Anton
Chekhov (1860-1904) by Mihail Chekhov (translated by Constance Garnett)
In 1841 a serf
belonging to a Russian nobleman purchased his freedom and the freedom of his
family for 3,500 rubles, being at the rate of 700 rubles a soul, with one daughter,
Alexandra, thrown in for nothing. The grandson of this serf was Anton
Chekhov, the author; the son of the nobleman was Tchertkov, the Tolstoyan and
friend of Tolstoy.
There is in this
nothing striking to a Russian, but to the English student it is sufficiently
significant for several reasons. It illustrates how recent a growth was the
educated middle-class in pre-revolutionary Russia, and it shows, what is
perhaps more significant, the homogeneity of the Russian people, and their
capacity for completely changing their whole way of life.
Chekhov’s father
started life as a slave, but the son of this slave was even more sensitive to
the Arts, more innately civilized and in love with the things of the mind
than the son of the slaveowner. Chekhov’s father, Pavel Yegorovitch, had a
passion for music and singing; while he was still a serf boy he learned to
read music at sight and to play the violin. A few years after his freedom had
been purchased he settled at Taganrog, a town on the Sea of Azov, where he
afterwards opened a “Colonial Stores.”
This business did
well until the construction of the railway to Vladikavkaz, which greatly
diminished the importance of Taganrog
as a port and a trading centre. But Pavel Yegorovitch was always inclined to
neglect his business. He took an active part in all the affairs of the town,
devoted himself to church singing, conducted the choir, played on the violin,
and painted ikons.
In 1854 he married
Yevgenia Yakovlevna Morozov, the daughter of a cloth merchant of fairly good
education who had settled down at Taganrog after a life spent in travelling
about Russia in the course of his business.
There were six
children, five of whom were boys, Anton being the third son. The family was
an ordinary patriarchal household of the kind common at that time. The father
was severe, and in exceptional cases even went so far as to chastise his
children, but they all lived on warm and affectionate terms. Everyone got up
early, the boys went to the high school, and when they returned learned their
lessons. All of them had their hobbies. The eldest, Alexandr, would construct
an electric battery, Nikolay used to draw, Ivan to bind books, while Anton
was always writing stories. In the evening, when their father came home from
the shop, there was choral singing or a duet.
Pavel Yegorovitch
trained his children into a regular choir, taught them to sing music at
sight, and play on the violin, while at one time they had a music teacher for
the piano too. There was also a French governess who came to teach the
children languages. Every Saturday the whole family went to the evening
service, and on their return sang hymns and burned incense. On Sunday morning
they went to early mass, after which they all sang hymns in chorus at home.
Anton had to learn the whole church service by heart and sing it over with
his brothers.
The chief
characteristic distinguishing the Chekhov family from their neighbours was
their habit of singing and having religious services at home.
Though the boys had
often to take their father’s place in the shop, they had leisure enough to
enjoy themselves. They sometimes went for whole days to the sea fishing,
played Russian tennis, and went for excursions to their grandfather’s in the
country. Anton was a sturdy, lively boy, extremely intelligent, and
inexhaustible in jokes and enterprises of all kinds. He used to get up
lectures and performances, and was always acting and mimicking. As children,
the brothers got up a performance of Gogol’s “Inspector General,” in which
Anton took the part of Gorodnitchy. One of Anton’s favourite improvisations
was a scene in which the Governor of the town attended church parade at a
festival and stood in the centre of the church, on a rug surrounded by
foreign consuls. Anton, dressed in his high-school uniform, with his
grandfather’s old sabre coming to his shoulder, used to act the part of the
Governor with extraordinary subtlety and carry out a review of imaginary
Cossacks. Often the children would gather round their mother or their old
nurse to hear stories.
Chekhov’s story
“Happiness” was written under the influence of one of his nurse’s tales,
which were always of the mysterious, of the extraordinary, of the terrible,
and poetical.
