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Letters of Anton Chekhov (Tchekhov) - Penn State University

Letters of Anton Chekhov (Tchekhov) - Penn State University

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<strong>Letters</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Anton</strong> <strong>Chekhov</strong> to His Family and Friends with biographical sketchTO HIS SISTER.KRASNOYARSK, May 28, 1890.What a deadly road! It was all we could do to crawl to Krasnoyarskand my trap had to be repaired twice. The first thing to be brokenwas the vertical piece <strong>of</strong> iron connecting the front <strong>of</strong> the carriagewith the axle; then the so-called circle under the front broke. I havenever in all my life seen such a road—such impassable mud andsuch an utterly neglected road. I am going to write about its horrorsto the Novoye Vremya, and so won’t talk about it now.The last three stations have been splendid; as one comes down toKrasnoyarsk one seems to be getting into a different world. Youcome out <strong>of</strong> the forest into a plain which is like our Donets steppe,but here the mountain ridges are grander. The sun shines its verybest and the birch-trees are out, though three stations back the budswere not even bursting. Thank God, I have at last reached a summerin which there is neither rain nor a cold wind. Krasnoyarsk is apicturesque, cultured town; compared with it, Tomsk is “a pig in askull-cap and the acme <strong>of</strong> mauvais ton.” The streets are clean andpaved, the houses are <strong>of</strong> stone and large, the churches are elegant.I am alive and perfectly well. My money is all right, and so are mythings; I lost my woollen stockings but soon found them again.Apart from my trap, everything so far has been satisfactory and Ihave nothing to complain <strong>of</strong>. Only I am spending an awful lot <strong>of</strong>money. Incompetence in the practical affairs <strong>of</strong> life is never felt somuch as on a journey. I pay more than I need to, I do the wrongthing, and I say the wrong thing, and I am always expecting whatdoes not happen.… I shall be in Irkutsk in five or six days, shall spend as manydays there, then drive on to Sryetensk—and that will be the end <strong>of</strong>my journey on land. For more than a fortnight I have been drivingwithout a break, I think about nothing else, I live for nothing else;every morning I see the sunrise from beginning to end. I’ve grownso used to it that it seems as though all my life I had been drivingand struggling with the muddy roads. When it does not rain, andthere are no pits <strong>of</strong> mud on the road, one feels queer and even a168

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