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 <description>Tolstoy's novella, written just after the author's conversion to Christianity, is now considered a literary masterpiece. In it, death suddenly confronts Ivan, a well-to-do middle-aged Russian man, in the form of an acute illness. Standing on the edge of death's yawning chasm, Ivan looks back at his life and its comparative vacuity. Before he fell ill, earning enough money for some elegant furniture concerned him, but now eternity and destiny wrack his spirit. Tolstoy's startlingly precise portrayal of human anxiety, desire, epiphany, and love has gripped countless readers from all walks of life, and many of them report that the story not only moved them to tears, but also had a profound impact upon how they view life and its purpose. This beloved book is essential to any library.

 <br /><br />Kathleen O'Bannon<br />CCEL Staff

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  <DC>
    <DC.Title>The Death of Ivan Ilych</DC.Title>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Tolstoy, Leo Nikolayevich (1828-1910)</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
    <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">PG3366 </DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Slavic</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh2">Russian. White Russian. Ukrainian</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Fiction;</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Date sub="Created">2000-07-08</DC.Date>
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    <div1 title="Title Page" progress="0.38%" id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">
<h2 id="i-p0.1">THE DEATH OF IVAN ILYCH</h2>
<h3 id="i-p0.2">by Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy</h3>
<div style="text-align:center; margin-top:24pt; line-height:200%" id="i-p0.3">
<p id="i-p1"><b>1886</b></p>
<p id="i-p2">Translated by Louise and Aylmer Maude</p>
<p id="i-p3">Distributed by the Tolstoy Library</p>
<p id="i-p4">http://home.aol.com/Tolstoy28</p>
<p id="i-p5">email: Tolstoy28@aol.com</p>
</div>
</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter I" progress="0.53%" id="ii" prev="i" next="iii">


<h2 id="ii-p0.1">I</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p1">During an interval in the Melvinski trial in the large building 
of the Law Courts the members and public prosecutor met in Ivan Egorovich Shebek’s 
private room, where the conversation turned on the celebrated Krasovski case. Fedor 
Vasilievich warmly maintained that it was not subject to their jurisdiction, Ivan 
Egorovich maintained the contrary, while Peter Ivanovich, not having entered into 
the discussion at the start, took no part in it but looked through the <i>Gazette</i> 
which had just been handed in.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p2">“Gentlemen,” he said, “Ivan Ilych has died!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p3">“You don’t say so!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p4">“Here, read it yourself,” replied Peter Ivanovich, handing Fedor 
Vasilievich the paper still damp from the press. Surrounded by a black border were 
the words: “Praskovya Fedorovna Golovina, with profound sorrow, informs relatives 
and friends of the demise of her beloved husband Ivan Ilych Golovin, Member of the 
Court of Justice, which occurred on February the 4th of this year 1882. The funeral 
will take place on Friday at one o’clock in the afternoon.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p5">Ivan Ilych had been a colleague of the gentlemen present and was 
liked by them all. He had been ill for some weeks with an illness said to be incurable. 
His post had been kept open for him, but there had been conjectures that in case 
of his death Alexeev might receive his appointment, and that either Vinnikov or 
Shtabel would succeed Alexeev. So on receiving the news of Ivan Ilych’s death the 
first thought of each of the gentlemen in that private room was of the changes and 
promotions it might occasion among themselves or their acquaintances.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p6">“I shall be sure to get Shtabel’s place or Vinnikov’s,” thought 
Fedor Vasilievich. “I was promised that long ago, and the promotion means an extra 
eight hundred rubles a year for me besides the allowance.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p7">“Now I must apply for my brother-in-law’s transfer from Kaluga,” 
thought Peter Ivanovich. “My wife will be very glad, and then she won’t be able 
to say that I never do anything for her relations.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p8">“I thought he would never leave his bed again,” said Peter Ivanovich 
aloud. “It’s very sad.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p9">“But what really was the matter with him?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p10">“The doctors couldn’t say — at least they could, but each of 
them said something different. When last I saw him I thought he was getting better.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p11">“And I haven’t been to see him since the holidays. I always meant 
to go.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p12">“Had he any property?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p13">“I think his wife had a little — but something quiet trifling.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p14">“We shall have to go to see her, but they live so terribly far 
away.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p15">“Far away from you, you mean. Everything’s far away from your 
place.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p16">“You see, he never can forgive my living on the other side of 
the river,” said Peter Ivanovich, smiling at Shebek. Then, still talking of the 
distances between different parts of the city, they returned to the Court.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p17">Besides considerations as to the possible transfers and promotions 
likely to result from Ivan Ilych’s death, the mere fact of the death of a near acquaintance 
aroused, as usual, in all who heard of it the complacent feeling that, “it is he 
who is dead and not I.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p18">Each one thought or felt, “Well, he’s dead but I’m alive!” But 
the more intimate of Ivan Ilych’s acquaintances, his so-called friends, could not 
help thinking also that they would now have to fulfil the very tiresome demands 
of propriety by attending the funeral service and paying a visit of condolence to 
the widow.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p19">Fedor Vasilievich and Peter Ivanovich had been his nearest acquaintances. 
Peter Ivanovich had studied law with Ivan Ilych and had considered himself to be 
under obligations to him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p20">Having told his wife at dinner-time of Ivan Ilych’s death, and 
of his conjecture that it might be possible to get her brother transferred to their 
circuit, Peter Ivanovich sacrificed his usual nap, put on his evening clothes and 
drove to Ivan Ilych’s house.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p21">At the entrance stood a carriage and two cabs. Leaning against 
the wall in the hall downstairs near the cloakstand was a coffin-lid covered with 
cloth of gold, ornamented with gold cord and tassels, that had been polished up 
with metal powder. Two ladies in black were taking off their fur cloaks. Peter Ivanovich 
recognized one of them as Ivan Ilych’s sister, but the other was a stranger to him. 
His colleague Schwartz was just coming downstairs, but on seeing Peter Ivanovich 
enter he stopped and winked at him, as if to say: “Ivan Ilych has made a mess of 
things — not like you and me.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p22">Schwartz’s face with his Piccadilly whiskers, and his slim figure 
in evening dress, had as usual an air of elegant solemnity which contrasted with 
the playfulness of his character and had a special piquancy here, or so it seemed 
to Peter Ivanovich.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p23">Peter Ivanovich allowed the ladies to precede him and slowly followed 
them upstairs. Schwartz did not come down but remained where he was, and Peter Ivanovich 
understood that he wanted to arrange where they should play bridge that evening. 
The ladies went upstairs to the widow’s room, and Schwartz with seriously compressed 
lips but a playful look in his eyes, indicated by a twist of his eyebrows the room 
to the right where the body lay.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p24">Peter Ivanovich, like everyone else on such occasions, entered 
feeling uncertain what he would have to do. All he knew was that at such times it 
is always safe to cross oneself. But he was not quite sure whether one should make 
obseisances while doing so. He therefore adopted a middle course. On entering the 
room he began crossing himself and made a slight movement resembling a bow. At the 
same time, as far as the motion of his head and arm allowed, he surveyed the room. 
Two young men — apparently nephews, one of whom was a high-school pupil — were 
leaving the room, crossing themselves as they did so. An old woman was standing 
motionless, and a lady with strangely arched eyebrows was saying something to her 
in a whisper. A vigorous, resolute Church Reader, in a frock-coat, was reading 
something in a loud voice with an expression that precluded any contradiction. The 
butler’s assistant, Gerasim, stepping lightly in front of Peter Ivanovich, was strewing 
something on the floor. Noticing this, Peter Ivanovich was immediately aware of 
a faint odour of a decomposing body.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p25">The last time he had called on Ivan Ilych, Peter Ivanovich had 
seen Gerasim in the study. Ivan Ilych had been particularly fond of him and he was 
performing the duty of a sick nurse.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p26">Peter Ivanovich continued to make the sign of the cross slightly 
inclining his head in an intermediate direction between the coffin, the Reader, 
and the icons on the table in a corner of the room. Afterwards, when it seemed to 
him that this movement of his arm in crossing himself had gone on too long, he stopped 
and began to look at the corpse.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p27">The dead man lay, as dead men always lie, in a specially heavy 
way, his rigid limbs sunk in the soft cushions of the coffin, with the head forever 
bowed on the pillow. His yellow waxen brow with bald patches over his sunken temples 
was thrust up in the way peculiar to the dead, the protruding nose seeming to press 
on the upper lip. He was much changed and grown even thinner since Peter Ivanovich 
had last seen him, but, as is always the case with the dead, his face was handsomer 
and above all more dignified than when he was alive. The expression on the face 
said that what was necessary had been accomplished, and accomplished rightly. Besides 
this there was in that expression a reproach and a warning to the living. This warning 
seemed to Peter Ivanovich out of place, or at least not applicable to him. He felt 
a certain discomfort and so he hurriedly crossed himself once more and turned and 
went out of the door — too hurriedly and too regardless of propriety, as he himself 
was aware.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p28">Schwartz was waiting for him in the adjoining room with legs spread 
wide apart and both hands toying with his top-hat behind his back. The mere sight 
of that playful, well-groomed, and elegant figure refreshed Peter Ivanovich. He 
felt that Schwartz was above all these happenings and would not surrender to any 
depressing influences. His very look said that this incident of a church service 
for Ivan Ilych could not be a sufficient reason for infringing the order of the 
session — in other words, that it would certainly not prevent his unwrapping a 
new pack of cards and shuffling them that evening while a footman placed fresh candles 
on the table: in fact, that there was no reason for supposing that this incident 
would hinder their spending the evening agreeably. Indeed he said this in a whisper 
as Peter Ivanovich passed him, proposing that they should meet for a game at Fedor 
Vasilievich’s. But apparently Peter Ivanovich was not destined to play bridge that 
evening. Praskovya Fedorovna (a short, fat woman who despite all efforts to the 
contrary had continued to broaden steadily from her shoulders downwards and who 
had the same extraordinarily arched eyebrows as the lady who had been standing by 
the coffin), dressed all in black, her head covered with lace, came out of her own 
room with some other ladies, conducted them to the room where the dead body lay, 
and said: “The service will begin immediately. Please go in.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p29">Schwartz, making an indefinite bow, stood still, evidently neither 
accepting nor declining this invitation. Praskovya Fedorovna recognizing Peter Ivanovich, 
sighed, went close up to him, took his hand, and said: “I know you were a true friend 
to Ivan Ilych . . .  ” and looked at him awaiting some suitable response. And Peter Ivanovich 
knew that, just as it had been the right thing to cross himself in that room, so 
what he had to do here was to press her hand, sigh, and say, “Believe me . . .  ” So 
he did all this and as he did it felt that the desired result had been achieved: 
that both he and she were touched.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p30">“Come with me. I want to speak to you before it begins,” said 
the widow. “Give me your arm.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p31">Peter Ivanovich gave her his arm and they went to the inner rooms, 
passing Schwartz who winked at Peter Ivanovich compassionately.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p32">“That does for our bridge! Don't object if we find another player. 
Perhaps you can cut in when you do escape,” said his playful look.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p33">Peter Ivanovich sighed still more deeply and despondently, and 
Praskovya Fedorovna pressed his arm gratefully. When they reached the drawing-room, 
upholstered in pink cretonne and lighted by a dim lamp, they sat down at the table 
— she on a sofa and Peter Ivanovich on a low pouffe, the springs of which yielded 
spasmodically under his weight. Praskovya Fedorovna had been on the point of warning 
him to take another seat, but felt that such a warning was out of keeping with her 
present condition and so changed her mind. As he sat down on the pouffe Peter Ivanovich 
recalled how Ivan Ilych had arranged this room and had consulted him regarding this 
pink cretonne with green leaves. The whole room was full of furniture and knick-knacks, 
and on her way to the sofa the lace of the widow’s black shawl caught on the edge 
of the table. Peter Ivanovich rose to detach it, and the springs of the pouffe, 
relieved of his weight, rose also and gave him a push. The widow began detaching 
her shawl herself, and Peter Ivanovich again sat down, suppressing the rebellious 
springs of the pouffe under him. But the widow had not quite freed herself and Peter 
Ivanovich got up again, and again the pouffe rebelled and even creaked. When this 
was all over she took out a clean cambric handkerchief and began to weep. The episode 
with the shawl and the struggle with the pouffe had cooled Peter Ivanovich’s emotions 
and he sat there with a sullen look on his face. This awkward situation was interrupted 
by Sokolov, Ivan Ilych’s butler, who came to report that the plot in the cemetery 
that Praskovya Fedorovna had chosen would cost two hundred rubles. She stopped weeping 
and, looking at Peter Ivanovich with the air of a victim, remarked in French that 
it was very hard for her. Peter Ivanovich made a silent gesture signifying his full 
conviction that it must indeed be so.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p34">“Please smoke,” she said in a magnanimous yet crushed voice, and 
turned to discuss with Sokolov the price of the plot for the grave.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p35">Peter Ivanovich while lighting his cigarette heard her inquiring 
very circumstantially into the prices of different plots in the cemetery and finally 
decide which she would take. When that was done she gave instructions about engaging 
the choir. Sokolov then left the room.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p36">“I look after everything myself,” she told Peter Ivanovich, shifting 
the albums that lay on the table; and noticing that the table was endangered by 
his cigarette-ash, she immediately passed him an ash-tray, saying as she did so: 
“I consider it an affectation to say that my grief prevents my attending to practical 
affairs. On the contrary, if anything can — I won’t say console me, but — distract 
me, it is seeing to everything concerning him.” She again took out her handkerchief 
as if preparing to cry, but suddenly, as if mastering her feeling, she shook herself 
and began to speak calmly. “But there is something I want to talk to you about.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p37">Peter Ivanovich bowed, keeping control of the springs of the pouffe, 
which immediately began quivering under him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p38">“He suffered terribly the last few days.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p39">“Did he?” said Peter Ivanovich.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p40">“Oh, terribly! He screamed unceasingly, not for minutes but for 
hours. For the last three days he screamed incessantly. It was unendurable. I cannot 
understand how I bore it; you could hear him three rooms off. Oh, what I have suffered!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p41">“Is it possible that he was conscious all that time?” asked Peter 
Ivanovich.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p42">“Yes,” she whispered. “To the last moment. He took leave of us 
a quarter of an hour before he died, and asked us to take Volodya away.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p43">The thought of the suffering of this man he had known so intimately, 
first as a merry little boy, then as a schoolmate, and later as a grown-up colleague, 
suddenly struck Peter Ivanovich with horror, despite an unpleasant consciousness 
of his own and this woman’s dissimulation. He again saw that brow, and that nose 
pressing down on the lip, and felt afraid for himself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p44">“Three days of frightful suffering and the death! Why, that might 
suddenly, at any time, happen to me,” he thought, and for a moment felt terrified. 
But — he did not himself know how — the customary reflection at once occurred 
to him that this had happened to Ivan Ilych and not to him, and that it should not 
and could not happen to him, and that to think that it could would be yielding to 
depression which he ought not to do, as Schwartz’s expression plainly showed. After