Their mother, on
the other hand, told the children stories of real life, describing how she
had travelled all over Russia as a little girl, how the Allies had bombarded
Taganrog during the Crimean War, and how hard life had been for the peasants
in the days of serfdom. She instilled into her children a hatred of brutality
and a feeling of regard for all who were in an inferior position, and for
birds and animals.
Chekhov in later
years used to say: “Our talents we got from our father, but our soul from our
mother.”
In 1875 the two
elder boys went to Moscow.
After their
departure the business went from bad to worse, and the family sank into
poverty.
In 1876 Pavel
Yegorovitch closed his shop, and went to join his sons in Moscow. While
earning their own living, one was a student at the University, and the other
a student at the School
of Sculpture and
Painting. The house was sold by auction, one of the creditors took all the
furniture, and Chekhov’s mother was left with nothing. Some months afterwards
she went to rejoin her husband in Moscow, taking the younger children with
her, while Anton, who was then sixteen, lived on in solitude at Taganrog for
three whole years, earning his own living, and paying for his education at
the high school.
He lived in the
house that had been his father’s, in the family of one Selivanov, the
creditor who had bought it, and gave lessons to the latter’s nephew, a
Cossack. He went with his pupil to the latter’s house in the country, and
learned to ride and shoot. During the last two years he was very fond of the
society of the high-school girls, and used to tell his brothers that he had
had the most delightful flirtations.
At the same time he
went frequently to the theatre and was very fond of French melodramas, so
that he was by no means crushed by his early struggle for existence. In 1879
he went to Moscow
to enter the University, bringing with him two school-fellows who boarded
with his family. He found his father had just succeeded in getting work away
from home, so that from the first day of his arrival he found himself head of
the family, every member of which had to work for their common livelihood.
Even little Mihail used to copy out lectures for students, and so made a
little money. It was the absolute necessity of earning money to pay for his
fees at the University and to help in supporting the household that forced
Anton to write. That winter he wrote his first published story, “A Letter to
a Learned Neighbour.” All the members of the family were closely bound
together round one common centre—Anton. “What will Anton say?” was always
their uppermost thought on every occasion.
Ivan soon became
the master of the parish school at Voskresensk, a little town in the Moscow
province. Living was cheap there, so the other members of the family spent
the summer there; they were joined by Anton when he had taken his degree, and
the Chekhovs soon had a large circle of friends in the neighbourhood. Every
day the company met, went long walks, played croquet, discussed politics,
read aloud, and went into raptures over Shtchedrin. Here Chekhov gained an
insight into military society which he afterwards turned to account in his
play “The Three Sisters.”
One day a young
doctor called Uspensky came in from Zvenigorod, a small town fourteen miles
away. “Look here,” he said to Chekhov, “I am going away for a holiday and
can’t find anyone to take my place.... You take the job on. My Pelageya will
cook for you, and there is a guitar there....”
Voskresensk and
Zvenigorod played an important part in Chekhov’s life as a writer; a whole
series of his tales is founded on his experiences there, besides which it was
his first introduction to the society of literary and artistic people. Three
or four miles from Voskresensk was the estate of a landowner, A. S. Kiselyov,
whose wife was the daughter of Begitchev, the director of the Moscow Imperial
Theatre. The Chekhovs made the acquaintance of the Kiselyovs, and spent three
summers in succession on their estate, Babkino.
The Kiselyovs were
musical and cultivated people, and intimate friends of Dargomyzhsky,
Tchaykovsky the composer, and the Italian actor Salvini. Madame Kiselyov was
passionately fond of fishing, and would spend hours at a time sitting on the
river bank with Anton, fishing and talking about literature. She was herself
a writer. Chekhov was always playing with the Kiselyov children and running
about the old park with them. The people he met, the huntsman, the gardener,
the carpenters, the sick women who came to him for treatment, and the place
itself, river, forests, nightingales—all provided Chekhov with subjects to
write about and put him in the mood for writing. He always got up early and
began writing by seven o’clock in the morning. After lunch the whole party
set off to look for mushrooms in the woods. Anton was fond of looking for mushrooms,
and said it stimulated the imagination. At this time he was always talking
nonsense.
