about ten months he started in to walk, to talk; all of my children, now, used to begin walking and talking about the eleventh month. He got to drinking tea all by his own selfā āused to sink his little face in the saucer soās you couldnāt pull it away, nohow. But this boy died, too, when he werenāt a year yet. I come home one day from washing clothes in the river, and my sister-in-lawā āwe used to rent our rooms off herā āup and says:
āYour Kostiya was yelling and squirming all day today. I done all sorts of things to him already; I worked his arms and I patted him hard, and I gave him some sugar and water; but all he does is gag, and throw up the water through his nose. Either heās gone and caught a cold, or else heās ate something; for the children always put everything in their mouthā āhow is a body to look after them?ā
I was just scared stiff. I make a dash for the cradle and throw back the curtain, but he was already beginning to pass away then; couldnāt even as much as cry out. My sister ran to get a doctorās assistant we knew; when he comes, he asks: āWhat did you feed him with?ā
āHeās eaten some manna porridge, now, and that was all.ā
āAnd wasnāt he playing with something?ā
āThatās right, he was,ā says my sister. āThere was a copper ring from a horse-collar knocking about all the timeā āwell, he was playing with that.ā
āWell,ā says the doctorās assistant, āhe must have swallowed it, for sure. May your arms wither!ā says he. āYouāve gone and done it nowā āwhy, heās going to die on your hands!ā
Of course, it turned out just like he said. Not even two hours had gone when he passed away. We took on and we took on, but there was nothing as could be done about it; for itās no use going against the will of God. So I buried him too; only Vanniya was left. Only he was left; but then, as they say, one is enough. A small creature, itās true, and yet heāll eat and drink as much as a grownup. So I started scrubbing floors at the home of Nikulinā āa colonel in the army, he was. Him and his wife was rather well off; they paid thirty roubles a month for the rooms they had. They lived in the upper floor; the kitchen was below. The woman they had to get up their meals was a no-account little old woman; she wasnāt responsible, and yet she was loose. Well, naturally, she got in the family way. Couldnāt bend down to scrub the floors, couldnāt pull a pot out the oven.ā āā ā¦ She went away when her time came, and I just grabbed her place: thatās how I had gotten around the masters! To tell the truth, Iāve been clever and cunning from a girl up; no matter what I took a hold of, Iād do it neat, accurate, better nor any waiter. Again, I knew how to please them: no matter what the masters would say, Iād just say āYes, sir,ā or āYes, maāam,ā all the time, and āYou are absolutely right.ā āā ā¦ā I used to get up when you could still see the moon. Iād mop up the floors, make the stove, polish up the samovarā āin the meanwhile the masters would wake up, but I had everything ready. And then, of course, I always kept myself clean, and was well-builtā āI was spare, but still I was handsome. There was times when Iād even get to feeling sorry for myself: what were my beauty and my knowledge going to waste for, now, in such hard work?
Thinks I, I ought to take advantage of the opportunity. And the opportunity was, that the colonel was awful strong himself and couldnāt bear to look at me calmly. His wife, now, was a Germanā āfat, ailing, and some ten years older than he. He werenāt good-looking; heavy-bodied, short-legged, looking like a wild pigā āand she was still worse. Well, I see heās started to pay court to me, to sit in my kitchen, to teach me smoking. Soon as his wife went out, he was right there on the spot. Heād chase his orderly into town, as though on some errand, and be sitting there. He bored me to death, but, of course, I pretended otherwise: Iād laugh, and Iād sit and swing my legā āgetting him heated up in all sorts of ways, that is.ā āā ā¦ What can you do when thereās poverty; and, as they say, this little was as good as a feast. Somehow one day, on the Tsarās birthday, he comes down to the kitchen in his uniform frock, in epaulettes, belted with that white belt of his like with a hoop, with kid gloves in his hands. Heās buttoned his collar so tight that his neck is all swollen and heās all blue in the face; heās all perfumedā āhis eyes shining, his moustache black and thick.ā āā ā¦ He comes down and says:
āIām going to the cathedral with the missus right away; dust off my bootsā āIāve only gone through the yard and yet I managed to get all dusty.ā
He put his
Comments (0)