The Wife, and other stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 282 pages of information about The Wife, and other stories.

The Wife, and other stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 282 pages of information about The Wife, and other stories.
up all my liquor at one sitting; and the Yyesnik Evropi went to the priest’s daughters; as in the summer, especially at the haymaking, I did not succeed in getting to my bed at all, and slept in the sledge in the barn, or somewhere in the forester’s lodge, what chance was there of reading?  Little by little I moved downstairs, began dining in the servants’ kitchen, and of my former luxury nothing is left but the servants who were in my father’s service, and whom it would be painful to turn away.

“In the first years I was elected here an honourary justice of the peace.  I used to have to go to the town and take part in the sessions of the congress and of the circuit court, and this was a pleasant change for me.  When you live here for two or three months without a break, especially in the winter, you begin at last to pine for a black coat.  And in the circuit court there were frock-coats, and uniforms, and dress-coats, too, all lawyers, men who have received a general education; I had some one to talk to.  After sleeping in the sledge and dining in the kitchen, to sit in an arm-chair in clean linen, in thin boots, with a chain on one’s waistcoat, is such luxury!

“I received a warm welcome in the town.  I made friends eagerly.  And of all my acquaintanceships the most intimate and, to tell the truth, the most agreeable to me was my acquaintance with Luganovitch, the vice-president of the circuit court.  You both know him:  a most charming personality.  It all happened just after a celebrated case of incendiarism; the preliminary investigation lasted two days; we were exhausted.  Luganovitch looked at me and said: 

“‘Look here, come round to dinner with me.’

“This was unexpected, as I knew Luganovitch very little, only officially, and I had never been to his house.  I only just went to my hotel room to change and went off to dinner.  And here it was my lot to meet Anna Alexyevna, Luganovitch’s wife.  At that time she was still very young, not more than twenty-two, and her first baby had been born just six months before.  It is all a thing of the past; and now I should find it difficult to define what there was so exceptional in her, what it was in her attracted me so much; at the time, at dinner, it was all perfectly clear to me.  I saw a lovely young, good, intelligent, fascinating woman, such as I had never met before; and I felt her at once some one close and already familiar, as though that face, those cordial, intelligent eyes, I had seen somewhere in my childhood, in the album which lay on my mother’s chest of drawers.

“Four Jews were charged with being incendiaries, were regarded as a gang of robbers, and, to my mind, quite groundlessly.  At dinner I was very much excited, I was uncomfortable, and I don’t know what I said, but Anna Alexyevna kept shaking her head and saying to her husband: 

“‘Dmitry, how is this?’

“Luganovitch is a good-natured man, one of those simple-hearted people who firmly maintain the opinion that once a man is charged before a court he is guilty, and to express doubt of the correctness of a sentence cannot be done except in legal form on paper, and not at dinner and in private conversation.

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The Wife, and other stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.