which reflection Peter Ivanovich felt reassured, and began to ask with interest 
about the details of Ivan Ilych’s death, as though death was an accident natural 
to Ivan Ilych but certainly not to himself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p45">After many details of the really dreadful physical sufferings 
Ivan Ilych had endured (which details he learnt only from the effect those sufferings 
had produced on Praskovya Fedorovna’s nerves) the widow apparently found it necessary 
to get to business.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p46">“Oh, Peter Ivanovich, how hard it is! How terribly, terribly hard!” 
and she again began to weep.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p47">Peter Ivanovich sighed and waited for her to finish blowing her 
nose. When she had done so he said, “Believe me . . .  ” and she again began talking and 
brought out what was evidently her chief concern with him — namely, to question 
him as to how she could obtain a grant of money from the government on the occasion 
of her husband’s death. She made it appear that she was asking Peter Ivanovich’s 
advice about her pension, but he soon saw that she already knew about that to the 
minutest detail, more even than he did himself. She knew how much could be got out 
of the government in consequence of her husband’s death, but wanted to find out 
whether she could not possibly extract something more. Peter Ivanovich tried to 
think of some means of doing so, but after reflecting for a while and, out of propriety, 
condemning the government for its niggardliness, he said he thought that nothing 
more could be got. Then she sighed and evidently began to devise means of getting 
rid of her visitor. Noticing this, he put out his cigarette, rose, pressed her hand, 
and went out into the anteroom.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p48">In the dining-room where the clock stood that Ivan Ilych had liked 
so much and had bought at an antique shop, Peter Ivanovich met a priest and a few 
acquaintances who had come to attend the service, and he recognized Ivan Ilych’s 
daughter, a handsome young woman. She was in black and her slim figure appeared 
slimmer than ever. She had a gloomy, determined, almost angry expression, and bowed 
to Peter Ivanovich as though he were in some way to blame. Behind her, with the 
same offended look, stood a wealthy young man, an examining magistrate, whom Peter 
Ivanovich also knew and who was her fiance, as he had heard. He bowed mournfully 
to them and was about to pass into the death-chamber, when from under the stairs 
appeared the figure of Ivan Ilych’s schoolboy son, who was extremely like his father. 
He seemed a little Ivan Ilych, such as Peter Ivanovich remembered when they studied 
law together. His tear-stained eyes had in them the look that is seen in the eyes 
of boys of thirteen or fourteen who are not pure-minded. When he saw Peter Ivanovich 
he scowled morosely and shamefacedly. Peter Ivanovich nodded to him and entered 
the death-chamber. The service began: candles, groans, incense, tears, and sobs. 
Peter Ivanovich stood looking gloomily down at his feet. He did not look once at 
the dead man, did not yield to any depressing influence, and was one of the first 
to leave the room. There was no one in the anteroom, but Gerasim darted out of the 
dead man’s room, rummaged with his strong hands among the fur coats to find Peter 
Ivanovich’s and helped him on with it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p49">“Well, friend Gerasim,” said Peter Ivanovich, so as to say something. 
“It’s a sad affair, isn’t it?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p50">“It’s God's will. We shall all come to it some day,” said Gerasim, 
displaying his teeth — the even white teeth of a healthy peasant — and, like a 
man in the thick of urgent work, he briskly opened the front door, called the coachman, 
helped Peter Ivanovich into the sledge, and sprang back to the porch as if in readiness 
for what he had to do next.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p51">Peter Ivanovich found the fresh air particularly pleasant after 
the smell of incense, the dead body, and carbolic acid.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p52">“Where to sir?” asked the coachman.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p53">“It’s not too late even now. . . . I’ll call round on Fedor Vasilievich.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii-p54">He accordingly drove there and found them just finishing the first 
rubber, so that it was quite convenient for him to cut in.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter II" progress="15.21%" id="iii" prev="ii" next="iv">


<h2 id="iii-p0.1">II</h2>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p1">Ivan Ilych’s life had been most simple and most ordinary and therefore 
most terrible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p2">He had been a member of the Court of Justice, and died at the 
age of forty-five. His father had been an official who after serving in various 
ministries and departments in Petersburg had made the sort of career which brings 
men to positions from which by reason of their long service they cannot be dismissed, 
though they are obviously unfit to hold any responsible position, and for whom therefore 
posts are specially created, which though fictitious carry salaries of from six 
to ten thousand rubles that are not fictitious, and in receipt of which they live 
on to a great age.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p3">Such was the Privy Councillor and superfluous member of various 
superfluous institutions, Ilya Epimovich Golovin.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p4">He had three sons, of whom Ivan Ilych was the second. The eldest 
son was following in his father’s footsteps only in another department, and was 
already approaching that stage in the service at which a similar sinecure would 
be reached. The third son was a failure. He had ruined his prospects in a number 
of positions and was not serving in the railway department. His father and brothers, 
and still more their wives, not merely disliked meeting him, but avoided remembering 
his existence unless compelled to do so. His sister had married Baron Greff, a Petersburg 
official of her father’s type. Ivan Ilych was <i><span lang="FR" id="iii-p4.1">le phenix de la famille</span></i> as people 
said. He was neither as cold and formal as his elder brother nor as wild as the 
younger, but was a happy mean between them — an intelligent polished, lively and 
agreeable man. He had studied with his younger brother at the School of Law, but 
the latter had failed to complete the course and was expelled when he was in the 
fifth class. Ivan Ilych finished the course well. Even when he was at the School 
of Law he was just what he remained for the rest of his life: a capable, cheerful, 
good-natured, and sociable man, though strict in the fulfillment of what he considered 
to be his duty: and he considered his duty to be what was so considered by those 
in authority. Neither as a boy nor as a man was he a toady, but from early youth 
was by nature attracted to people of high station as a fly is drawn to the light, 
assimilating their ways and views of life and establishing friendly relations with 
them. All the enthusiasms of childhood and youth passed without leaving much trace 
on him; he succumbed to sensuality, to vanity, and latterly among the highest classes 
to liberalism, but always within limits which his instinct unfailingly indicated 
to him as correct.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p5">At school he had done things which had formerly seemed to him 
very horrid and made him feel disgusted with himself when he did them; but when 
later on he saw that such actions were done by people of good position and that 
they did not regard them as wrong, he was able not exactly to regard them as right, 
but to forget about them entirely or not be at all troubled at remembering them.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p6">Having graduated from the School of Law and qualified for the 
tenth rank of the civil service, and having received money from his father for his 
equipment, Ivan Ilych ordered himself clothes at Scharmer’s, the fashionable tailor, 
hung a medallion inscribed <i><span lang="LA" id="iii-p6.1">respice finem</span></i> on his watch-chain, took leave of his 
professor and the prince who was patron of the school, had a farewell dinner with 
his comrades at Donon’s first-class restaurant, and with his new and fashionable 
portmanteau, linen, clothes, shaving and other toilet appliances, and a travelling 
rug, all purchased at the best shops, he set off for one of the provinces where 
through his father’s influence, he had been attached to the governor as an official 
for special service.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p7">In the province Ivan Ilych soon arranged as easy and agreeable 
a position for himself as he had had at the School of Law. He performed his official 
task, made his career, and at the same time amused himself pleasantly and decorously. 
Occasionally he paid official visits to country districts where he behaved with 
dignity both to his superiors and inferiors, and performed the duties entrusted 
to him, which related chiefly to the sectarians, with an exactness and incorruptible 
honesty of which he could not but feel proud.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p8">In official matters, despite his youth and taste for frivolous 
gaiety, he was exceedingly reserved, punctilious, and even severe; but in society 
he was often amusing and witty, and always good-natured, correct in his manner, 
and <i><span lang="FR" id="iii-p8.1">bon enfant</span></i>, as the governor and his wife — with whom he was like one of the 
family — used to say of him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p9">In the province he had an affair with a lady who made advances 
to the elegant young lawyer, and there was also a milliner; and there were carousals 
with aides-de-camp who visited the district, and after-supper visits to a certain 
outlying street of doubtful reputation; and there was too some obsequiousness to 
his chief and even to his chief’s wife, but all this was done with such a tone of 
good breeding that no hard names could be applied to it. It all came under the heading 
of the French saying: “<i><span lang="FR" id="iii-p9.1">Il faut que jeunesse se passe.</span></i>” It was all done with clean 
hands, in clean linen, with French phrases, and above all among people of the best 
society and consequently with the approval of people of rank.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p10">So Ivan Ilych served for five years and then came a change in 
his official life. The new and reformed judicial institutions were introduced, and 
new men were needed. Ivan Ilych became such a new man. He was offered the post of 
examining magistrate, and he accepted it though the post was in another province 
and obliged him to give up the connexions he had formed and to make new ones. His 
friends met to give him a send-off; they had a group photograph taken and presented 
him with a silver cigarette-case, and he set off to his new post.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p11">As examining magistrate Ivan Ilych was just as <i><span lang="FR" id="iii-p11.1">comme il faut</span></i> 
and decorous a man, inspiring general respect and capable of separating his official 
duties from his private life, as he had been when acting as an official on special 
service. His duties now as examining magistrate were fare more interesting and attractive 
than before. In his former position it had been pleasant to wear an undress uniform 
made by Scharmer, and to pass through the crowd of petitioners and officials who 
were timorously awaiting an audience with the governor, and who envied him as with 
free and easy gait he went straight into his chief’s private room to have a cup 
of tea and a cigarette with him. But not many people had then been directly dependent 
on him — only police officials and the sectarians when he went on special missions 
— and he liked to treat them politely, almost as comrades, as if he were letting 
them feel that he who had the power to crush them was treating them in this simple, 
friendly way. There were then but few such people. But now, as an examining magistrate, 
Ivan Ilych felt that everyone without exception, even the most important and self-satisfied, 
was in his power, and that he need only write a few words on a sheet of paper with 
a certain heading, and this or that important, self-satisfied person would be brought 
before him in the role of an accused person or a witness, and if he did not choose 
to allow him to sit down, would have to stand before him and answer his questions. 
Ivan Ilych never abused his power; he tried on the contrary to soften its expression, 
but the consciousness of it and the possibility of softening its effect, supplied 
the chief interest and attraction of his office. In his work itself, especially 
in his examinations, he very soon acquired a method of eliminating all considerations 
irrelevant to the legal aspect of the case, and reducing even the most complicated 
case to a form in which it would be presented on paper only in its externals, completely 
excluding his personal opinion of the matter, while above all observing every prescribed 
formality. The work was new and Ivan Ilych was one of the first men to apply the 
new Code of 1864.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p12">On taking up the post of examining magistrate in a new town, he 
made new acquaintances and connexions, placed himself on a new footing and assumed 
a somewhat different tone. He took up an attitude of rather dignified aloofness 
towards the provincial authorities, but picked out the best circle of legal gentlemen 
and wealthy gentry living in the town and assumed a tone of slight dissatisfaction 
with the government, of moderate liberalism, and of enlightened citizenship. At 
the same time, without at all altering the elegance of his toilet, he ceased shaving 
his chin and allowed his beard to grow as it pleased.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p13">Ivan Ilych settled down very pleasantly in this new town. The 
society there, which inclined towards opposition to the governor was friendly, his 
salary was larger, and he began to play <i>vint</i> [a form of bridge], which he found 
added not a little to the pleasure of life, for he had a capacity for cards, played 
good-humouredly, and calculated rapidly and astutely, so that he usually won.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p14">After living there for two years he met his future wife, Praskovya 
Fedorovna Mikhel, who was the most attractive, clever, and brilliant girl of the 
set in which he moved, and among other amusements and relaxations from his labours 
as examining magistrate, Ivan Ilych established light and playful relations with 
her.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p15">While he had been an official on special service he had been accustomed 
to dance, but now as an examining magistrate it was exceptional for him to do so. 
If he danced now, he did it as if to show that though he served under the reformed 
order of things, and had reached the fifth official rank, yet when it came to dancing 
he could do it better than most people. So at the end of an evening he sometimes 
danced with Praskovya Fedorovna, and it was chiefly during these dances that he 
captivated her. She fell in love with him. Ivan Ilych had at first no definite intention 
of marrying, but when the girl fell in love with him he said to himself: “Really, 
why shouldn’t I marry?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p16">Praskovya Fedorovna came of a good family, was not bad looking, 
and had some little property. Ivan Ilych might have aspired to a more brilliant 
match, but even this was good. He had his salary, and she, he hoped, would have 
an equal income. She was well connected, and was a sweet, pretty, and thoroughly 
correct young woman. To say that Ivan Ilych married because he fell in love with 
Praskovya Fedorovna and found that she sympathized with his views of life would 
be as incorrect as to say that he married because his social circle approved of 
the match. He was swayed by both these considerations: the marriage gave him personal 
satisfaction, and at the same time it was considered the right thing by the most 
highly placed of his associates.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p17">So Ivan Ilych got married.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p18">The preparations for marriage and the beginning of married life, 
with its conjugal caresses, the new furniture, new crockery, and new linen, were 
very pleasant until his wife became pregnant — so that Ivan Ilych had begun to 
think that marriage would not impair the easy, agreeable, gay and always decorous 
character of his life, approved of by society and regarded by himself as natural, 
but would even improve it. But from the first months of his wife’s pregnancy, something 
new, unpleasant, depressing, and unseemly, and from which there was no way of escape, 
unexpectedly showed itself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p19">His wife, without any reason — <i><span lang="FR" id="iii-p19.1">de gaiete de coeur</span></i> as Ivan Ilych 
expressed it to himself — began to disturb the pleasure and propriety of their 
life. She began to be jealous without any cause, expected him to devote his whole 
attention to her, found fault with everything, and made coarse and ill-mannered 
scenes.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p20">At first Ivan Ilych hoped to escape from the unpleasantness of 
this state of affairs by the same easy and decorous relation to life that had served 
him heretofore: he tried to ignore his wife’s disagreeable moods, continued to live 
in his usual easy and pleasant way, invited friends to his house for a game of cards, 
and also tried going out to his club or spending his evenings with friends. But 
one day his wife began upbraiding him so vigorously, using such coarse words, and 
continued to abuse him every time he did not fulfil her demands, so resolutely and 
with such evident determination not to give way till he submitted — that is, till 
he stayed at home and was bored just as she was — that he became alarmed. He now 
realized that matrimony — at any rate with Praskovya Fedorovna — was not always 
conducive to the pleasures and amenities of life, but on the contrary often infringed 
both comfort and propriety, and that he must therefore entrench himself against 
such infringement. And Ivan Ilych began to seek for means of doing so. His official 
duties were the one thing that imposed upon Praskovya Fedorovna, and by means of 
his official work and the duties attached to it he began struggling with his wife 
to secure his own independence.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p21">With the birth of their child, the attempts to feed it and the 
various failures in doing so, and with the real and imaginary illnesses of mother 
and child, in which Ivan Ilych’s sympathy was demanded but about which he understood 
nothing, the need of securing for himself an existence outside his family life became 
still more imperative.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p22">As his wife grew more irritable and exacting and Ivan Ilych transferred 
the center of gravity of his life more and more to his official work, so did he 
grow to like his work better and became more ambitious than before.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p23">Very soon, within a year of his wedding, Ivan Ilych had realized 
that marriage, though it may add some comforts to life, is in fact a very intricate 
and difficult affair towards which in order to perform one’s duty, that is, to lead 
a decorous life approved of by society, one must adopt a definite attitude just 
as towards one’s official duties.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p24">And Ivan Ilych evolved such an attitude towards married life. 
He only required of it those conveniences — dinner at home, housewife, and bed 
— which it could give him, and above all that propriety of external forms required 
by public opinion. For the rest he looked for lighthearted pleasure and propriety, 
and was very thankful when he found them, but if he met with antagonism and querulousness 
he at once retired into his separate fenced-off world of official duties, where 
he found satisfaction.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p25">Ivan Ilych was esteemed a good official, and after three years 
was made Assistant Public Prosecutor. His new duties, their importance, the possibility 
of indicting and imprisoning anyone he chose, the publicity his speeches received, 
and the success he had in all these things, made his work still more attractive.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p26">More children came. His wife became more and more querulous and 
ill-tempered, but the attitude Ivan Ilych had adopted towards his home life rendered 
him almost impervious to her grumbling.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p27">After seven years’ service in that town he was transferred to 
another province as Public Prosecutor. They moved, but were short of money and his 
wife did not like the place they moved to. Though the salary was higher the cost 
of living was greater, besides which two of their children died and family life 
became still more unpleasant for him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p28">Praskovya Fedorovna blamed her husband for every inconvenience 
they encountered in their new home. Most of the conversations between husband and 
wife, especially as to the children’s education, led to topics which recalled former 
disputes, and these disputes were apt to flare up again at any moment. There remained 
only those rare periods of amorousness which still came to them at times but did 
not last long. These were islets at which they anchored for a while and then again 
set out upon that ocean of veiled hostility which showed itself in their aloofness 
from one another. This aloofness might have grieved Ivan Ilych had he considered 
that it ought not to exist, but he now regarded the position as normal, and even 
made it the goal at which he aimed in family life. His aim was to free himself more 
and more from those unpleasantness and to give them a semblance of harmlessness 
and propriety. He attained this by spending less and less time with his family, 
and when obliged to be at home he tried to safeguard his position by the presence 
of outsiders. The chief thing however was that he had his official duties. The whole 
interest of his life now centered in the official world and that interest absorbed 
him. The consciousness of his power, being able to ruin anybody he wished to ruin, 
the importance, even the external dignity of his entry into court, or meetings with 
his subordinates, his success with superiors and inferiors, and above all his masterly 
handling of cases, of which he was conscious — all this gave him pleasure and filled 
his life, together with chats with his colleagues, dinners, and bridge. So that 
on the whole Ivan Ilych’s life continued to flow as he considered it should do — 
pleasantly and properly.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iii-p29">So things continued for another seven years. His eldest daughter 
was already sixteen, another child had died, and only one son was left, a schoolboy 
and a subject of dissension. Ivan Ilych wanted to put him in the School of Law, 
but to spite him Praskovya Fedorovna entered him at the High School. The daughter 
had been educated at home and had turned out well: the boy did not learn badly either.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter III" progress="28.95%" id="iv" prev="iii" next="v">