Levitan, the
painter, lived in the neighbourhood, and Chekhov and he dressed up, blacked
their faces and put on turbans. Levitan then rode off on a donkey through the
fields, where Anton suddenly sprang out of the bushes with a gun and began
firing blank cartridges at him.
In 1886 Chekhov
suffered for the second time from an attack of spitting blood. There is no
doubt that consumption was developing, but apparently he refused to believe
this himself. He went on being as gay as ever, though he slept badly and
often had terrible dreams. It was one of these dreams that suggested the
subject of his story “The Black Monk.”
That year he began
to write for the Novoye Vremya, which made a special feature of his
work. Under the influence of letters from Grigorovitch, who was the first
person to appreciate his talent, Chekhov began to take his writing more
seriously.
In 1887 he visited
the south of Russia and stayed at the Holy Mountains, which gave him the
subjects of two of his stories, “Easter Eve” and “Uprooted.” In the autumn of
that year he was asked by Korsh, a theatrical manager who knew him as a
humorous writer, to write something for his theatre. Chekhov sat down and
wrote “Ivanov” in a fortnight, sending off every act for rehearsal as it was
completed.
By this time he had
won a certain amount of recognition, everyone was talking of him, and there
was consequently great curiosity about his new play. The performance was,
however, only partially a success; the audience, divided into two parties,
hissed vigorously and clapped noisily. For a long time afterwards the
newspapers were full of discussions of the character and personality of the
hero, while the novelty of the dramatic method attracted great attention.
In January, 1889,
the play was performed at the Alexandrinsky Theatre in Petersburg and the
controversy broke out again.
“Ivanov” was the
turning-point in Chekhov’s mental development, and literary career. He took
up his position definitely as a writer, though his brass plate continued to
hang on the door. Shortly after writing “Ivanov,” he wrote a one-act play
called “The Bear.” The following season Solovtsev, who had taken the chief
character in “The Bear,” opened a theatre of his own in Moscow, which was not at first a success.
He appealed to Chekhov to save him with a play for Christmas, which was only
ten days off. Chekhov set to work and wrote an act every day. The play was
produced in time, but the author was never satisfied with it, and after a
short, very successful run took it off the stage. Several years later he
completely remodelled it and produced it as “Uncle Vanya” at the Art Theatre
in Moscow. At
this time he was writing a long novel, of which he often dreamed aloud, and
which he liked to talk about. He was for several years writing at this novel,
but no doubt finally destroyed it, as no trace of it could be found after his
death. He wanted it to embody his views on life, opinions which he expressed
in a letter to Plestcheyev in these words:
“I am not a
Liberal, not a Conservative.... I should have liked to have been a free
artist and nothing more—and I regret that God has not given me the strength
to be one. I hate lying and violence in all their forms—the most absolute
freedom, freedom from force and fraud in whatever form the two latter may be
expressed, that is the programme I would hold to if I were a great artist.”
At this time he was
always gay and insisted on having people round him while he worked. His
little house in Moscow,
which “looked like a chest of drawers,” was a centre to which people, and
especially young people, flocked in swarms. Upstairs they played the piano, a
hired one, while downstairs he sat writing through it all. “I positively
can’t live without visitors,” he wrote to Suvorin; “when I am alone, for some
reason I am frightened.” This gay life which seemed so full of promise was,
however, interrupted by violent fits of coughing. He tried to persuade other
people, and perhaps himself, that it was not serious, and he would not
consent to be properly examined. He was sometimes so weak from haemorrhage
that he could see no one, but as soon as the attack was over his mood
changed, the doors were thrown open, visitors arrived, there was music again,
and Chekhov was once more in the wildest spirits.
