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Anton Chekhov

  • amiranmanoochehri858892цитируетв прошлом месяце
    "One should not go to sick people and old women for miracles. Is not health a miracle? And life itself? A miracle is something incomprehensible."
  • Egla Balajцитирует2 года назад
    'Look, I don't care a straw for life, but I am living!'
  • Egla Balajцитирует2 года назад
    The predominance of reason over the heart is simply overwhelming amongst us. Direct feeling, inspiration--everything is choked by petty analysis. Where there is reasonableness there is coldness, and cold people--it's no use to disguise it--know nothing of chastity. That virtue is only known to those who are warm, affectionate, and capable of love.
  • annkaragwaцитируетв прошлом году
    Fortunately for men, women in love are always blinded by their feelings and never know anything of life
  • torreonjenelouцитирует1 час назад
    what is the explanation of the love itself,
  • ulyannavaцитируетв прошлом году
    It is not a question of medicine and woods, my dear, he is a man of genius. Do you know what that means? It means he is brave, profound, and of clear insight. He plants a tree and his mind travels a thousand years into the future, and he sees visions of the happiness of the human race. People like him are rare and should be loved.
  • Theodore Maurice August "Vanderboom" Scarletцитируетв прошлом году
    Unwilling to these sad shores

    A mysterious force is drawing me’

    sang the medical student in a pleasant tenor.

    ‘See the windmill now in ruins’

    the art student joined in.

    ‘See the windmill now in ruins’

    repeated the medical student, raising his eyebrows and sadly shaking his head.
  • Theodore Maurice August "Vanderboom" Scarletцитирует3 месяца назад
    He stopped singing for a moment, rubbed his forehead as he tried to recall the words, then he sang so loudly, so well that passers-by looked round at him.

    ‘Here once I did meet light-hearted love, as free as myself.’
  • Theodore Maurice August "Vanderboom" Scarletцитирует3 месяца назад
    His expression appeared strange to the medical student.

    ‘Why are you staring like that?’ he asked. ‘Please, don’t start philosophizing! Vodka’s for drinking, sturgeon’s for eating, women for visiting and snow for walking over. Please try and behave like a normal human being, at least for one evening!’

    ‘Don’t worry, I’m not chickening out!’ Vasilyev laughed.

    The vodka warmed his chest. He looked at his friends affectionately, and admired and envied them. How well-balanced these healthy, strong, cheerful men were, how well-rounded and smooth their minds and hearts! They sang, loved the theatre passionately, sketched, talked a great deal, drank without having hangovers the next day. They were romantic, dissolute, gentle and audacious. They could work, be deeply indignant, laugh at nothing and talk rubbish. They were warm, decent, selfless and as human beings were in no way inferior to Vasilyev himself, who was so careful with his every word and step, so mistrustful, so cautious, so prone to make an issue out of the least trifle. And so he had felt the urge to spend just one evening in the same way as his friends, to unwind, let himself go a little. Would he have to drink vodka? Then drink it he would, even if he had a splitting headache the next morning. Would they take him to visit some girls? Then he would go. He would laugh, play the fool, cheerfully respond to passers-by.

    He was laughing as he left the restaurant. He liked his friends – the one with pretensions to artistic eccentricity in that crumpled, broad-brimmed hat, the other in his sealskin cap – he had money, but he liked to play the academic Bohemian.

    He liked the snow, the pale street-lamps, the sharp black prints left on the snow by the feet of passers-by. He liked the air and particularly that crystal-clear, gentle, innocent, almost virginal mood that one sees in nature only twice a year – when all is covered with snow, and on bright days or those moonlit nights in spring, when the ice breaks up on the river.
  • Theodore Maurice August "Vanderboom" Scarletцитирует3 месяца назад
    ‘Unwilling to these sad shores

    A mysterious force is drawing me …’

    he sang under his breath.

    For some reason he and his friends could not get that tune out of their minds and the three of them sang it mechanically, out of time with each other.
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