<h2 id="iv-p0.1">III</h2>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p1">So Ivan Ilych lived for seventeen years after his marriage. He 
was already a Public Prosecutor of long standing, and had declined several proposed 
transfers while awaiting a more desirable post, when an unanticipated and unpleasant 
occurrence quite upset the peaceful course of his life. He was expecting to be offered 
the post of presiding judge in a University town, but Happe somehow came to the 
front and obtained the appointment instead. Ivan Ilych became irritable, reproached 
Happe, and quarrelled both him and with his immediate superiors — who became colder 
to him and again passed him over when other appointments were made.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p2">This was in 1880, the hardest year of Ivan Ilych’s life. It was 
then that it became evident on the one hand that his salary was insufficient for 
them to live on, and on the other that he had been forgotten, and not only this, 
but that what was for him the greatest and most cruel injustice appeared to others 
a quite ordinary occurrence. Even his father did not consider it his duty to help 
him. Ivan Ilych felt himself abandoned by everyone, and that they regarded his position 
with a salary of 3,500 rubles as quite normal and even fortunate. He alone knew 
that with the consciousness of the injustices done him, with his wife’s incessant 
nagging, and with the debts he had contracted by living beyond his means, his position 
was far from normal.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p3">In order to save money that summer he obtained leave of absence 
and went with his wife to live in the country at her brother’s place.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p4">In the country, without his work, he experienced <i>ennui</i> for the 
first time in his life, and not only <i>ennui</i> but intolerable depression, and he 
decided that it was impossible to go on living like that, and that it was necessary 
to take energetic measures.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p5">Having passed a sleepless night pacing up and down the veranda, 
he decided to go to Petersburg and bestir himself, in order to punish those who 
had failed to appreciate him and to get transferred to another ministry.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p6">Next day, despite many protests from his wife and her brother, 
he started for Petersburg with the sole object of obtaining a post with a salary 
of five thousand rubles a year. He was no longer bent on any particular department, 
or tendency, or kind of activity. All he now wanted was an appointment to another 
post with a salary of five thousand rubles, either in the administration, in the 
banks, with the railways in one of the Empress Marya’s Institutions, or even in 
the customs — but it had to carry with it a salary of five thousand rubles and 
be in a ministry other than that in which they had failed to appreciate him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p7">And this quest of Ivan Ilych’s was crowned with remarkable and 
unexpected success. At Kursk an acquaintance of his, F. I. Ilyin, got into the first-class 
carriage, sat down beside Ivan Ilych, and told him of a telegram just received by 
the governor of Kursk announcing that a change was about to take place in the ministry: 
Peter Ivanovich was to be superseded by Ivan Semonovich.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p8">The proposed change, apart from its significance for Russia, had 
a special significance for Ivan Ilych, because by bringing forward a new man, Peter 
Petrovich, and consequently his friend Zachar Ivanovich, it was highly favourable 
for Ivan Ilych, since Sachar Ivanovich was a friend and colleague of his.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p9">In Moscow this news was confirmed, and on reaching Petersburg 
Ivan Ilych found Zachar Ivanovich and received a definite promise of an appointment 
in his former Department of Justice.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p10">A week later he telegraphed to his wife: “Zachar in Miller’s place. 
I shall receive appointment on presentation of report.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p11">Thanks to this change of personnel, Ivan Ilych had unexpectedly 
obtained an appointment in his former ministry which placed him two states above 
his former colleagues besides giving him five thousand rubles salary and three thousand 
five hundred rubles for expenses connected with his removal. All his ill humour 
towards his former enemies and the whole department vanished, and Ivan Ilych was 
completely happy.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p12">He returned to the country more cheerful and contented than he 
had been for a long time. Praskovya Fedorovna also cheered up and a truce was arranged 
between them. Ivan Ilych told of how he had been feted by everybody in Petersburg, 
how all those who had been his enemies were put to shame and now fawned on him, 
how envious they were of his appointment, and how much everybody in Petersburg had 
liked him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p13">Praskovya Fedorovna listened to all this and appeared to believe 
it. She did not contradict anything, but only made plans for their life in the town 
to which they were going. Ivan Ilych saw with delight that these plans were his 
plans, that he and his wife agreed, and that, after a stumble, his life was regaining 
its due and natural character of pleasant lightheartedness and decorum.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p14">Ivan Ilych had come back for a short time only, for he had to 
take up his new duties on the 10th of September. Moreover, he needed time to settle 
into the new place, to move all his belongings from the province, and to buy and 
order many additional things: in a word, to make such arrangements as he had resolved 
on, which were almost exactly what Praskovya Fedorovna too had decided on.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p15">Now that everything had happened so fortunately, and that he and 
his wife were at one in their aims and moreover saw so little of one another, they 
got on together better than they had done since the first years of marriage. Ivan 
Ilych had thought of taking his family away with him at once, but the insistence 
of his wife’s brother and her sister-in-law, who had suddenly become particularly 
amiable and friendly to him and his family, induced him to depart alone.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p16">So he departed, and the cheerful state of mind induced by his 
success and by the harmony between his wife and himself, the one intensifying the 
other, did not leave him. He found a delightful house, just the thing both he and 
his wife had dreamt of. Spacious, lofty reception rooms in the old style, a convenient 
and dignified study, rooms for his wife and daughter, a study for his son — it 
might have been specially built for them. Ivan Ilych himself superintended the arrangements, 
chose the wallpapers, supplemented the furniture (preferably with antiques which 
he considered particularly <i><span lang="FR" id="iv-p16.1">comme il faut</span></i>), and supervised the upholstering. Everything 
progressed and progressed and approached the ideal he had set himself: even when 
things were only half completed they exceeded his expectations. He saw what a refined 
and elegant character, free from vulgarity, it would all have when it was ready. 
On falling asleep he pictured to himself how the reception room would look. Looking 
at the yet unfinished drawing room he could see the fireplace, the screen, the what-not, 
the little chairs dotted here and there, the dishes and plates on the walls, and 
the bronzes, as they would be when everything was in place. He was pleased by the 
thought of how his wife and daughter, who shared his taste in this matter, would 
be impressed by it. They were certainly not expecting as much. He had been particularly 
successful in finding, and buying cheaply, antiques which gave a particularly aristocratic 
character to the whole place. But in his letters he intentionally understated everything 
in order to be able to surprise them. All this so absorbed him that his new duties 
— though he liked his official work — interested him less than he had expected. 
Sometimes he even had moments of absent-mindedness during the court sessions and 
would consider whether he should have straight or curved cornices for his curtains. 
He was so interested in it all that he often did things himself, rearranging the 
furniture, or rehanging the curtains. Once when mounting a step-ladder to show 
the upholsterer, who did not understand, how he wanted the hangings draped, he mad 
a false step and slipped, but being a strong and agile man he clung on and only 
knocked his side against the knob of the window frame. The bruised place was painful 
but the pain soon passed, and he felt particularly bright and well just then. He 
wrote: “I feel fifteen years younger.” He thought he would have everything ready 
by September, but it dragged on till mid-October. But the result was charming not 
only in his eyes but to everyone who saw it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p17">In reality it was just what is usually seen in the houses of people 
of moderate means who want to appear rich, and therefore succeed only in resembling 
others like themselves: there are damasks, dark wood, plants, rugs, and dull and 
polished bronzes — all the things people of a certain class have in order to resemble 
other people of that class. His house was so like the others that it would never 
have been noticed, but to him it all seemed to be quite exceptional. He was very 
happy when he met his family at the station and brought them to the newly furnished 
house all lit up, where a footman in a white tie opened the door into the hall decorated 
with plants, and when they went on into the drawing-room and the study uttering 
exclamations of delight. He conducted them everywhere, drank in their praises eagerly, 
and beamed with pleasure. At tea that evening, when Praskovya Fedorovna among others 
things asked him about his fall, he laughed, and showed them how he had gone flying 
and had frightened the upholsterer.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p18">“It’s a good thing I’m a bit of an athlete. Another man might 
have been killed, but I merely knocked myself, just here; it hurts when it’s touched, 
but it’s passing off already — it’s only a bruise.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p19">So they began living in their new home — in which, as always 
happens, when they got thoroughly settled in they found they were just one room 
short — and with the increased income, which as always was just a little (some 
five hundred rubles) too little, but it was all very nice.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p20">Things went particularly well at first, before everything was 
finally arranged and while something had still to be done: this thing bought, that 
thing ordered, another thing moved, and something else adjusted. Though there were 
some disputes between husband and wife, they were both so well satisfied and had 
so much to do that it all passed off without any serious quarrels. When nothing 
was left to arrange it became rather dull and something seemed to be lacking, but 
they were then making acquaintances, forming habits, and life was growing fuller.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p21">Ivan Ilych spent his mornings at the law court and came home to 
dinner, and at first he was generally in a good humour, though he occasionally became 
irritable just on account of his house. (Every spot on the tablecloth or the upholstery, 
and every broken window-blind string, irritated him. He had devoted so much trouble 
to arranging it all that every disturbance of it distressed him.) But on the whole 
his life ran its course as he believed life should do: easily, pleasantly, and decorously.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p22">He got up at nine, drank his coffee, read the paper, and then 
put on his undress uniform and went to the law courts. There the harness in which 
he worked had already been stretched to fit him and he donned it without a hitch: 
petitioners, inquiries at the chancery, the chancery itself, and the sittings public 
and administrative. In all this the thing was to exclude everything fresh and vital, 
which always disturbs the regular course of official business, and to admit only 
official relations with people, and then only on official grounds. A man would come, 
for instance, wanting some information. Ivan Ilych, as one in whose sphere the matter 
did not lie, would have nothing to do with him: but if the man had some business 
with him in his official capacity, something that could be expressed on officially 
stamped paper, he would do everything, positively everything he could within the 
limits of such relations, and in doing so would maintain the semblance of friendly 
human relations, that is, would observe the courtesies of life. As soon as the official 
relations ended, so did everything else. Ivan Ilych possessed this capacity to separate 
his real life from the official side of affairs and not mix the two, in the highest 
degree, and by long practice and natural aptitude had brought it to such a pitch 
that sometimes, in the manner of a virtuoso, he would even allow himself to let 
the human and official relations mingle. He let himself do this just because he 
felt that he could at any time he chose resume the strictly official attitude again 
and drop the human relation. and he did it all easily, pleasantly, correctly, and 
even artistically. In the intervals between the sessions he smoked, drank tea, chatted 
a little about politics, a little about general topics, a little about cards, but 
most of all about official appointments. Tired, but with the feelings of a virtuoso 
— one of the first violins who has played his part in an orchestra with precision 
— he would return home to find that his wife and daughter had been out paying calls, 
or had a visitor, and that his son had been to school, had done his homework with 
his tutor, and was surely learning what is taught at High Schools. Everything was 
as it should be. After dinner, if they had no visitors, Ivan Ilych sometimes read 
a book that was being much discussed at the time, and in the evening settled down 
to work, that is, read official papers, compared the depositions of witnesses, and 
noted paragraphs of the Code applying to them. This was neither dull nor amusing. 
It was dull when he might have been playing bridge, but if no bridge was available 
it was at any rate better than doing nothing or sitting with his wife. Ivan Ilych’s 
chief pleasure was giving little dinners to which he invited men and women of good 
social position, and just as his drawing-room resembled all other drawing-rooms 
so did his enjoyable little parties resemble all other such parties.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p23">Once they even gave a dance. Ivan Ilych enjoyed it and everything 
went off well, except that it led to a violent quarrel with his wife about the cakes 
and sweets. Praskovya Fedorovna had made her own plans, but Ivan Ilych insisted 
on getting everything from an expensive confectioner and ordered too many cakes, 
and the quarrel occurred because some of those cakes were left over and the confectioner’s 
bill came to forty-five rubles. It was a great and disagreeable quarrel. Praskovya 
Fedorovna called him “a fool and an imbecile,” and he clutched at his head and made 
angry allusions to divorce.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p24">But the dance itself had been enjoyable. The best people were 
there, and Ivan Ilych had danced with Princess Trufonova, a sister of the distinguished 
founder of the Society “Bear My Burden”.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p25">The pleasures connected with his work were pleasures of ambition; 
his social pleasures were those of vanity; but Ivan Ilych’s greatest pleasure was 
playing bridge. He acknowledged that whatever disagreeable incident happened in 
his life, the pleasure that beamed like a ray of light above everything else was 
to sit down to bridge with good players, not noisy partners, and of course to four-handed 
bridge (with five players it was annoying to have to stand out, though one pretended 
not to mind), to play a clever and serious game (when the cards allowed it) and 
then to have supper and drink a glass of wine. After a game of bridge, especially 
if he had won a little (to win a large sum was unpleasant), Ivan Ilych went to bed 
in a specially good humour.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p26">So they lived. They formed a circle of acquaintances among the 
best people and were visited by people of importance and by young folk. In their 
views as to their acquaintances, husband, wife and daughter were entirely agreed, 
and tacitly and unanimously kept at arm’s length and shook off the various shabby 
friends and relations who, with much show of affection, gushed into the drawing-room 
with its Japanese plates on the walls. Soon these shabby friends ceased to obtrude 
themselves and only the best people remained in the Golovins’ set.</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p27">Young men made up to Lisa, and Petrishchev, an examining magistrate 
and Dmitri Ivanovich Petrishchev’s son and sole heir, began to be so attentive to 
her that Ivan Ilych had already spoken to Praskovya Fedorovna about it, and considered 
whether they should not arrange a party for them, or get up some private theatricals.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="iv-p28">So they lived, and all went well, without change, and life flowed 
pleasantly.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter IV" progress="41.84%" id="v" prev="iv" next="vi">



