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Author

Anton Chekhov

/anton-chekhov-quotes-and-sayings

137 Quotes
26 Works

Author Summary

About Anton Chekhov on QuoteMust

Anton Chekhov currently has 137 indexed quotes and 26 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

A Life in Letters About Love and Other Stories Five Great Short Stories Gooseberries Gooseberries and Other Stories Ivanov Misery My Life Selected Stories Short Stories The Bet and Other Stories The Cherry Orchard The Complete Short Novels The Complete Short Stories of Anton Chekhov The Essential Tales of Chekhov The Exclamation Mark The Lady With the Little Dog and Other Stories, 1896-1904 The Lottery Ticket The Portable Chekhov The Seagull The Shooting Party The Three Sisters The Witch and Other Stories The Wood Demon: A Comedy in Four Acts Three Sisters: A Translation Of The Play By Anton Chekhov Uncle Vanya

Quotes

All quote cards for Anton Chekhov

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I'm not saying that French books are talented, and intelligent, and noble. They don't satisfy me either. But they're less boring than the Russian ones, and not seldom one finds in them the main element of creative work___ sense of personal freedom, which Russian authors don't have. I can't remember a single new book in which the author doesn't do his best, from the very first page, to entangle himself in all possible conventions and private deals with his conscience. One is afraid to speak of the naked body, another is bound hand and foot by psychological analysis, a third must have "a warm attitude towards humanity," a fourth purposely wallows for whole pages in descriptions of nature, lest he be suspected of tendentiousness... One insists on being a bourgeois in his work, another an aristocrat, etc. Contrivance, caution, keeping one's own counsel, but no freedom nor courage to write as one wishes, and therefore no creativity.- A Boring Story

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Anton Chekhov

Selected Stories

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Yakov spent the whole day playing his fiddle; when it got completely dark, he took the notebook in which he recorded his losses daily, and out of boredom began adding up the yearly total. It came to over a thousand roubles. This astounded him so much that he flung the abacus to the floor and stamped his feet. Then he picked up the abacus, again clicked away for a long time, and sighed deeply and tensely. His face was purple and wet with sweat. He thought that if he could have put that lost thousand roubles in the bank, he would have earned at least forty roubles a year in interest. And therefore those forty roubles were a loss. In short, wherever you turned, there was nothing but losses every

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Anton Chekhov

Selected Stories

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In short, the man displayed a constant and insurmountable impulse to wrap himself in a covering, to make himself, so to speak, a case which would isolate him and protect him from external influences. Reality irritated him, frightened him, kept him in continual agitation, and, perhaps to justify his timidity, his aversion for the actual, he always praised the past and what had never existed; and even the classical languages which he taught were in reality for him goloshes and umbrellas in which he sheltered himself from real life.

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Anton Chekhov

The Complete Short Stories of Anton Chekhov

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When describing nature, a writer should seize upon small details, arranging them so that the reader will see an image in his mind after he closes his eyes. For instance: you will capture the truth of a moonlit night if you'll write that a gleam like starlight shone from the pieces of a broken bottle, and then the dark, plump shadow of a dog or wolf appeared. You will bring life to nature only if you don't shrink from similes that liken its activities to those of human