The summers of
those two years, 1888 and 1889, he spent with his family in a summer villa at
Luka, in the province of Harkov. He was in ecstasies beforehand over the
deep, broad river, full of fish and crayfish, the pond full of carp, the
woods, the old garden, and the abundance of young ladies. His expectations
were fulfilled in every particular, and he had all the fishing and musical
society he could wish for. Soon after his arrival Plestcheyev came to stay
with him on a month’s visit.
He was an old man
in feeble health, but attractive to everyone. Young ladies in particular were
immediately fascinated by him. He used to compose his works aloud, sometimes
shouting at the top of his voice, so that Chekhov would run in and ask him if
he wanted anything. Then the old man would give a sweet and guilty smile and
go on with his work. Chekhov was in constant anxiety about the old man’s
health, as he was very fond of cakes and pastry, and Chekhov’s mother used to
regale him on them to such an extent that Anton was constantly having to give
him medicine. Afterwards Suvorin, the editor of Novoye Vremya, came
to stay. Chekhov and he used to paddle in a canoe, hollowed out of a tree, to
an old mill, where they would spend hours fishing and talking about
literature.
Both the grandsons
of serfs, both cultivated and talented men, they were greatly attracted by
each other. Their friendship lasted for several years, and on account of
Suvorin’s reactionary opinions, exposed Chekhov to a great deal of criticism
in Russia.
Chekhov’s feelings for Suvorin began to change at the time of the Dreyfus
case, but he never broke entirely with him. Suvorin’s feelings for Chekhov
remained unchanged.
In the spring of
1889 his brother Nikolay, the artist, fell ill with consumption, and his
illness occupied Anton entirely, and completely prevented his working. That
summer Nikolay died, and it was under the influence of this, his first great
sorrow, that Chekhov wrote “A Dreary Story.” For several months after the
death of his brother he was extremely restless and depressed.
In 1890 his younger
brother Mihail was taking his degree in law at Moscow, and studying treatises
on the management of prisons. Chekhov got hold of them, became intensely
interested in prisons, and resolved to visit the penal settlement of Sahalin.
He made up his mind to go to the Far East so unexpectedly that it was
difficult for his family to believe that he was in earnest.
He was afraid that
after Kennan’s revelations about the penal system in Siberia, he would, as a
writer, be refused permission to visit the prisons in Sahalin, and therefore
tried to get a free pass from the head of the prison administration, Galkin-Vrasskoy.
When this proved fruitless he set off in April, 1890, with no credentials but
his card as a newspaper correspondent.
The Siberian
railway did not then exist, and only after great hardships, being held up by
floods and by the impassable state of the roads, Chekhov succeeded in
reaching Sahalin on the 11th of July, having driven nearly 3,000 miles. He
stayed three months on the island, traversed it from north to south, made a
census of the population, talked to every one of the ten thousand convicts,
and made a careful study of the convict system. Apparently the chief reason
for all this was the consciousness that “We have destroyed millions of men in
prisons.... It is not the superintendents of the prisons who are to blame,
but all of us.” In Russia
it was not possible to be a “free artist and nothing more.”
Chekhov left
Sahalin in October and returned to Europe by way of India and the Suez Canal.
He wanted to visit Japan, but the steamer was not allowed to put in at the
port on account of cholera.
In the Indian Ocean
he used to bathe by diving off the forecastle deck when the steamer was going
at full speed, and catching a rope which was let down from the stern. Once
while he was doing this he saw a shark and a shoal of pilot fish close to him
in the water, as he describes in his story “Gusev.”
The fruits of this
journey were a series of articles in Russkaya Myssl on the island of
Sahalin, and two short stories, “Gusev” and “In Exile.” His articles on
Sahalin were looked on with a favourable eye in Petersburg, and, who knows,
it is possible that the reforms which followed in regard to penal servitude
and exile would not have taken place but for their influence.