<h2 id="v-p0.1">IV</h2>
<p class="normal" id="v-p1">They were all in good health. It could not be called ill health 
if Ivan Ilych sometimes said that he had a queer taste in his mouth and felt some 
discomfort in his left side.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p2">But this discomfort increased and, though not exactly painful, 
grew into a sense of pressure in his side accompanied by ill humour. And his irritability 
became worse and worse and began to mar the agreeable, easy, and correct life that 
had established itself in the Golovin family. Quarrels between husband and wife 
became more and more frequent, and soon the ease and amenity disappeared and even 
the decorum was barely maintained. Scenes again became frequent, and very few of 
those islets remained on which husband and wife could meet without an explosion. 
Praskovya Fedorovna now had good reason to say that her husband’s temper was trying. 
With characteristic exaggeration she said he had always had a dreadful temper, and 
that it had needed all her good nature to put up with it for twenty years. It was 
true that now the quarrels were started by him. His bursts of temper always came 
just before dinner, often just as he began to eat his soup. Sometimes he noticed 
that a plate or dish was chipped, or the food was not right, or his son put his 
elbow on the table, or his daughter’s hair was not done as he liked it, and for 
all this he blamed Praskovya Fedorovna. At first she retorted and said disagreeable 
things to him, but once or twice he fell into such a rage at the beginning of dinner 
that she realized it was due to some physical derangement brought on by taking food, 
and so she restrained herself and did not answer, but only hurried to get the dinner 
over. She regarded this self-restraint as highly praiseworthy. Having come to the 
conclusion that her husband had a dreadful temper and made her life miserable, she 
began to feel sorry for herself, and the more she pitied herself the more she hated 
her husband. She began to wish he would die; yet she did not want him to die because 
then his salary would cease. And this irritated her against him still more. She 
considered herself dreadfully unhappy just because not even his death could save 
her, and though she concealed her exasperation, that hidden exasperation of hers 
increased his irritation also.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p3">After one scene in which Ivan Ilych had been particularly unfair 
and after which he had said in explanation that he certainly was irritable but that 
it was due to his not being well, she said that if he was ill it should be attended 
to, and insisted on his going to see a celebrated doctor.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p4">He went. Everything took place as he had expected and as it always 
does. There was the usual waiting and the important air assumed by the doctor, with 
which he was so familiar (resembling that which he himself assumed in court), and 
the sounding and listening, and the questions which called for answers that were 
foregone conclusions and were evidently unnecessary, and the look of importance 
which implied that “if only you put yourself in our hands we will arrange everything 
— we know indubitably how it has to be done, always in the same way for everybody 
alike.” It was all just as it was in the law courts. The doctor put on just the 
same air towards him as he himself put on towards an accused person.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p5">The doctor said that so-and-so indicated that there was so-and-so 
inside the patient, but if the investigation of so-and-so did not confirm this, 
then he must assume that and that. If he assumed that and that, then . . .  and so on. 
To Ivan Ilych only one question was important: was his case serious or not? But 
the doctor ignored that inappropriate question. From his point of view it was not 
the one under consideration, the real question was to decide between a floating 
kidney, chronic catarrh, or appendicitis. It was not a question the doctor solved 
brilliantly, as it seemed to Ivan Ilych, in favour of the appendix, with the reservation 
that should an examination of the urine give fresh indications the matter would 
be reconsidered. All this was just what Ivan Ilych had himself brilliantly accomplished 
a thousand times in dealing with men on trial. The doctor summed up just as brilliantly, 
looking over his spectacles triumphantly and even gaily at the accused. From the 
doctor’s summing up Ivan Ilych concluded that things were bad, but that for the 
doctor, and perhaps for everybody else, it was a matter of indifference, though 
for him it was bad. And this conclusion struck him painfully, arousing in him a 
great feeling of pity for himself and of bitterness towards the doctor’s indifference 
to a matter of such importance.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p6">He said nothing of this, but rose, placed the doctor’s fee on 
the table, and remarked with a sigh: “We sick people probably often put inappropriate 
questions. But tell me, in general, is this complaint dangerous, or not? . . .  ”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p7">The doctor looked at him sternly over his spectacles with one 
eye, as if to say: “Prisoner, if you will not keep to the questions put to you, 
I shall be obliged to have you removed from the court.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p8">“I have already told you what I consider necessary and proper. 
The analysis may show something more.” And the doctor bowed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p9">Ivan Ilych went out slowly, seated himself disconsolately in his 
sledge, and drove home. All the way home he was going over what the doctor had said, 
trying to translate those complicated, obscure, scientific phrases into plain language 
and find in them an answer to the question: “Is my condition bad? Is it very bad? 
Or is there as yet nothing much wrong?” And it seemed to him that the meaning of 
what the doctor had said was that it was very bad. Everything in the streets seemed 
depressing. The cabmen, the houses, the passers-by, and the shops, were dismal. 
His ache, this dull gnawing ache that never ceased for a moment, seemed to have 
acquired a new and more serious significance from the doctor’s dubious remarks. 
Ivan Ilych now watched it with a new and oppressive feeling.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p10">He reached home and began to tell his wife about it. She listened, 
but in the middle of his account his daughter came in with her hat on, ready to 
go out with her mother. She sat down reluctantly to listen to this tedious story, 
but could not stand it long, and her mother too did not hear him to the end.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p11">“Well, I am very glad,” she said. “Mind now to take your medicine 
regularly. Give me the prescription and I’ll send Gerasim to the chemist’s.” And 
she went to get ready to go out.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p12">While she was in the room Ivan Ilych had hardly taken time to 
breathe, but he sighed deeply when she left it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p13">“Well,” he thought, “perhaps it isn’t so bad after all.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p14">He began taking his medicine and following the doctor’s directions, 
which had been altered after the examination of the urine. But then it happened 
that there was a contradiction between the indications drawn from the examination 
of the urine and the symptoms that showed themselves. It turned out that what was 
happening differed from what the doctor had told him, and that he had either forgotten 
or blundered, or hidden something from him. He could not, however, be blamed for 
that, and Ivan Ilych still obeyed his orders implicitly and at first derived some 
comfort from doing so.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p15">From the time of his visit to the doctor, Ivan Ilych’s chief occupation 
was the exact fulfillment of the doctor’s instructions regarding hygiene and the 
taking of medicine, and the observation of his pain and his excretions. His chief 
interest came to be people’s ailments and people’s health. When sickness, deaths, 
or recoveries were mentioned in his presence, especially when the illness resembled 
his own, he listened with agitation which he tried to hide, asked questions, and 
applied what he heard to his own case.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p16">The pain did not grow less, but Ivan Ilych made efforts to force 
himself to think that he was better. And he could do this so long as nothing agitated 
him. But as soon as he had any unpleasantness with his wife, any lack of success 
in his official work, or held bad cards at bridge, he was at once acutely sensible 
of his disease. He had formerly borne such mischances, hoping soon to adjust what 
was wrong, to master it and attain success, or make a grand slam. But now every 
mischance upset him and plunged him into despair. He would say to himself: “there 
now, just as I was beginning to get better and the medicine had begun to take effect, 
comes this accursed misfortune, or unpleasantness . . .  ” And he was furious with the 
mishap, or with the people who were causing the unpleasantness and killing him, 
for he felt that this fury was killing him but he could not restrain it. One would 
have thought that it should have been clear to him that this exasperation with circumstances 
and people aggravated his illness, and that he ought therefore to ignore unpleasant 
occurrences. But he drew the very opposite conclusion: he said that he needed peace, 
and he watched for everything that might disturb it and became irritable at the 
slightest infringement of it. His condition was rendered worse by the fact that 
he read medical books and consulted doctors. The progress of his disease was so 
gradual that he could deceive himself when comparing one day with another — the 
difference was so slight. But when he consulted the doctors it seemed to him that 
he was getting worse, and even very rapidly. Yet despite this he was continually 
consulting them.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p17">That month he went to see another celebrity, who told him almost 
the same as the first had done but put his questions rather differently, and the 
interview with this celebrity only increased Ivan Ilych’s doubts and fears. A friend 
of a friend of his, a very good doctor, diagnosed his illness again quite differently 
from the others, and though he predicted recovery, his questions and suppositions 
bewildered Ivan Ilych still more and increased his doubts. A homeopathist diagnosed 
the disease in yet another way, and prescribed medicine which Ivan Ilych took secretly 
for a week. But after a week, not feeling any improvement and having lost confidence 
both in the former doctor’s treatment and in this one’s, he became still more despondent. 
One day a lady acquaintance mentioned a cure effected by a wonder-working icon. 
Ivan Ilych caught himself listening attentively and beginning to believe that it 
had occurred. This incident alarmed him. “Has my mind really weakened to such an 
extent?” he asked himself. “Nonsense! It’s all rubbish. I mustn’t give way to nervous 
fears but having chosen a doctor must keep strictly to his treatment. That is what 
I will do. Now it’s all settled. I won’t think about it, but will follow the treatment 
seriously till summer, and then we shall see. From now there must be no more of 
this wavering!” This was easy to say but impossible to carry out. The pain in his 
side oppressed him and seemed to grow worse and more incessant, while the taste 
in his mouth grew stranger and stranger. It seemed to him that his breath had a 
disgusting smell, and he was conscious of a loss of appetite and strength. There 
was no deceiving himself: something terrible, new, and more important than anything 
before in his life, was taking place within him of which he alone was aware. Those 
about him did not understand or would not understand it, but thought everything 
in the world was going on as usual. That tormented Ivan Ilych more than anything. 
He saw that his household, especially his wife and daughter who were in a perfect 
whirl of visiting, did not understand anything of it and were annoyed that he was 
so depressed and so exacting, as if he were to blame for it. Though they tried to 
disguise it he saw that he was an obstacle in their path, and that his wife had 
adopted a definite line in regard to his illness and kept to it regardless of anything 
he said or did. Her attitude was this: “You know,” she would say to her friends, 
“Ivan Ilych can’t do as other people do, and keep to the treatment prescribed for 
him. One day he’ll take his drops and keep strictly to his diet and go to bed in 
good time, but the next day unless I watch him he’ll suddenly forget his medicine, 
eat sturgeon — which is forbidden — and sit up playing cards till one o’clock 
in the morning.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p18">“Oh, come, when was that?” Ivan Ilych would ask in vexation. “Only 
once at Peter Ivanovich’s.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p19">“And yesterday with Shebek.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p20">“Well, even if I hadn’t stayed up, this pain would have kept me 
awake.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p21">“Be that as it may you’ll never get well like that, but will always 
make us wretched.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p22">Praskovya Fedorovna’s attitude to Ivan Ilych’s illness, as she 
expressed it both to others and to him, was that it was his own fault and was another 
of the annoyances he caused her. Ivan ilych felt that this opinion escaped her involuntarily 
— but that did not make it easier for him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p23">At the law courts too, Ivan Ilych noticed, or thought he noticed, 
a strange attitude towards himself. It sometimes seemed to him that people were 
watching him inquisitively as a man whose place might soon be vacant. Then again, 
his friends would suddenly begin to chaff him in a friendly way about his low spirits, 
as if the awful, horrible, and unheard-of thing that was going on within him, incessantly 
gnawing at him and irresistibly drawing him away, was a very agreeable subject for 
jests. Schwartz in particular irritated him by his jocularity, vivacity, and <i>savoir-faire</i>, 
which reminded him of what he himself had been ten years ago.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p24">Friends came to make up a set and they sat down to cards. They 
dealt, bending the new cards to soften them, and he sorted the diamonds in his hand 
and found he had seven. His partner said “No trumps” and supported him with two 
diamonds. What more could be wished for? It ought to be jolly and lively. They would 
make a grand slam. But suddenly Ivan Ilych was conscious of that gnawing pain, that 
taste in his mouth, and it seemed ridiculous that in such circumstances he should 
be pleased to make a grand slam.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p25">He looked at his partner Mikhail Mikhaylovich, who rapped the 
table with his strong hand and instead of snatching up the tricks pushed the cards 
courteously and indulgently towards Ivan Ilych that he might have the pleasure of 
gathering them up without the trouble of stretching out his hand for them. “Does 
he think I am too weak to stretch out my arm?” thought Ivan Ilych, and forgetting 
what he was doing he over-trumped his partner, missing the grand slam by three tricks. 
And what was most awful of all was that he saw how upset Mikhail Mikhaylovich was 
about it but did not himself care. And it was dreadful to realize why he did not 
care.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p26">They all saw that he was suffering, and said: “We can stop if 
you are tired. Take a rest.” Lie down? No, he was not at all tired, and he finished 
the rubber. All were gloomy and silent. Ivan Ilych felt that he had diffused this 
gloom over them and could not dispel it. They had supper and went away, and Ivan 
Ilych was left alone with the consciousness that his life was poisoned and was poisoning 
the lives of others, and that this poison did not weaken but penetrated more and 
more deeply into his whole being.</p>
<p class="normal" id="v-p27">With this consciousness, and with physical pain besides the terror, 
he must go to bed, often to lie awake the greater part of the night. Next morning 
he had to get up again, dress, go to the law courts, speak, and write; or if he 
did not go out, spend at home those twenty-four hours a day each of which was a 
torture. And he had to live thus all alone on the brink of an abyss, with no one 
who understood or pitied him.</p>



