Russian Classics Ultimate Collection: Novels, Short Stories, Plays, Folk Tales & Legends. Максим Горький
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СКАЧАТЬ at least you are acquainted with landowner Manilov?” continued Chichikov.

      “No. Who is he?”

      “Another landed proprietor, madam.”

      “Well, neither have I heard of him. No such landowner lives hereabouts.”

      “Then who ARE your local landowners?”

      “Bobrov, Svinin, Kanapatiev, Khapakin, Trepakin, and Plieshakov.”

      “Are they rich men?”

      “No, none of them. One of them may own twenty souls, and another thirty, but of gentry who own a hundred there are none.”

      Chichikov reflected that he had indeed fallen into an aristocratic wilderness!

      “At all events, is the town far away?” he inquired.

      “About sixty versts. How sorry I am that I have nothing for you to eat! Should you care to drink some tea?”

      “I thank you, good mother, but I require nothing beyond a bed.”

      “Well, after such a journey you must indeed be needing rest, so you shall lie upon this sofa. Fetinia, bring a quilt and some pillows and sheets. What weather God has sent us! And what dreadful thunder! Ever since sunset I have had a candle burning before the ikon in my bedroom. My God! Why, your back and sides are as muddy as a boar’s! However have you managed to get into such a state?”

      “That I am nothing worse than muddy is indeed fortunate, since, but for the Almighty, I should have had my ribs broken.”

      “Dear, dear! To think of all that you must have been through. Had I not better wipe your back?”

      “I thank you, I thank you, but you need not trouble. Merely be so good as to tell your maid to dry my clothes.”

      “Do you hear that, Fetinia?” said the hostess, turning to a woman who was engaged in dragging in a feather bed and deluging the room with feathers. “Take this coat and this vest, and, after drying them before the fire — just as we used to do for your late master — give them a good rub, and fold them up neatly.”

      “Very well, mistress,” said Fetinia, spreading some sheets over the bed, and arranging the pillows.

      “Now your bed is ready for you,” said the hostess to Chichikov. “Good-night, dear sir. I wish you good-night. Is there anything else that you require? Perhaps you would like to have your heels tickled before retiring to rest? Never could my late husband get to sleep without that having been done.”

      “This lady owns by no means a poor village,” said Chichikov to himself; wherefore he decided then and there to have a talk with his hostess, and to cultivate her closer acquaintance. Accordingly he peeped through the chink of the door whence her head had recently protruded, and, on seeing her seated at a tea table, entered and greeted her with a cheerful, kindly smile.

      “Good morning, dear sir,” she responded as she rose. “How have you slept?” She was dressed in better style than she had been on the previous evening. That is to say, she was now wearing a gown of some dark colour, and lacked her nightcap, and had swathed her neck in something stiff.

      “I have slept exceedingly well,” replied Chichikov, seating himself upon a chair. “And how are YOU, good madam?”

      “But poorly, my dear sir.”

      “And why so?”

      “Because I cannot sleep. A pain has taken me in my middle, and my legs, from the ankles upwards, are aching as though they were broken.”

      “That will pass, that will pass, СКАЧАТЬ