The Village The Village

The Village

    • £3.99
    • £3.99

Publisher Description

THE great-grandfather of the Krasoffs, known by the manor-house servants under the nickname of “The Gipsy,” was hunted with wolf-hounds by Cavalry Captain Durnovo. The Gipsy had lured his lord-and-master’s mistress away from him. Durnovo gave orders that The Gipsy should be taken out into the fields and placed on a hillock. Then he himself went out there with a pack of hounds and shouted “Tallyho! Go for him!” The Gipsy, who was sitting there in a state of stupor, started to run. But there is no use in running away from wolf-hounds.

The grandfather of the Krasoffs, for some reason or other, was given a letter of enfranchisement. He went off with his family to the town—and soon distinguished himself by becoming a famous thief. He hired a tiny hovel in the Black Suburb for his wife and set her to weaving lace for sale, while he, in company with a petty burgher named Byelokopytoff, roamed about the province robbing churches. At the end of a couple of years he was caught. But at his trial he bore himself in such fashion that his replies to the judges were current for a long time thereafter. He stood before them, it appears, in a velveteen kaftan, with a silver watch and goat-hide boots, making insolent play with his cheek-bones and his eyes and, in the most respectful manner, confessing every one of his innumerable crimes, even the most insignificant: “Yes, sir. Just so, sir.”

The father of the Krasoffs was a petty huckster. He roved about the county, lived for a time in Durnovka, set up a pot-house and a little shop, failed, took to drink, returned to the town, and soon died. After serving for a while in shops his sons, Tikhon and Kuzma, who were almost of an age, also took to peddling. They drove about in a peasant cart which had a carved front and a roofed, shop-like arrangement in the middle, and shouted in doleful tones: “Wo-omen, here’s merchandise! Wo-omen, here’s merchandise!”

The merchandise consisted of small mirrors, cheap soap, rings, thread, kerchiefs, needles, cracknels—these in the covered shop. The open-body cart contained everything they gathered in: dead cats, eggs, heavy linen, crash, rags. But one day, after having thus travelled about for the space of several years, the brothers came near cutting each other’s throats—in a dispute over the division of the profits, rumour averred—and separated to avoid a catastrophe. Kuzma hired himself to a drover. Tikhon took over a small posting-house on the metalled highway of Vorgol, five versts from Durnovka, and opened a dram-shop and a tiny “popular” shop.—“I deal in small wears tea shugar tubako sigars and so furth.”

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2019
24 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
286
Pages
PUBLISHER
Library of Alexandria
SIZE
708.2
KB

More Books Like This

The Bishop and Other Stories The Bishop and Other Stories
2020
The Bishop and Other Stories The Bishop and Other Stories
2015
The Steppe The Steppe
2016
The Bishop and Other Classic Tales The Bishop and Other Classic Tales
2015
Selected Polish Tales Selected Polish Tales
2017
"Fiction Classics by Leo Tolstoy : The Complete Works of Count Tolstóy Volume XII/The Cossacks by Leo Tolstoy/The Death of Ivan Ilych " "Fiction Classics by Leo Tolstoy : The Complete Works of Count Tolstóy Volume XII/The Cossacks by Leo Tolstoy/The Death of Ivan Ilych "
2022

More Books by Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin

The Gentleman from San Francisco and Other Stories The Gentleman from San Francisco and Other Stories
2013
The Gentleman from San Francisco, and Other Stories The Gentleman from San Francisco, and Other Stories
2017
The Gentleman from San Francisco, and Other Stories The Gentleman from San Francisco, and Other Stories
2017