</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter V" progress="54.08%" id="vi" prev="v" next="vii">

<h2 id="vi-p0.1">V</h2>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p1">So one month passed and then another. Just before the New Year 
his brother-in-law came to town and stayed at their house. Ivan Ilych was at the 
law courts and Praskovya Fedorovna had gone shopping. When Ivan Ilych came home 
and entered his study he found his brother-in-law there — a healthy, florid man 
— unpacking his portmanteau himself. He raised his head on hearing Ivan Ilych’s 
footsteps and looked up at him for a moment without a word. That stare told Ivan 
Ilych everything. His brother-in-law opened his mouth to utter an exclamation of 
surprise but checked himself, and that action confirmed it all.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p2">“I have changed, eh?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p3">“Yes, there is a change.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p4">And after that, try as he would to get his brother-in-law to return 
to the subject of his looks, the latter would say nothing about it. Praskovya Fedorovna 
came home and her brother went out to her. Ivan Ilych locked the door and began to 
examine himself in the glass, first full face, then in profile. He took up a portrait 
of himself taken with his wife, and compared it with what he saw in the glass. The 
change in him was immense. Then he bared his arms to the elbow, looked at them, 
drew the sleeves down again, sat down on an ottoman, and grew blacker than night.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p5">“No, no, this won’t do!” he said to himself, and jumped up, went 
to the table, took up some law papers and began to read them, but could not continue. 
He unlocked the door and went into the reception-room. The door leading to the drawing-room 
was shut. He approached it on tiptoe and listened.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p6">“No, you are exaggerating!” Praskovya Fedorovna was saying.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p7">“Exaggerating! Don’t you see it? Why, he’s a dead man! Look at 
his eyes — there’s no life in them. But what is it that is wrong with him?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p8">“No one knows. Nikolaevich [that was another doctor] said something, 
but I don’t know what. And Seshchetitsky [this was the celebrated specialist] said 
quite the contrary . . .  ”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p9">Ivan Ilych walked away, went to his own room, lay down, and began 
musing; “The kidney, a floating kidney.” He recalled all the doctors had told him 
of how it detached itself and swayed about. And by an effort of imagination he tried 
to catch that kidney and arrest it and support it. So little was needed for this, 
it seemed to him. “No, I’ll go to see Peter Ivanovich again.” [That was the friend 
whose friend was a doctor.] He rang, ordered the carriage, and got ready to go.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p10">“Where are you going, Jean?” asked his wife with a specially sad 
and exceptionally kind look.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p11">This exceptionally kind look irritated him. He looked morosely 
at her.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p12">“I must go to see Peter Ivanovich.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p13">He went to see Peter Ivanovich, and together they went to see 
his friend, the doctor. He was in, and Ivan Ilych had a long talk with him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p14">Reviewing the anatomical and physiological details of what in 
the doctor’s opinion was going on inside him, he understood it all.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p15">There was something, a small thing, in the vermiform appendix. 
It might all come right. Only stimulate the energy of one organ and check the activity 
of another, then absorption would take place and everything would come right. He 
got home rather late for dinner, ate his dinner, and conversed cheerfully, but could 
not for a long time bring himself to go back to work in his room. At last, however, 
he went to his study and did what was necessary, but the consciousness that he had 
put something aside — an important, intimate matter which he would revert to when 
his work was done — never left him. When he had finished his work he remembered 
that this intimate matter was the thought of his vermiform appendix. But he did 
not give himself up to it, and went to the drawing-room for tea. There were callers 
there, including the examining magistrate who was a desirable match for his daughter, 
and they were conversing, playing the piano, and singing. Ivan Ilych, as Praskovya 
Fedorovna remarked, spent that evening more cheerfully than usual, but he never 
for a moment forgot that he had postponed the important matter of the appendix. 
At eleven o’clock he said goodnight and went to his bedroom. Since his illness he 
had slept alone in a small room next to his study. He undressed and took up a novel 
by Zola, but instead of reading it he fell into thought, and in his imagination 
that desired improvement in the vermiform appendix occurred. There was the absorption 
and evacuation and the re-establishment of normal activity. “Yes, that’s it!” he 
said to himself. “One need only assist nature, that’s all.” He remembered his medicine, 
rose, took it, and lay down on his back watching for the beneficent action of the 
medicine and for it to lessen the pain. “I need only take it regularly and avoid 
all injurious influences. I am already feeling better, much better.” He began touching 
his side: it was not painful to the touch. “There, I really don’t feel it. It’s 
much better already.” He put out the light and turned on his side . . .  “The appendix 
is getting better, absorption is occurring.” Suddenly he felt the old, familiar, 
dull, gnawing pain, stubborn and serious. There was the same familiar loathsome 
taste in his mouth. His heart sand and he felt dazed. “My God! My God!” he muttered. 
“Again, again! And it will never cease.” And suddenly the matter presented itself 
in a quite different aspect. “Vermiform appendix! Kidney!” he said to himself. “It’s 
not a question of appendix or kidney, but of life and . . .  death. Yes, life was there 
and now it is going, going and I cannot stop it. Yes. Why deceive myself? Isn’t 
it obvious to everyone but me that I’m dying, and that it’s only a question of weeks, 
days . . .  it may happen this moment. There was light and now there is darkness. I was 
here and now I’m going there! Where?” A chill came over him, his breathing ceased, 
and he felt only the throbbing of his heart.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p16">“When I am not, what will there be? There will be nothing. Then 
where shall I be when I am no more? Can this be dying? No, I don’t want to!” He 
jumped up and tried to light the candle, felt for it with trembling hands, dropped 
candle and candlestick on the floor, and fell back on his pillow.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p17">“What’s the use? It makes no difference,” he said to himself, 
staring with wide-open eyes into the darkness. “Death. Yes, death. And none of them 
knows or wishes to know it, and they have no pity for me. Now they are playing.” 
(He heard through the door the distant sound of a song and its accompaniment.) “It’s 
all the same to them, but they will die too! Fools! I first, and they later, but 
it will be the same for them. And now they are merry . . .  the beasts!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p18">Anger choked him and he was agonizingly, unbearably miserable. 
“It is impossible that all men have been doomed to suffer this awful horror!” He 
raised himself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p19">“Something must be wrong. I must calm myself — must think it 
all over from the beginning.” And he again began thinking. “Yes, the beginning of 
my illness: I knocked my side, but I was still quite well that day and the next. 
It hurt a little, then rather more. I saw the doctors, then followed despondency 
and anguish, more doctors, and I drew nearer to the abyss. My strength grew less 
and I kept coming nearer and nearer, and now I have wasted away and there is no 
light in my eyes. I think of the appendix — but this is death! I think of mending 
the appendix, and all the while here is death! Can it really be death?” Again terror 
seized him and he gasped for breath. He leant down and began feeling for the matches, 
pressing with his elbow on the stand beside the bed. It was in his way and hurt 
him, he grew furious with it, pressed on it still harder, and upset it. Breathless 
and in despair he fell on his back, expecting death to come immediately.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p20">Meanwhile the visitors were leaving. Praskovya Fedorovna was seeing 
them off. She heard something fall and came in.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p21">“What has happened?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p22">“Nothing. I knocked it over accidentally.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p23">She went out and returned with a candle. He lay there panting 
heavily, like a man who has run a thousand yards, and stared upwards at her with 
a fixed look.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p24">“What is it, Jean?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p25">“No . . .  o . . .  thing. I upset it.” (“Why speak of it? She won’t understand,” 
he thought.)</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p26">And in truth she did not understand. She picked up the stand, 
lit his candle, and hurried away to see another visitor off. When she came back 
he still lay on his back, looking upwards.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p27">“What is it? Do you feel worse?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p28">“Yes.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p29">She shook her head and sat down.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p30">“Do you know, Jean, I think we must ask Leshchetitsky to come 
and see you here.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p31">This meant calling in the famous specialist, regardless of expense. 
He smiled malignantly and said “No.” She remained a little longer and then went 
up to him and kissed his forehead.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p32">While she was kissing him he hated her from the bottom of his 
soul and with difficulty refrained from pushing her away.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p33">“Good night. Please God you’ll sleep.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vi-p34">“Yes.”</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter VI" progress="61.04%" id="vii" prev="vi" next="viii">