After about a month
in Moscow, Chekhov went to Petersburg to see Suvorin. The majority of his Petersburg friends and
admirers met him with feelings of envy and ill-will. People gave dinners in
his honour and praised him to the skies, but at the same time they were ready
to “tear him to pieces.” Even in Moscow
such people did not give him a moment for work or rest. He was so prostrated
by the feeling of hostility surrounding him that he accepted an invitation
from Suvorin to go abroad with him. When Chekhov had completed arrangements
for equipping the Sahalin schools with the necessary books, they set off for
the South of Europe. Vienna delighted him, and
Venice
surpassed all his expectations and threw him into a state of childlike
ecstasy.
Everything
fascinated him—and then there was a change in the weather and a steady
downpour of rain. Chekhov’s spirits drooped. Venice was damp and seemed
horrible, and he longed to escape from it.
He had had just
such a change of mood in Singapore, which interested him immensely and
suddenly filled him with such misery that he wanted to cry.
After Venice
Chekhov did not get the pleasure he expected from any Italian town. Florence did not
attract him; the sun was not shining. Rome
gave him the impression of a provincial town. He was feeling exhausted, and
to add to his depression he had got into debt, and had the prospect of
spending the summer without any money at all.
Travelling with
Suvorin, who did not stint himself, drew him into spending more than he
intended, and he owed Suvorin a sum which was further increased at Monte
Carlo by Chekhov’s losing nine hundred rubles at roulette. But this loss was
a blessing to him in so far as, for some reason, it made him feel satisfied
with himself. At the end of April, 1891, after a stay in Paris,
Chekhov returned to Moscow.
Except at Vienna and for the first days in Venice and at Nice, it
had rained the whole time. On his return he had to work extremely hard to pay
for his two tours.
His brother Mihail was at this time inspector of taxes at
Alexino, and Chekhov and his household spent the summer not far from that
town in the province
of Kaluga, so as to be
near him. They took a house dating from the days of Catherine. Chekhov’s
mother had to sit down and rest halfway when she crossed the hall, the rooms
were so large. He liked the place with its endless avenues of lime-trees and
poetical river, while fishing and gathering mushrooms soothed him and put him
in the mood for work. Here he went on with his story “The Duel,” which he had
begun before going abroad. From the windows there was the view of an old
house which Chekhov described in “An Artist’s Story,” and which he was very
eager to buy. Indeed from this time he began thinking of buying a country
place of his own, not in Little Russia, but in Central
Russia. Petersburg seemed to him
more and more idle, cold and egoistic, and he had lost all faith in his Petersburg
acquaintances. On the other hand, Moscow
no longer seemed to him as before “like a cook,” and he grew to love it. He
grew fond of its climate, its people and its bells. He always delighted in
bells. Sometimes in earlier days he had gathered together a party of friends
and gone with them to Kamenny
Bridge to listen to the
Easter bells. After eagerly listening to them he would set off to wander from
church to church, and with his legs giving way under him from fatigue would,
only when Easter night was over, make his way homewards. Meanwhile his
father, who was fond of staying till the end of the service, would return
from the parish church, and all the brothers would sing “Christ is risen” in
chorus, and then they all sat down to break their fast. Chekhov never spent
an Easter night in bed.
Meanwhile in the
spring of 1892 there began to be fears about the crops. These apprehensions
were soon confirmed. An unfortunate summer was followed by a hard autumn and
winter, in which many districts were famine-stricken. Side by side with the
Government relief of the starving population there was a widespread movement
for organizing relief, in which various societies and private persons took
part. Chekhov naturally was drawn into this movement. The provinces of
Nizhni-Novogorod and Voronezh
were in the greatest distress, and in the former of these two provinces,
Yegorov, an old friend of Chekhov’s Voskresensk days, was a district captain
(Zemsky Natchalnik). Chekhov wrote to Yegorov, got up a subscription fund
among his acquaintance, and finally set off himself for Nizhni-Novogorod. As
the starving peasants were selling their horses and cattle for next to
nothing, or even slaughtering them for food, it was feared that as spring
came on there would be no beasts to plough with, so that the coming year
threatened to be one of famine also.
