A Desperate Character and Other Stories by Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev
page 37 of 288 (12%)
page 37 of 288 (12%)
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herself! I told him to ask Madame Poltyev up to my room.
I saw a woman of five-and-twenty, in the dress of the small tradesman class, with a large kerchief on her head. Her face was simple, roundish, not without charm; she looked dejected and gloomy, and was shy and awkward in her movements. 'You are Madame Poltyev?' I inquired, and I asked her to sit down. 'Yes,' she answered in a subdued voice, and she did not sit down. 'I am the widow of your nephew, Mihail Andreevitch Poltyev.' 'Is Mihail Andreevitch dead? Has he been dead long? But sit down, I beg.' She sank into a chair. 'It's two months.' 'And had you been married to him long?' 'I had been a year with him.' 'Where have you come from now?' 'From out Tula way.... There's a village there, Znamenskoe-Glushkovo--perhaps you may know it. I am the daughter of the deacon there. Mihail Andreitch and I lived there.... He lived in my father's house. We were a whole year together.' |
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