<h2 id="vii-p0.1">VI</h2>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p1">Ivan Ilych saw that he was dying, and he was in continual despair.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p2">In the depth of his heart he knew he was dying, but not only was 
he not accustomed to the thought, he simply did not and could not grasp it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p3">The syllogism he had learnt from Kiesewetter’s Logic: “Caius is 
a man, men are mortal, therefore Caius is mortal,” had always seemed to him correct 
as applied to Caius, but certainly not as applied to himself. That Caius — man 
in the abstract — was mortal, was perfectly correct, but he was not Caius, not 
an abstract man, but a creature quite, quite separate from all others. He had been 
little Vanya, with a mamma and a papa, with Mitya and Volodya, with the toys, a 
coachman and a nurse, afterwards with Katenka and will all the joys, griefs, and 
delights of childhood, boyhood, and youth. What did Caius know of the smell of that 
striped leather ball Vanya had been so fond of? Had Caius kissed his mother’s hand 
like that, and did the silk of her dress rustle so for Caius? Had he rioted like 
that at school when the pastry was bad? Had Caius been in love like that? Could 
Caius preside at a session as he did? “Caius really was mortal, and it was right 
for him to die; but for me, little Vanya, Ivan Ilych, with all my thoughts and emotions, 
it’s altogether a different matter. It cannot be that I ought to die. That would 
be too terrible.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p4">Such was his feeling.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p5">“If I had to die like Caius I would have known it was so. An inner 
voice would have told me so, but there was nothing of the sort in me and I and all 
my friends felt that our case was quite different from that of Caius. and now here 
it is!” he said to himself. “It can’t be. It’s impossible! But here it is. How is 
this? How is one to understand it?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p6">He could not understand it, and tried to drive this false, incorrect, 
morbid thought away and to replace it by other proper and healthy thoughts. But 
that thought, and not the thought only but the reality itself, seemed to come and 
confront him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p7">And to replace that thought he called up a succession of others, 
hoping to find in them some support. He tried to get back into the former current 
of thoughts that had once screened the thought of death from him. But strange to 
say, all that had formerly shut off, hidden, and destroyed his consciousness of 
death, no longer had that effect. Ivan Ilych now spent most of his time in attempting 
to re-establish that old current. He would say to himself: “I will take up my duties 
again — after all I used to live by them.” And banishing all doubts he would go 
to the law courts, enter into conversation with his colleagues, and sit carelessly 
as was his wont, scanning the crowd with a thoughtful look and leaning both his 
emaciated arms on the arms of his oak chair; bending over as usual to a colleague 
and drawing his papers nearer he would interchange whispers with him, and then suddenly 
raising his eyes and sitting erect would pronounce certain words and open the proceedings. 
But suddenly in the midst of those proceedings the pain in his side, regardless 
of the stage the proceedings had reached, would begin its own gnawing work. Ivan 
Ilych would turn his attention to it and try to drive the thought of it away, but 
without success. <i>It</i> would come and stand before him and look at him, and he would 
be petrified and the light would die out of his eyes, and he would again begin asking 
himself whether <i>It</i> alone was true. And his colleagues and subordinates would see 
with surprise and distress that he, the brilliant and subtle judge, was becoming 
confused and making mistakes. He would shake himself, try to pull himself together, 
manage somehow to bring the sitting to a close, and return home with the sorrowful 
consciousness that his judicial labours could not as formerly hide from him what 
he wanted them to hide, and could not deliver him from <i>It</i>. And what was worst 
of all was that <i>It</i> drew his attention to itself not in order to make him take 
some action but only that he should look at <i>It</i>, look it straight in the face: 
look at it and without doing anything, suffer inexpressibly.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p8">And to save himself from this condition Ivan Ilych looked for 
consolations — new screens — and new screens were found and for a while seemed 
to save him, but then they immediately fell to pieces or rather became transparent, 
as if <i>It</i> penetrated them and nothing could veil <i>It</i>.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p9">In these latter days he would go into the drawing-room he had 
arranged — that drawing-room where he had fallen and for the sake of which (how 
bitterly ridiculous it seemed) he had sacrificed his life — for he knew that his 
illness originated with that knock. He would enter and see that something had scratched 
the polished table. He would look for the cause of this and find that it was the 
bronze ornamentation of an album, that had got bent. He would take up the expensive 
album which he had lovingly arranged, and feel vexed with his daughter and her friends 
for their untidiness — for the album was torn here and there and some of the photographs 
turned upside down. He would put it carefully in order and bend the ornamentation 
back into position. Then it would occur to him to place all those things in another 
corner of the room, near the plants. He would call the footman, but his daughter 
or wife would come to help him. They would not agree, and his wife would contradict 
him, and he would dispute and grow angry. But that was all right, for then he did 
not think about <i>It</i>. <i>It</i> was invisible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p10">But then, when he was moving something himself, his wife would 
say: “Let the servants do it. You will hurt yourself again.” And suddenly <i>It</i> would 
flash through the screen and he would see it. It was just a flash, and he hoped 
it would disappear, but he would involuntarily pay attention to his side. “It sits 
there as before, gnawing just the same!” And he could no longer forget <i>It</i>, but 
could distinctly see it looking at him from behind the flowers. “What is it all 
for?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p11">“It really is so! I lost my life over that curtain as I might 
have done when storming a fort. Is that possible? How terrible and how stupid. It 
can’t be true! It can’t, but it is.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="vii-p12">He would go to his study, lie down, and again be alone with <i>It</i>: 
face to face with <i>It</i>. And nothing could be done with <i>It</i> except to look at it 
and shudder.</p>


</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter VII" progress="66.01%" id="viii" prev="vii" next="ix">


<h2 id="viii-p0.1">VII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p1">How it happened it is impossible to say because it came about 
step by step, unnoticed, but in the third month of Ivan Ilych’s illness, his wife, 
his daughter, his son, his acquaintances, the doctors, the servants, and above all 
he himself, were aware that the whole interest he had for other people was whether 
he would soon vacate his place, and at last release the living from the discomfort 
caused by his presence and be himself released from his sufferings.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p2">He slept less and less. He was given opium and hypodermic injections 
of morphine, but this did not relieve him. The dull depression he experienced in 
a somnolent condition at first gave him a little relief, but only as something new, 
afterwards it became as distressing as the pain itself or even more so.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p3">Special foods were prepared for him by the doctors’ orders, but 
all those foods became increasingly distasteful and disgusting to him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p4">For his excretions also special arrangements had to be made, and 
this was a torment to him every time — a torment from the uncleanliness, the unseemliness, 
and the smell, and from knowing that another person had to take part in it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p5">But just through his most unpleasant matter, Ivan Ilych obtained 
comfort. Gerasim, the butler’s young assistant, always came in to carry the things 
out. Gerasim was a clean, fresh peasant lad, grown stout on town food and always 
cheerful and bright. At first the sight of him, in his clean Russian peasant costume, 
engaged on that disgusting task embarrassed Ivan Ilych.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p6">Once when he got up from the commode to weak to draw up his trousers, 
he dropped into a soft armchair and looked with horror at his bare, enfeebled thighs 
with the muscles so sharply marked on them.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p7">Gerasim with a firm light tread, his heavy boots emitting a pleasant 
smell of tar and fresh winter air, came in wearing a clean Hessian apron, the sleeves 
of his print shirt tucked up over his strong bare young arms; and refraining from 
looking at his sick master out of consideration for his feelings, and restraining 
the joy of life that beamed from his face, he went up to the commode.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p8">“Gerasim!” said Ivan Ilych in a weak voice.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p9">“Gerasim started, evidently afraid he might have committed some 
blunder, and with a rapid movement turned his fresh, kind, simple young face which 
just showed the first downy signs of a beard.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p10">“Yes, sir?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p11">“That must be very unpleasant for you. You must forgive me. I 
am helpless.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p12">“Oh, why, sir,” and Gerasim’s eyes beamed and he showed his glistening 
white teeth, “what’s a little trouble? It’s a case of illness with you, sir.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p13">And his deft strong hands did their accustomed task, and he went 
out of the room stepping lightly. five minutes later he as lightly returned.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p14">Ivan Ilych was still sitting in the same position in the armchair.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p15">“Gerasim,” he said when the latter had replaced the freshly-washed 
utensil. “Please come here and help me.” Gerasim went up to him. “Lift me up. It 
is hard for me to get up, and I have sent Dmitri away.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p16">Gerasim went up to him, grasped his master with his strong arms 
deftly but gently, in the same way that he stepped — lifted him, supported him 
with one hand, and with the other drew up his trousers and would have set him down 
again, but Ivan Ilych asked to be led to the sofa. Gerasim, without an effort and 
without apparent pressure, led him, almost lifting him, to the sofa and placed him 
on it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p17">“That you. How easily and well you do it all!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p18">Gerasim smiled again and turned to leave the room. But Ivan Ilych 
felt his presence such a comfort that he did not want to let him go.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p19">“One thing more, please move up that chair. No, the other one 
— under my feet. It is easier for me when my feet are raised.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p20">Gerasim brought the chair, set it down gently in place, and raised 
Ivan Ilych’s legs on it. It seemed to Ivan Ilych that he felt better while Gerasim 
was holding up his legs.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p21">“It’s better when my legs are higher,” he said. “Place that cushion 
under them.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p22">Gerasim did so. He again lifted the legs and placed them, and 
again Ivan Ilych felt better while Gerasim held his legs. When he set them down 
Ivan Ilych fancied he felt worse.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p23">“Gerasim,” he said. “Are you busy now?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p24">“Not at all, sir,” said Gerasim, who had learnt from the townsfolk 
how to speak to gentlefolk.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p25">“What have you still to do?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p26">“What have I to do? I’ve done everything except chopping the logs 
for tomorrow.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p27">“Then hold my legs up a bit higher, can you?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p28">“Of course I can. Why not?” and Gerasim raised his master’s legs 
higher and Ivan Ilych thought that in that position he did not feel any pain at 
all.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p29">“And how about the logs?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p30">“Don’t trouble about that, sir. There’s plenty of time.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p31">Ivan Ilych told Gerasim to sit down and hold his legs, and began 
to talk to him. And strange to say it seemed to him that he felt better while Gerasim 
held his legs up.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p32">After that Ivan Ilych would sometimes call Gerasim and get him 
to hold his legs on his shoulders, and he liked talking to him. Gerasim did it all 
easily, willingly, simply, and with a good nature that touched Ivan Ilych. Health, 
strength, and vitality in other people were offensive to him, but Gerasim’s strength 
and vitality did not mortify but soothed him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p33">What tormented Ivan Ilych most was the deception, the lie, which 
for some reason they all accepted, that he was not dying but was simply ill, and 
the only need keep quiet and undergo a treatment and then something very good would 
result. He however knew that do what they would nothing would come of it, only still 
more agonizing suffering and death. This deception tortured him — their not wishing 
to admit what they all knew and what he knew, but wanting to lie to him concerning 
his terrible condition, and wishing and forcing him to participate in that lie. 
Those lies — lies enacted over him on the eve of his death and destined to degrade 
this awful, solemn act to the level of their visitings, their curtains, their sturgeon 
for dinner — were a terrible agony for Ivan Ilych. And strangely enough, many times 
when they were going through their antics over him he had been within a hairbreadth 
of calling out to them: “Stop lying! You know and I know that I am dying. Then at 
least stop lying about it!” But he had never had the spirit to do it. The awful, 
terrible act of his dying was, he could see, reduced by those about him to the level 
of a casual, unpleasant, and almost indecorous incident (as if someone entered a 
drawing room defusing an unpleasant odour) and this was done by that very decorum 
which he had served all his life long. He saw that no one felt for him, because 
no one even wished to grasp his position. Only Gerasim recognized it and pitied 
him. And so Ivan Ilych felt at ease only with him. He felt comforted when Gerasim 
supported his legs (sometimes all night long) and refused to go to bed, saying: 
“Don’t you worry, Ivan Ilych. I’ll get sleep enough later on,” or when he suddenly 
became familiar and exclaimed: “If you weren’t sick it would be another matter, 
but as it is, why should I grudge a little trouble?” Gerasim alone did not lie; 
everything showed that he alone understood the facts of the case and did not consider 
it necessary to disguise them, but simply felt sorry for his emaciated and enfeebled 
master. Once when Ivan Ilych was sending him away he even said straight out: “We 
shall all of us die, so why should I grudge a little trouble?” — expressing the 
fact that he did not think his work burdensome, because he was doing it for a dying 
man and hoped someone would do the same for him when his time came.</p>
<p class="normal" id="viii-p34">Apart from this lying, or because of it, what most tormented Ivan 
Ilych was that no one pitied him as he wished to be pitied. At certain moments after 
prolonged suffering he wished most of all (though he would have been ashamed to 
confess it) for someone to pity him as a sick child is pitied. He longed to be petted 
and comforted. he knew he was an important functionary, that he had a beard turning 
grey, and that therefore what he long for was impossible, but still he longed for 
it. and in Gerasim’s attitude towards him there was something akin to what he wished 
for, and so that attitude comforted him. Ivan Ilych wanted to weep, wanted to be 
petted and cried over, and then his colleague Shebek would come, and instead of 
weeping and being petted, Ivan Ilych would assume a serious, severe, and profound 
air, and by force of habit would express his opinion on a decision of the Court 
of Cassation and would stubbornly insist on that view. This falsity around him and 
within him did more than anything else to poison his last days.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter VIII" progress="72.79%" id="ix" prev="viii" next="x">