Chekhov organized a
scheme for buying up the horses and feeding them till the spring at the
expense of a relief fund, and then, as soon as field labour was possible,
distributing them among the peasants who were without horses.
After visiting the
province of Nizhni-Novogorod, Chekhov went with Suvorin to Voronezh. But this
expedition was not a successful one. He was revolted by the ceremonious
dinners with which he was welcomed as an author, while the whole province was
suffering from famine. Moreover travelling with Suvorin tied him down and
hindered his independent action. Chekhov longed for intense personal activity
such as he displayed later in his campaign against the cholera.
In the winter of
the same year (1892) his long-cherished dream was realized: he bought himself an
estate. It was in the province
of Moscow, near the
hamlet of Melihovo. As an estate it had nothing to recommend it but an old,
badly laid out homestead, wastes of land, and a forest that had been felled.
It had been bought on the spur of the moment, simply because it had happened
to turn up. Chekhov had never been to the place before he bought it, and only
visited it when all the formalities had been completed. One could hardly turn
round near the house for the mass of hurdles and fences. Moreover the
Chekhovs moved into it in the winter when it was under snow, and all
boundaries being obliterated, it was impossible to tell what was theirs and
what was not. But in spite of all that, Chekhov’s first impression was
favourable, and he never showed a sign of being disappointed. He was
delighted by the approach of spring and the fresh surprises that were
continually being revealed by the melting snow. Suddenly it would appear that
a whole haystack belonged to him which he had supposed to be a neighbour’s,
then an avenue of lime-trees came to light which they had not distinguished
before under the snow. Everything that was amiss in the place, everything he
did not like, was at once abolished or altered. But in spite of all the
defects of the house and its surroundings, and the appalling road from the
station (nearly nine miles) and the lack of rooms, so many visitors came that
there was nowhere to put them, and beds had sometimes to be made up in the
passages. Chekhov’s household at this time consisted of his father and
mother, his sister, and his younger brother Mihail. These were all permanent
inmates of Melihovo.
As soon as the snow
had disappeared the various duties in the house and on the land were
assigned: Chekhov’s sister undertook the flower-beds and the kitchen garden,
his younger brother undertook the field work. Chekhov himself planted the
trees and looked after them. His father worked from morning till night
weeding the paths in the garden and making new ones.
Everything
attracted the new landowner: planting the bulbs and watching the flight of
rooks and starlings, sowing the clover, and the goose hatching out her
goslings. By four o’clock in the morning Chekhov was up and about. After
drinking his coffee he would go out into the garden and would spend a long
time scrutinizing every fruit-tree and every rose-bush, now cutting off a
branch, now training a shoot, or he would squat on his heels by a stump and
gaze at something on the ground. It turned out that there was more land than
they needed (639 acres), and they farmed it themselves, with no bailiff or
steward, assisted only by two labourers, Frol and Ivan.
At eleven o’clock
Chekhov, who got through a good deal of writing in the morning, would go into
the dining-room and look significantly at the clock. His mother would jump up
from her seat and her sewing-machine and begin to bustle about, crying: “Oh dear!
Antosha wants his dinner!”
When the table was
laid there were so many homemade and other dainties prepared by his mother
that there would hardly be space on the table for them. There was not room to
sit at the table either. Besides the five permanent members of the family
there were invariably outsiders as well. After dinner Chekhov used to go off
to his bedroom and lock himself in to “read.” Between his after-dinner nap
and tea-time he wrote again. The time between tea and supper (at seven
o’clock in the evening) was devoted to walks and outdoor work. At ten o’clock
they went to bed. Lights were put out and all was stillness in the house; the
only sound was a subdued singing and monotonous recitation. This was Pavel
Yegorovitch repeating the evening service in his room: he was religious and
liked to say his prayers aloud.
