The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 266 pages of information about The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories.

The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 266 pages of information about The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories.

“But how about the husband?” he asked in perplexity, after they had played three rubbers.

“I don’t know,” answered Orlov.

Pekarsky combed his big beard with his fingers and sank into thought, and he did not speak again till supper-time.  When they were seated at supper, he began deliberately, drawling every word: 

“Altogether, excuse my saying so, I don’t understand either of you.  You might love each other and break the seventh commandment to your heart’s content—­that I understand.  Yes, that’s comprehensible.  But why make the husband a party to your secrets?  Was there any need for that?”

“But does it make any difference?”

“Hm! . . . .”  Pekarsky mused.  “Well, then, let me tell you this, my friend,” he went on, evidently thinking hard:  “if I ever marry again and you take it into your head to seduce my wife, please do it so that I don’t notice it.  It’s much more honest to deceive a man than to break up his family life and injure his reputation.  I understand.  You both imagine that in living together openly you are doing something exceptionally honourable and advanced, but I can’t agree with that . . . what shall I call it? . . . romantic attitude?”

Orlov made no reply.  He was out of humour and disinclined to talk.  Pekarsky, still perplexed, drummed on the table with his fingers, thought a little, and said: 

“I don’t understand you, all the same.  You are not a student and she is not a dressmaker.  You are both of you people with means.  I should have thought you might have arranged a separate flat for her.”

“No, I couldn’t.  Read Turgenev.”

“Why should I read him?  I have read him already.”

“Turgenev teaches us in his novels that every exalted, noble-minded girl should follow the man she loves to the ends of the earth, and should serve his idea,” said Orlov, screwing up his eyes ironically.  “The ends of the earth are poetic license; the earth and all its ends can be reduced to the flat of the man she loves. . . .  And so not to live in the same flat with the woman who loves you is to deny her her exalted vocation and to refuse to share her ideals.  Yes, my dear fellow, Turgenev wrote, and I have to suffer for it.”

“What Turgenev has got to do with it I don’t understand,” said Gruzin softly, and he shrugged his shoulders.  “Do you remember, George, how in ‘Three Meetings’ he is walking late in the evening somewhere in Italy, and suddenly hears, ’Vieni pensando a me segretamente,’” Gruzin hummed.  “It’s fine.”

“But she hasn’t come to settle with you by force,” said Pekarsky.  “It was your own wish.”

“What next!  Far from wishing it, I never imagined that this would ever happen.  When she said she was coming to live with me, I thought it was a charming joke on her part.”

Everybody laughed.

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The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.