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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>Anton</strong> <strong>Chekhov</strong>cal. I imagined that with coolness and good humour, one might getround all the terrors and delicacy <strong>of</strong> the position, and that there wasno need to go to the Minister about it. I went to Sahalin without asingle letter <strong>of</strong> recommendation, and yet I did everything I wantedto. Why cannot I go to the famine-stricken provinces? I remembered,too, such representatives <strong>of</strong> the government as you, Kiselyov,and all the Zemsky Natchalniks and tax inspectors <strong>of</strong> my acquaintance—allextremely decent people, worthy <strong>of</strong> complete confidence.And I resolved—if only for a small region—to combine the twoelements <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficialdom and private initiative. I want to come andconsult you as soon as I can. The public trusts me; it would trustyou, too, and I might reckon on succeeding. Do you remember Iwrote to you? Suvorin came to Moscow at the time; I complained tohim that I did not know your address. He telegraphed to Baranov,and Baranov was so kind as to send it to me. Suvorin was ill withinfluenza; as a rule when he comes to Moscow we spend whole daystogether discussing literature, <strong>of</strong> which he has a wide knowledge;we did the same on this occasion, and in consequence I caught hisinfluenza, was laid up, and had a raging cough. Korolenko was inMoscow, and he found me ill. Lung complications kept me ill for awhole month, confined to the house and unable to do anything.Now I am on the way to recovery, though I still cough and am thin.There is the whole story for you. If it had not been for the influenzawe might together perhaps have succeeded in extracting two or threethousand or more from the public.Your exasperation with the press I can quite understand. The lucubrations<strong>of</strong> the journalists annoy you who know the true position<strong>of</strong> affairs, in the same way as the lucubrations <strong>of</strong> the pr<strong>of</strong>ane aboutdiphtheria annoy me as a doctor. But what would you have? Russiais not England and is not France. Our newspapers are not rich andthey have very few men at their disposal. To send to the Volga apr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> the Petrovsky Academy or an Engelhardt is expensive:to send a talented and business-like member <strong>of</strong> the staff is impossibletoo—he is wanted at home. The Times could organize a censusin the famine-stricken provinces at its own expense, could settle aKennan in every district, paying him forty roubles a day, and thensomething sensible could be done; but what can the Russkiya283

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