From the first day
that Chekhov moved to Melihovo the sick began flocking to him from twenty
miles around. They came on foot or were brought in carts, and often he was
fetched to patients at a distance. Sometimes from early in the morning
peasant women and children were standing before his door waiting. He would go
out, listen to them and sound them, and would never let one go away without
advice and medicine. His expenditure on drugs was considerable, as he had to
keep a regular store of them. Once some wayfarers brought Chekhov a man they
had picked up by the roadside in the middle of the night, stabbed in the
stomach with a pitchfork. The peasant was carried into his study and put down
in the middle of the floor, and Chekhov spent a long time looking after him,
examining his wounds and bandaging them up. But what was hardest for Chekhov
was visiting the sick at their own homes: sometimes there was a journey of
several hours, and in this way the time essential for writing was wasted.
The first winter at
Melihovo was cold; it lasted late and food was short. Easter came in the
snow. There was a church at Melihovo in which a service was held only once a
year, at Easter. Visitors from Moscow
were staying with Chekhov. The family got up a choir among themselves and
sang all the Easter matins and mass. Pavel Yegorovitch conducted as usual. It
was out of the ordinary and touching, and the peasants were delighted: it
warmed their hearts to their new neighbours.
Then the thaw came.
The roads became appalling. There were only three broken-down horses on the
estate and not a wisp of hay. The horses had to be fed on rye straw chopped
up with an axe and sprinkled with flour. One of the horses was vicious and
there was no getting it out of the yard. Another was stolen in the fields and
a dead horse left in its place. And so for a long time there was only one
poor spiritless beast to drive which was nicknamed Anna Petrovna. This Anna
Petrovna contrived to trot to the station, to take Chekhov to his patients,
to haul logs and to eat nothing but straw sprinkled with flour. But Chekhov
and his family did not lose heart. Always affectionate, gay and plucky, he
cheered the others, work went ahead, and in less than three months everything
in the place was changed: the house was furnished with crockery; there was
the ring of carpenters’ axes; six horses were bought, and all the field work
for the spring had been completed in good time and in accordance with the
rules of agricultural science. They had no experience at all, but bought
masses of books on the management of the land, and every question, however
small, was debated in common.
Their first
successes delighted Chekhov. He had thirty acres under rye, thirty under
oats, and fully thirty under hay. Marvels were being done in the kitchen
garden: tomatoes and artichokes did well in the open air. A dry spring and
summer ruined the oats and the rye; the peasants cut the hay in return for
half the crop, and Chekhov’s half seemed a small stack; only in the kitchen
garden things went well.
The position of
Melihovo on the highroad and the news that Chekhov the author had settled
there inevitably led to new acquaintances. Doctors and members of the local
Zemstvos began visiting Chekhov; acquaintance was made with the officials of
the district, and Chekhov was elected a member of the Serpuhov Sanitary
Council.
At that time
cholera was raging in the South of Russia. Every day it came nearer and
nearer to the province
of Moscow, and
everywhere it found favourable conditions among the population weakened by
the famine of autumn and winter. It was essential to take immediate measures
for meeting the cholera, and the Zemstvo of Serpuhov worked its hardest.
Chekhov as a doctor and a member of the Sanitary Council was asked to take
charge of a section. He immediately gave his services for nothing. He had to
drive about among the manufacturers of the district persuading them to take
adequate measures to combat the cholera. Owing to his efforts the whole
section containing twenty-five villages and hamlets was covered with a
network of the necessary institutions. For several months Chekhov scarcely
got out of his chaise. During that time he had to drive all over his section,
receive patients at home, and do his literary work. He returned home
shattered and exhausted, but always behaved as though he were doing something
trivial; he cracked little jokes and made everyone laugh as before, and
carried on conversations with his dachshund, Quinine, about her supposed
sufferings.
