Stories by Foreign Authors: Russian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Stories by Foreign Authors.

Stories by Foreign Authors: Russian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 126 pages of information about Stories by Foreign Authors.

The Count was silent.  In this way I learned the end of the story, whose beginning had once made such a deep impression upon me.  The hero of it I never saw again.  It is said that Silvio commanded a detachment of Hetairists during the revolt under Alexander Ipsilanti, and that he was killed in the battle of Skoulana.

ST. JOHN’S EVE

BY

NIKOLAI VASILIEVITCH GOGOL

From “St. John’s Eve.”  Translated by Isabel F. Hapgood.

1886

[Footnote:  This is one of the stories from the celebrated volume entitled “Tales at a Farmhouse near Dikanka.”]

(RELATED BY THE SACRISTAN OF THE DIKANKA CHURCH)

Thoma Grigorovitch had a very strange sort of eccentricity:  to the day of his death he never liked to tell the same thing twice.  There were times when, if you asked him to relate a thing afresh, behold, he would interpolate new matter, or alter it so that it was impossible to recognize it.  Once on a time, one of those gentlemen (it is hard for us simple people to put a name to them, to say whether they are scribblers or not scribblers:  but it is just the same thing as the usurers at our yearly fairs; they clutch and beg and steal every sort of frippery, and issue mean little volumes, no thicker than an ABC book, every month, or even every week),—­one of these gentlemen wormed this same story out of Thoma Grigorovitch, and he completely forgot about it.  But that same young gentleman in the pea-green caftan, whom I have mentioned, and one of whose Tales you have already read, I think, came from Poltava, bringing with him a little book, and, opening it in the middle, shows it to us.  Thoma Grigorovitch was on the point of setting his spectacles astride of his nose, but recollected that he had forgotten to wind thread about them, and stick them together with wax, so he passed it over to me.  As I understand something about reading and writing, and do not wear spectacles, I undertook to read it.  I had not turned two leaves, when all at once he caught me by the hand, and stopped me.

“Stop! tell me first what you are reading.”

I confess that I was a trifle stunned by such a question.

“What! what am I reading, Thoma Grigorovitch?  These were your very words.”

“Who told you that they were my words?”

“Why, what more would you have?  Here it is printed:  Related by such and such A sacristan.”

“Spit on the head of the man who printed that! he lies, the dog of a Moscow pedler!  Did I say that?  ’Twas just the same as though one hadn’t his wits about him.  Listen.  I’ll tell it to you on the spot.”

We moved up to the table, and he began.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Stories by Foreign Authors: Russian from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.