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.

As regards my present manner of life, I must give a foremost place to the insomnia from which I have suffered of late.  If I were asked what constituted the chief and fundamental feature of my existence now, I should answer, Insomnia.  As in the past, from habit I undress and go to bed exactly at midnight.  I fall asleep quickly, but before two o’clock I wake up and feel as though I had not slept at all.  Sometimes I get out of bed and light a lamp.  For an hour or two I walk up and down the room looking at the familiar photographs and pictures.  When I am weary of walking about, I sit down to my table.  I sit motionless, thinking of nothing, conscious of no inclination; if a book is lying before me, I mechanically move it closer and read it without any interest—­in that way not long ago I mechanically read through in one night a whole novel, with the strange title “The Song the Lark was Singing”; or to occupy my attention I force myself to count to a thousand; or I imagine the face of one of my colleagues and begin trying to remember in what year and under what circumstances he entered the service.  I like listening to sounds.  Two rooms away from me my daughter Liza says something rapidly in her sleep, or my wife crosses the drawing-room with a candle and invariably drops the matchbox; or a warped cupboard creaks; or the burner of the lamp suddenly begins to hum—­and all these sounds, for some reason, excite me.

To lie awake at night means to be at every moment conscious of being abnormal, and so I look forward with impatience to the morning and the day when I have a right to be awake.  Many wearisome hours pass before the cock crows in the yard.  He is my first bringer of good tidings.  As soon as he crows I know that within an hour the porter will wake up below, and, coughing angrily, will go upstairs to fetch something.  And then a pale light will begin gradually glimmering at the windows, voices will sound in the street....

The day begins for me with the entrance of my wife.  She comes in to me in her petticoat, before she has done her hair, but after she has washed, smelling of flower-scented eau-de-Cologne, looking as though she had come in by chance.  Every time she says exactly the same thing:  “Excuse me, I have just come in for a minute....  Have you had a bad night again?”

Then she puts out the lamp, sits down near the table, and begins talking.  I am no prophet, but I know what she will talk about.  Every morning it is exactly the same thing.  Usually, after anxious inquiries concerning my health, she suddenly mentions our son who is an officer serving at Warsaw.  After the twentieth of each month we send him fifty roubles, and that serves as the chief topic of our conversation.

“Of course it is difficult for us,” my wife would sigh, “but until he is completely on his own feet it is our duty to help him.  The boy is among strangers, his pay is small....  However, if you like, next month we won’t send him fifty, but forty.  What do you think?”

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