<h2 id="ix-p0.1">VIII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p1">It was morning. He knew it was morning because Gerasim had gone, 
and Peter the footman had come and put out the candles, drawn back one of the curtains, 
and begun quietly to tidy up. Whether it was morning or evening, Friday or Sunday, 
made no difference, it was all just the same: the gnawing, unmitigated, agonizing 
pain, never ceasing for an instant, the consciousness of life inexorably waning 
but not yet extinguished, the approach of that ever dreaded and hateful Death which 
was the only reality, and always the same falsity. What were days, weeks, hours, 
in such a case?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p2">“Will you have some tea, sir?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p3">“He wants things to be regular, and wishes the gentlefolk to drink 
tea in the morning,” thought ivan Ilych, and only said “No.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p4">“Wouldn’t you like to move onto the sofa, sir?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p5">“He wants to tidy up the room, and I’m in the way. I am uncleanliness 
and disorder,” he thought, and said only:</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p6">“No, leave me alone.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p7">The man went on bustling about. Ivan Ilych stretched out his hand. 
Peter came up, ready to help.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p8">“What is it, sir?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p9">“My watch.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p10">Peter took the watch which was close at hand and gave it to his 
master.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p11">“Half-past eight. Are they up?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p12">“No sir, except Vladimir Ivanovich” (the son) “who has gone to 
school. Praskovya Fedorovna ordered me to wake her if you asked for her. Shall I 
do so?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p13">“No, there’s no need to.” “Perhaps I’s better have some tea,” 
he thought, and added aloud: “Yes, bring me some tea.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p14">Peter went to the door, but Ivan Ilych dreaded being left alone. 
“How can I keep him here? Oh yes, my medicine.” “Peter, give me my medicine.” “Why 
not? Perhaps it may still do some good.” He took a spoonful and swallowed it. “No, 
it won’t help. It’s all tomfoolery, all deception,” he decided as soon as he became 
aware of the familiar, sickly, hopeless taste. “No, I can’t believe in it any longer. 
But the pain, why this pain? If it would only cease just for a moment!” And he moaned. 
Peter turned towards him. “It’s all right. Go and fetch me some tea.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p15">Peter went out. Left alone Ivan Ilych groaned not so much with 
pain, terrible thought that was, as from mental anguish. Always and for ever the 
same, always these endless days and nights. If only it would come quicker! If only 
<i>what</i> would come quicker? Death, darkness? . . .  No, no! anything rather than death!</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p16">When Peter returned with the tea on a tray, Ivan Ilych stared 
at him for a time in perplexity, not realizing who and what he was. Peter was disconcerted 
by that look and his embarrassment brought Ivan Ilych to himself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p17">“Oh, tea! All right, put it down. Only help me to wash and put 
on a clean shirt.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p18">And Ivan Ilych began to wash. With pauses for rest, he washed 
his hands and then his face, cleaned his teeth, brushed his hair, looked in the 
glass. He was terrified by what he saw, especially by the limp way in which his 
hair clung to his pallid forehead.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p19">While his shirt was being changed he knew that he would be still 
more frightened at the sight of his body, so he avoided looking at it. Finally he 
was ready. He drew on a dressing-gown, wrapped himself in a plaid, and sat down 
in the armchair to take his tea. For a moment he felt refreshed, but as soon as 
he began to drink the tea he was again aware of the same taste, and the pain also 
returned. He finished it with an effort, and then lay down stretching out his legs, 
and dismissed Peter.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p20">Always the same. Now a spark of hope flashes up, then a sea of 
despair rages, and always pain; always pain, always despair, and always the same. 
When alone he had a dreadful and distressing desire to call someone, but he knew 
beforehand that with others present it would be still worse. “Another dose of morphine—to 
lose consciousness. I will tell him, the doctor, that he must think of something 
else. It’s impossible, impossible, to go on like this.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p21">An hour and another pass like that. But now there is a ring at 
the door bell. Perhaps it’s the doctor? It is. He comes in fresh, hearty, plump, 
and cheerful, with that look on his face that seems to say: “There now, you’re in 
a panic about something, but we’ll arrange it all for you directly!” The doctor 
knows this expression is out of place here, but he has put it on once for all and 
can’t take it off — like a man who has put on a frock-coat in the morning to pay 
a round of calls.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p22">The doctor rubs his hands vigorously and reassuringly.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p23">“Brr! How cold it is! There’s such a sharp frost; just let me 
warm myself!” he says, as if it were only a matter of waiting till he was warm, 
and then he would put everything right.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p24">“Well now, how are you?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p25">Ivan Ilych feels that the doctor would like to say: “Well, how 
are our affairs?” but that even he feels that this would not do, and says instead: 
“What sort of a night have you had?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p26">Ivan Ilych looks at him as much as to say: “Are you really never 
ashamed of lying?” But the doctor does not wish to understand this question, and 
Ivan Ilych says: “Just as terrible as ever. The pain never leaves me and never subsides. 
If only something . . .  “</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p27">“Yes, you sick people are always like that. . . .  There, now I think 
I am warm enough. Even Praskovya Fedorovna, who is so particular, could find no 
fault with my temperature. Well, now I can say good-morning,” and the doctor presses 
his patient’s hand.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p28">Then dropping his former playfulness, he begins with a most serious 
face to examine the patient, feeling his pulse and taking his temperature, and then 
begins the sounding and auscultation.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p29">Ivan Ilych knows quite well and definitely that all this is nonsense 
and pure deception, but when the doctor, getting down on his knee, leans over him, 
putting his ear first higher then lower, and performs various gymnastic movements 
over him with a significant expression on his face, Ivan Ilych submits to it all 
as he used to submit to the speeches of the lawyers, though he knew very well that 
they were all lying and why they were lying.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p30">The doctor, kneeling on the sofa, is still sounding him when Praskovya 
Fedorovna’s silk dress rustles at the door and she is heard scolding Peter for not 
having let her know of the doctor’s arrival.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p31">She comes in, kisses her husband, and at once proceeds to prove 
that she has been up a long time already, and only owing to a misunderstanding failed 
to be there when the doctor arrived.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p32">Ivan Ilych looks at her, scans her all over, sets against her 
the whiteness and plumpness and cleanness of her hands and neck, the gloss of her 
hair, and the sparkle of her vivacious eyes. He hates her with his whole soul. And 
the thrill of hatred he feels for her makes him suffer from her touch.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p33">Her attitude towards him and his diseases is still the same. Just 
as the doctor had adopted a certain relation to his patient which he could not abandon, 
so had she formed one towards him — that he was not doing something he ought to 
do and was himself to blame, and that she reproached him lovingly for this — and 
she could not now change that attitude.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p34">“You see he doesn’t listen to me and doesn’t take his medicine 
at the proper time. And above all he lies in a position that is no doubt bad for 
him — with his legs up.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p35">She described how he made Gerasim hold his legs up.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p36">The doctor smiled with a contemptuous affability that said: “What’s 
to be done? These sick people do have foolish fancies of that kind, but we must 
forgive them.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p37">When the examination was over the doctor looked at his watch, 
and then Praskovya Fedorovna announced to Ivan Ilych that it was of course as he 
pleased, but she had sent today for a celebrated specialist who would examine him 
and have a consultation with Michael Danilovich (their regular doctor).</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p38">“Please don’t raise any objections. I am doing this for my own 
sake,” she said ironically, letting it be felt that she was doing it all for his 
sake and only said this to leave him no right to refuse. He remained silent, knitting 
his brows. He felt that he was surrounded and involved in a mesh of falsity that 
it was hard to unravel anything.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p39">Everything she did for him was entirely for her own sake, and 
she told him she was doing for herself what she actually was doing for herself, 
as if that was so incredible that he must understand the opposite.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p40">At half-past eleven the celebrated specialist arrived. Again the 
sounding began and the significant conversations in his presence and in another 
room, about the kidneys and the appendix, and the questions and answers, with such 
an air of importance that again, instead of the real question of life and death 
which now alone confronted him, the question arose of the kidney and appendix which 
were not behaving as they ought to and would now be attached by Michael Danilovich 
and the specialist and forced to amend their ways.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p41">The celebrated specialist took leave of him with a serious though 
not hopeless look, and in reply to the timid question Ivan Ilych, with eyes glistening 
with fear and hope, put to him as to whether there was a chance of recovery, said 
that he could not vouch for it but there was a possibility. The look of hope with 
which Ivan Ilych watched the doctor out was so pathetic that Praskovya Fedorovna, 
seeing it, even wept as she left the room to hand the doctor his fee.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p42">The gleam of hope kindled by the doctor’s encouragement did not 
last long. The same room, the same pictures, curtains, wall-paper, medicine bottles, 
were all there, and the same aching suffering body, and Ivan Ilych began to moan. 
They gave him a subcutaneous injection and he sank into oblivion.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p43">It was twilight when he came to. They brought him his dinner and 
he swallowed some beef tea with difficulty, and then everything was the same again 
and night was coming on.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p44">After dinner, at seven o’clock, Praskovya Fedorovna came into 
the room in evening dress, her full bosom pushed up by her corset, and with traces 
of powder on her face. She had reminded him in the morning that they were going 
to the theatre. Sarah Bernhardt was visiting the town and they had a box, which 
he had insisted on their taking. Now he had forgotten about it and her toilet offended 
him, but he concealed his vexation when he remembered that he had himself insisted 
on their securing a box and going because it would be an instructive and aesthetic 
pleasure for the children.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p45">Praskovya Fedorovna came in, self-satisfied but yet with a rather 
guilty air. She sat down and asked how he was, but, as he saw, only for the sake 
of asking and not in order to learn about it, knowing that there was nothing to 
learn — and then went on to what she really wanted to say: that she would not on 
any account have gone but that the box had been taken and Helen and their daughter 
were going, as well as Petrishchev (the examining magistrate, their daughter’s fiance) 
and that it was out of the question to let them go alone; but that she would have 
much preferred to sit with him for a while; and he must be sure to follow the doctor’s 
orders while she was away.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p46">“Oh, and Fedor Petrovich” (the fiance) “would like to come in. 
May he? And Lisa?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p47">“All right.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p48">Their daughter came in in full evening dress, her fresh young 
flesh exposed (making a show of that very flesh which in his own case caused so 
much suffering), strong, healthy, evidently in love, and impatient with illness, 
suffering, and death, because they interfered with her happiness.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p49">Fedor petrovich came in too, in evening dress, his hair curled 
<i><span lang="FR" id="ix-p49.1">a la Capoul</span></i>, a tight stiff collar round his long sinewy neck, an enormous white 
shirt-front and narrow black trousers tightly stretched over his strong thighs. 
He had one white glove tightly drawn on, and was holding his opera hat in his hand.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p50">Following him the schoolboy crept in unnoticed, in a new uniform, 
poor little fellow, and wearing gloves. Terribly dark shadows showed under his eyes, 
the meaning of which Ivan Ilych knew well.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p51">His son had always seemed pathetic to him, and now it was dreadful 
to see the boy’s frightened look of pity. It seemed to Ivan Ilych that Vasya was 
the only one besides Gerasim who understood and pitied him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p52">They all sat down and again asked how he was. A silence followed. 
Lisa asked her mother about the opera glasses, and there was an altercation between 
mother and daughter as to who had taken them and where they had been put. This occasioned 
some unpleasantness.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p53">Fedor Petrovich inquired of Ivan Ilych whether he had ever seen 
Sarah Bernhardt. Ivan Ilych did not at first catch the question, but then replied: 
“No, have you seen her before?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p54">“Yes, in <i>Adrienne Lecouvreur</i>.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p55">Praskovya Fedorovna mentioned some roles in which Sarah Bernhardt 
was particularly good. Her daughter disagreed. Conversation sprang up as to the 
elegance and realism of her acting — the sort of conversation that is always repeated 
and is always the same.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p56">In the midst of the conversation Fedor Petrovich glanced at Ivan 
Ilych and became silent. The others also looked at him and grew silent. Ivan Ilych 
was staring with glittering eyes straight before him, evidently indignant with them. 
This had to be rectified, but it was impossible to do so. The silence had to be 
broken, but for a time no one dared to break it and they all became afraid that 
the conventional deception would suddenly become obvious and the truth become plain 
to all. Lisa was the first to pluck up courage and break that silence, but by trying 
to hide what everybody was feeling, she betrayed it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p57">“Well, if we are going it’s time to start,” she said, looking 
at her watch, a present from her father, and with a faint and significant smile 
at Fedor Petrovich relating to something known only to them. She got up with a rustle 
of her dress.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p58">They all rose, said good-night, and went away.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p59">When they had gone it seemed to Ivan Ilych that he felt better; 
the falsity had gone with them. But the pain remained — that same pain and that 
same fear that made everything monotonously alike, nothing harder and nothing easier. 
Everything was worse.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p60">Again minute followed minute and hour followed hour. Everything 
remained the same and there was no cessation. And the inevitable end of it all became 
more and more terrible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ix-p61">“Yes, send Gerasim here,” he replied to a question Peter asked.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter IX" progress="83.94%" id="x" prev="ix" next="xi">



<h2 id="x-p0.1">IX</h2>
<p class="normal" id="x-p1">His wife returned late at night. She came in on tiptoe, but he 
heard her, opened his eyes, and made haste to close them again. She wished to send 
Gerasim away and to sit with him herself, but he opened his eyes and said: “No, 
go away.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p2">“Are you in great pain?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p3">“Always the same.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p4">“Take some opium.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p5">He agreed and took some. She went away.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p6">Till about three in the morning he was in a state of stupefied 
misery. It seemed to him that he and his pain were being thrust into a narrow, deep 
black sack, but though they were pushed further and further in they could not be 
pushed to the bottom. And this, terrible enough in itself, was accompanied by suffering. 
He was frightened yet wanted to fall through the sack, he struggled but yet co-operated. 
And suddenly he broke through, fell, and regained consciousness. Gerasim was sitting 
at the foot of the bed dozing quietly and patiently, while he himself lay with his 
emaciated stockinged legs resting on Gerasim’s shoulders; the same shaded candle 
was there and the same unceasing pain.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p7">“Go away, Gerasim,” he whispered.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p8">“It’s all right, sir. I’ll stay a while.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p9">“No. Go away.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p10">He removed his legs from Gerasim’s shoulders, turned sideways 
onto his arm, and felt sorry for himself. He only waited till Gerasim had gone into 
the next room and then restrained himself no longer but wept like a child. He wept 
on account of his helplessness, his terrible loneliness, the cruelty of man, the 
cruelty of God, and the absence of God.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p11">“Why hast Thou done all this? Why hast Thou brought me here? Why, 
why dost Thou torment me so terribly?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p12">He did not expect an answer and yet wept because there was no 
answer and could be none. The pain again grew more acute, but he did not stir and 
did not call. He said to himself: “Go on! Strike me! But what is it for? What have 
I done to Thee? What is it for?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p13">Then he grew quiet and not only ceased weeping but even held his 
breath and became all attention. It was as though he were listening not to an audible 
voice but to the voice of his soul, to the current of thoughts arising within him.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p14">“What is it you want?” was the first clear conception capable 
of expression in words, that he heard.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p15">“What do you want? What do you want?” he repeated to himself.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p16">“What do I want? To live and not to suffer,” he answered.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p17">And again he listened with such concentrated attention that even 
his pain did not distract him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p18">“To live? How?” asked his inner voice.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p19">“Why, to live as I used to — well and pleasantly.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p20">“As you lived before, well and pleasantly?” the voice repeated.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p21">And in imagination he began to recall the best moments of his 
pleasant life. But strange to say none of those best moments of his pleasant life 
now seemed at all what they had then seemed — none of them except the first recollections 
of childhood. There, in childhood, there had been something really pleasant with 
which it would be possible to live if it could return. But the child who had experienced 
that happiness existed no longer, it was like a reminiscence of somebody else.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p22">as soon as the period began which had produced the present Ivan 
Ilych, all that had then seemed joys now melted before his sight and turned into 
something trivial and often nasty.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p23">And the further he departed from childhood and the nearer he came 
to the present the more worthless and doubtful were the joys. This began with the 
School of Law. A little that was really good was still found there — there was 
light-heartedness, friendship, and hope. But in the upper classes there had already 
been fewer of such good moments. Then during the first years of his official career, 
when he was in the service of the governor, some pleasant moments again occurred: 
they were the memories of love for a woman. Then all became confused and there was 
still less of what was good; later on again there was still less that was good, 
and the further he went the less there was. His marriage, a mere accident, then 
the disenchantment that followed it, his wife’s bad breath and the sensuality and 
hypocrisy: then that deadly official life and those preoccupations about money, 
a year of it, and two, and ten, and twenty, and always the same thing. And the longer 
it lasted the more deadly it became. “It is as if I had been going downhill while 
I imagined I was going up. And that is really what it was. I was going up in public 
opinion, but to the same extent life was ebbing away from me. And now it is all 
done and there is only death.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p24">“Then what does it mean? Why? It can’t be that life is so senseless 
and horrible. But if it really has been so horrible and senseless, why must I die 
and die in agony? There is something wrong!</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p25">“Maybe I did not live as I ought to have done,” it suddenly occurred 
to him. “But how could that be, when I did everything properly?” he replied, and 
immediately dismissed from his mind this, the sole solution of all the riddles of 
life and death, as something quite impossible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="x-p26">“Then what do you want now? To live? Live how? Live as you lived 
in the law courts when the usher proclaimed ‘The judge is coming!’ The judge is 
coming, the judge!” he repeated to himself. “Here he is, the judge. But I am not 
guilty!” he exclaimed angrily. “What is it for?” And he ceased crying, but turning 
his face to the wall continued to ponder on the same question: Why, and for what 
purpose, is there all this horror? But however much he pondered he found no answer. 
And whenever the thought occurred to him, as it often did, that it all resulted 
from his not having lived as he ought to have done, he at once recalled the correctness 
of his whole life and dismissed so strange an idea.</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter X" progress="88.39%" id="xi" prev="x" next="xii">



