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.

“Yes, you have never painted anything like it before.  Do you know, it is positively awe-inspiring?”

And then she began beseeching him to love her and not to cast her off, to have pity on her in her misery and her wretchedness.  She shed tears, kissed his hands, insisted on his swearing that he loved her, told him that without her good influence he would go astray and be ruined.  And, when she had spoilt his good-humour, feeling herself humiliated, she would drive off to her dressmaker or to an actress of her acquaintance to try and get theatre tickets.

If she did not find him at his studio she left a letter in which she swore that if he did not come to see her that day she would poison herself.  He was scared, came to see her, and stayed to dinner.  Regardless of her husband’s presence, he would say rude things to her, and she would answer him in the same way.  Both felt they were a burden to each other, that they were tyrants and enemies, and were wrathful, and in their wrath did not notice that their behaviour was unseemly, and that even Korostelev, with his close-cropped head, saw it all.  After dinner Ryabovsky made haste to say good-bye and get away.

“Where are you off to?” Olga Ivanovna would ask him in the hall, looking at him with hatred.

Scowling and screwing up his eyes, he mentioned some lady of their acquaintance, and it was evident that he was laughing at her jealousy and wanted to annoy her.  She went to her bedroom and lay down on her bed; from jealousy, anger, a sense of humiliation and shame, she bit the pillow and began sobbing aloud.  Dymov left Korostelev in the drawing-room, went into the bedroom, and with a desperate and embarrassed face said softly: 

“Don’t cry so loud, little mother; there’s no need.  You must be quiet about it.  You must not let people see....  You know what is done is done, and can’t be mended.”

Not knowing how to ease the burden of her jealousy, which actually set her temples throbbing with pain, and thinking still that things might be set right, she would wash, powder her tear-stained face, and fly off to the lady mentioned.

Not finding Ryabovsky with her, she would drive off to a second, then to a third.  At first she was ashamed to go about like this, but afterwards she got used to it, and it would happen that in one evening she would make the round of all her female acquaintances in search of Ryabovsky, and they all understood it.

One day she said to Ryabovsky of her husband: 

“That man crushes me with his magnanimity.”

This phrase pleased her so much that when she met the artists who knew of her affair with Ryabovsky she said every time of her husband, with a vigorous movement of her arm: 

“That man crushes me with his magnanimity.”

Their manner of life was the same as it had been the year before.  On Wednesdays they were “At Home”; an actor recited, the artists sketched.  The violoncellist played, a singer sang, and invariably at half-past eleven the door leading to the dining-room opened and Dymov, smiling, said: 

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