<h2 id="xi-p0.1">X</h2>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p1">Another fortnight passed. Ivan Ilych now no longer left his sofa. 
He would not lie in bed but lay on the sofa, facing the wall nearly all the time. 
He suffered ever the same unceasing agonies and in his loneliness pondered always 
on the same insoluble question: “What is this? Can it be that it is Death?” And 
the inner voice answered: “Yes, it is Death.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p2">“Why these sufferings?” And the voice answered, “For no reason 
— they just are so.” Beyond and besides this there was nothing.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p3">From the very beginning of his illness, ever since he had first 
been to see the doctor, Ivan Ilych’s life had been divided between two contrary 
and alternating moods: now it was despair and the expectation of this uncomprehended 
and terrible death, and now hope and an intently interested observation of the functioning 
of his organs. Now before his eyes there was only a kidney or an intestine that 
temporarily evaded its duty, and now only that incomprehensible and dreadful death 
from which it was impossible to escape.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p4">These two states of mind had alternated from the very beginning 
of his illness, but the further it progressed the more doubtful and fantastic became 
the conception of the kidney, and the more real the sense of impending death.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p5">He had but to call to mind what he had been three months before 
and what he was now, to call to mind with what regularity he had been going downhill, 
for every possibility of hope to be shattered.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p6">Latterly during the loneliness in which he found himself as he 
lay facing the back of the sofa, a loneliness in the midst of a populous town and 
surrounded by numerous acquaintances and relations but that yet could not have been 
more complete anywhere — either at the bottom of the sea or under the earth — 
during that terrible loneliness Ivan ilych had lived only in memories of the past. 
Pictures of his past rose before him one after another. they always began with what 
was nearest in time and then went back to what was most remote — to his childhood 
— and rested there. If he thought of the stewed prunes that had been offered him 
that day, his mind went back to the raw shrivelled French plums of his childhood, 
their peculiar flavour and the flow of saliva when he sucked their stones, and along 
with the memory of that taste came a whole series of memories of those days: his 
nurse, his brother, and their toys. “No, I mustn’t thing of that. . . . It is too painful,” 
Ivan Ilych said to himself, and brought himself back to the present — to the button 
on the back of the sofa and the creases in its morocco. “Morocco is expensive, but 
it does not wear well: there had been a quarrel about it. It was a different kind 
of quarrel and a different kind of morocco that time when we tore father’s portfolio 
and were punished, and mamma brought us some tarts. . . .” And again his thoughts dwelt 
on his childhood, and again it was painful and he tried to banish them and fix his 
mind on something else.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p7">Then again together with that chain of memories another series 
passed through his mind — of how his illness had progressed and grown worse. There 
also the further back he looked the more life there had been. There had been more 
of what was good in life and more of life itself. The two merged together. “Just 
as the pain went on getting worse and worse, so my life grew worse and worse,” he 
thought. “There is one bright spot there at the back, at the beginning of life, 
and afterwards all becomes blacker and blacker and proceeds more and more rapidly 
— in inverse ration to the square of the distance from death,” thought Ivan Ilych. 
And the example of a stone falling downwards with increasing velocity entered his 
mind. Life, a series of increasing sufferings, flies further and further towards 
its end — the most terrible suffering. “I am flying. . . .” He shuddered, shifted 
himself, and tried to resist, but was already aware that resistance was impossible, 
and again with eyes weary of gazing but unable to cease seeing what was before them, 
he stared at the back of the sofa and waited — awaiting that dreadful fall and 
shock and destruction.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xi-p8">“Resistance is impossible!” he said to himself. “If I could only 
understand what it is all for! But that too is impossible. An explanation would 
be possible if it could be said that I have not lived as I ought to. But it is impossible 
to say that,” and he remembered all the legality, correctitude, and propriety of 
his life. “That at any rate can certainly not be admitted,” he thought, and his 
lips smiled ironically as if someone could see that smile and be taken in by it. 
“There is no explanation! Agony, death. . . . What for?”</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter XI" progress="92.06%" id="xii" prev="xi" next="xiii">



<h2 id="xii-p0.1">XI</h2>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p1">Another two weeks went by in this way and during that fortnight 
an event occurred that Ivan Ilych and his wife had desired. Petrishchev formally 
proposed. It happened in the evening. The next day Praskovya Fedorovna came into 
her husband’s room considering how best to inform him of it, but that very night 
there had been a fresh change for the worse in his condition. She found him still 
lying on the sofa but in a different position. He lay on his back, groaning and 
staring fixedly straight in front of him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p2">She began to remind him of his medicines, but he turned his eyes 
towards her with such a look that she did not finish what she was saying; so great 
an animosity, to her in particular, did that look express.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p3">“For Christ’s sake let me die in peace!” he said.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p4">She would have gone away, but just then their daughter came in 
and went up to say good morning. He looked at her as he had done at his wife, and 
in reply to her inquiry about his health said dryly that he would soon free them 
all of himself. They were both silent and after sitting with him for a while went 
away.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p5">“Is it our fault?” Lisa said to her mother. “It’s as if we were 
to blame! I am sorry for papa, but why should we be tortured?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p6">The doctor came at his usual time. Ivan Ilych answered “Yes” and 
“No,” never taking his angry eyes from him, and at last said: “You know you can 
do nothing for me, so leave me alone.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p7">“We can ease your sufferings.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p8">“You can’t even do that. Let me be.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p9">The doctor went into the drawing room and told Praskovya Fedorovna 
that the case was very serious and that the only resource left was opium to allay 
her husband’s sufferings, which must be terrible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p10">It was true, as the doctor said, that Ivan Ilych’s physical sufferings 
were terrible, but worse than the physical sufferings were his mental sufferings 
which were his chief torture.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p11">His mental sufferings were due to the fact that that night, as 
he looked at Gerasim’s sleepy, good-natured face with it prominent cheek-bones, 
the question suddenly occurred to him: “What if my whole life has been wrong?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p12">It occurred to him that what had appeared perfectly impossible 
before, namely that he had not spent his life as he should have done, might after 
all be true. It occurred to him that his scarcely perceptible attempts to struggle 
against what was considered good by the most highly placed people, those scarcely 
noticeable impulses which he had immediately suppressed, might have been the real 
thing, and all the rest false. And his professional duties and the whole arrangement 
of his life and of his family, and all his social and official interests, might 
all have been false. He tried to defend all those things to himself and suddenly 
felt the weakness of what he was defending. There was nothing to defend.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p13">“But if that is so,” he said to himself, “and i am leaving this 
life with the consciousness that I have lost all that was given me and it is impossible 
to rectify it — what then?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p14">He lay on his back and began to pass his life in review in quite 
a new way. In the morning when he saw first his footman, then his wife, then his 
daughter, and then the doctor, their every word and movement confirmed to him the 
awful truth that had been revealed to him during the night. In them he saw himself 
— all that for which he had lived — and saw clearly that it was not real at all, 
but a terrible and huge deception which had hidden both life and death. This consciousness 
intensified his physical suffering tenfold. He groaned and tossed about, and pulled 
at his clothing which choked and stifled him. And he hated them on that account.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p15">He was given a large dose of opium and became unconscious, but 
at noon his sufferings began again. He drove everybody away and tossed from side 
to side.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p16">His wife came to him and said:</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p17">“Jean, my dear, do this for me. It can’t do any harm and often 
helps. Healthy people often do it.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p18">He opened his eyes wide.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p19">“What? Take communion? Why? It’s unnecessary! However . . .  ”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p20">She began to cry.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p21">“Yes, do, my dear. I’ll send for our priest. He is such a nice 
man.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p22">“All right. Very well,” he muttered.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p23">When the priest came and heard his confession, Ivan Ilych was 
softened and seemed to feel a relief from his doubts and consequently from his sufferings, 
and for a moment there came a ray of hope. He again began to think of the vermiform 
appendix and the possibility of correcting it. He received the sacrament with tears 
in his eyes.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p24">When they laid him down again afterwards he felt a moment’s ease, 
and the hope that he might live awoke in him again. He began to think of the operation 
that had been suggested to him. “To live! I want to live!” he said to himself.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p25">His wife came in to congratulate him after his communion, and 
when uttering the usual conventional words she added:</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p26">“You feel better, don’t you?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p27">Without looking at her he said “Yes.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p28">Her dress, her figure, the expression of her face, the tone of 
her voice, all revealed the same thing. “This is wrong, it is not as it should be. 
All you have lived for and still live for is falsehood and deception, hiding life 
and death from you.” And as soon as he admitted that thought, his hatred and his 
agonizing physical suffering again sprang up, and with that suffering a consciousness 
of the unavoidable, approaching end. And to this was added a new sensation of grinding 
shooting pain and a feeling of suffocation.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p29">The expression of his face when he uttered that “Yes” was dreadful. 
Having uttered it, he looked her straight in the eyes, turned on his face with a 
rapidity extraordinary in his weak state and shouted:</p>
<p class="normal" id="xii-p30">“Go away! Go away and leave me alone!”</p>

</div1>

    <div1 title="Chapter XII" progress="96.51%" id="xiii" prev="xii" next="xiv">



<h2 id="xiii-p0.1">XII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p1">From that moment the screaming began that continued for three 
days, and was so terrible that one could not hear it through two closed doors without 
horror. At the moment he answered his wife realized that he was lost, that there 
was no return, that the end had come, the very end, and his doubts were still unsolved 
and remained doubts.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p2">“Oh! Oh! Oh!” he cried in various intonations. he had begun by 
screaming “I won’t!” and continued screaming on the letter “O”.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p3">For three whole days, during which time did not exist for him, 
he struggled in that black sack into which he was being thrust by an invisible, 
resistless force. He struggled as a man condemned to death struggles in the hands 
of the executioner, knowing that he cannot save himself. And every moment he felt 
that despite all his efforts he was drawing nearer and nearer to what terrified 
him. he felt that his agony was due to his being thrust into that black hole and 
still more to his not being able to get right into it. He was hindered from getting 
into it by his conviction that his life had been a good one. That very justification 
of his life held him fast and prevented his moving forward, and it caused him most 
torment of all.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p4">Suddenly some force struck him in the chest and side, making it 
still harder to breathe, and he fell through the hole and there at the bottom was 
a light. What had happened to him was like the sensation one sometimes experiences 
in a railway carriage when one thinks one is going backwards while one is really 
going forwards and suddenly becomes aware of the real direction.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p5">“Yes, it was not the right thing,” he said to himself, “but that’s 
no matter. It can be done. But what <i>is</i> the right thing? he asked himself, and 
suddenly grew quiet.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p6">This occurred at the end of the third day, two hours before his 
death. Just then his schoolboy son had crept softly in and gone up to the bedside. 
The dying man was still screaming desperately and waving his arms. His hand fell 
on the boy’s head, and the boy caught it, pressed it to his lips, and began to cry.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p7">At that very moment Ivan Ilych fell through and caught sight of 
the light, and it was revealed to him that though his life had not been what it 
should have been, this could still be rectified. He asked himself, “What <i>is</i> the 
right thing?” and grew still, listening. Then he felt that someone was kissing his 
hand. He opened his eyes, looked at his son, and felt sorry for him. His wife camp 
up to him and he glanced at her. She was gazing at him open-mouthed, with undried 
tears on her nose and cheek and a despairing look on her face. He felt sorry for 
her too.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p8">“Yes, I am making them wretched,” he thought. “They are sorry, 
but it will be better for them when I die.” He wished to say this but had not the 
strength to utter it. “Besides, why speak? I must act,” he thought. with a look 
at his wife he indicated his son and said: “Take him away . . .  sorry for him . . .  sorry 
for you too. . . .” He tried to add, “Forgive me,” but said “Forego” and waved his 
hand, knowing that He whose understanding mattered would understand.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p9">And suddenly it grew clear to him that what had been oppressing 
him and would not leave his was all dropping away at once from two sides, from ten 
sides, and from all sides. He was sorry for them, he must act so as not to hurt 
them: release them and free himself from these sufferings. “How good and how simple!” 
he thought. “And the pain?” he asked himself. “What has become of it? Where are 
you, pain?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p10">He turned his attention to it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p11">“Yes, here it is. Well, what of it? Let the pain be.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p12">“And death . . .  where is it?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p13">He sought his former accustomed fear of death and did not find 
it. “Where is it? What death?” There was no fear because there was no death.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p14">In place of death there was light.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p15">“So that’s what it is!” he suddenly exclaimed aloud. “What joy!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p16">To him all this happened in a single instant, and the meaning 
of that instant did not change. For those present his agony continued for another 
two hours. Something rattled in his throat, his emaciated body twitched, then the 
gasping and rattle became less and less frequent.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p17">“It is finished!” said someone near him.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p18">He heard these words and repeated them in his soul.</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p19">“Death is finished,” he said to himself. “It is no more!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="xiii-p20">He drew in a breath, stopped in the midst of a sigh, stretched 
out, and died.</p>
</div1>

    <!-- added reason="AutoIndexing" -->
    <div1 title="Indexes" id="xiv" prev="xiii" next="xiv.i">
      <h1 id="xiv-p0.1">Indexes</h1>

      <div2 title="French Words and Phrases" id="xiv.i" prev="xiv" next="toc">
        <h2 id="xiv.i-p0.1">Index of French Words and Phrases</h2>
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<ul class="Index1">
 <li>Il faut que jeunesse se passe.: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#iii-p9.1">1</a></li>
 <li>a la Capoul: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#ix-p49.1">1</a></li>
 <li>bon enfant: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#iii-p8.1">1</a></li>
 <li>comme il faut: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#iii-p11.1">1</a>
  <a class="TOC" href="#iv-p16.1">2</a></li>
 <li>de gaiete de coeur: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#iii-p19.1">1</a></li>
 <li>le phenix de la famille: 
  <a class="TOC" href="#iii-p4.1">1</a></li>
</ul>
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