By early autumn the
place had become unrecognizable. The outhouses had been rebuilt, unnecessary
fences had been removed, rose-trees had been planted, a flower-bed had been
laid out; in the fields before the gates Chekhov was planning to dig a big
new pond. With what interest he watched each day the progress of the work
upon it! He planted trees round it and dropped into it tiny carp and perch
which he brought with him in a jar from Moscow.
The pond became later on more like an ichthyological station than a pond, as
there was no kind of fish in Russia,
except the pike, of which Chekhov had not representatives in this pond. He
liked sitting on the dam on its bank and watching with ecstasy shoals of
little fish coming suddenly to the surface and then hiding in its depths. An
excellent well had been dug in Melihovo before this. Chekhov had been very
anxious that it should be in Little Russian style with a crane. But the
position did not allow of this, and it was made with a big wheel painted
yellow like the wells at Russian railway stations. The question where to dig
this well and whether the water in it would be good greatly interested
Chekhov. He wanted exact information and a theory based on good grounds,
seeing that nine-tenths of Russia
uses water out of wells, and has done so since time immemorial; but whenever
he questioned the well-sinkers who came to him, he received the same vague
answer: “Who can tell? It’s in God’s hands. Can you find out beforehand what
the water will be like?”
But the well, like
the pond, was a great success, and the water turned out to be excellent.
He began seriously
planning to build a new house and farm buildings. Creative activity was his
passion. He was never satisfied with what he had ready-made; he longed to
make something new. He planted little trees, raised pines and fir-trees from
seed, looked after them as though they were his children, and, like Colonel
Vershinin in his “Three Sisters,” dreamed as he looked at them of what they
would be like in three or four hundred years.
The winter of 1893
was a severe one with a great deal of snow. The snow was so high under the
windows that the hares who ran into the garden stood on their hind-legs and
looked into the window of Chekhov’s study. The swept paths in the garden were
like deep trenches. By then Chekhov had finished his work in connection with
the cholera and he began to live the life of a hermit. His sister found
employment in Moscow;
only his father and mother were left with him in the house, and the hours
seemed very long. They went to bed even earlier than in the summer, but
Chekhov would wake up at one in the morning, sit down to his work and then go
back to bed and sleep again. At six o’clock in the morning all the household
was up. Chekhov wrote a great deal that winter. But as soon as visitors
arrived, life was completely transformed. There was singing, playing on the
piano, laughter. Chekhov’s mother did her utmost to load the tables with
dainties; his father with a mysterious air would produce various specially
prepared cordials and liqueurs from some hidden recess; and then it seemed
that Melihovo had something of its own, peculiar to it, which could be found
in no other country estate. Chekhov was always particularly pleased at the
visits of Miss Mizinov and of Potapenko. He was particularly fond of them,
and his whole family rejoiced at their arrival. They stayed up long after
midnight on such days, and Chekhov wrote only by snatches. And every time he
wrote five or six lines, he would get up again and go back to his visitors.
“I have written
sixty kopecks’ worth,” he would say with a smile.
Braga’s “Serenade”
was the fashion at that time, and Chekhov was fond of hearing Potapenko play
it on the violin while Miss Mizinov sang it.
Having been a
student at the Moscow University, Chekhov liked to celebrate St. Tatyana’s
Day. He never missed making a holiday of it when he lived in Moscow. That winter, for the first time, he
chanced to be in Petersburg
on the 12th of January. He did not forget “St. Tatyana,” and assembled all
his literary friends on that day in a Petersburg
restaurant. They made speeches and kept the holiday, and this festivity
initiated by him was so successful that the authors went on meeting regularly
afterwards.
Though Melihovo was
his permanent home, Chekhov often paid visits to Moscow and Petersburg. He
frequently stayed at hotels, and there he sometimes had difficulties over his
passport. As a landowner he had no need of credentials from the police in the
Serpuhov district, and found his University diploma sufficient. In Petersburg and Moscow,
under the old passport regulations they would not give him a passport because
he resided permanently in the provinces. Misunderstandings arose, sometimes
developing into disagreeable incidents and compelling Chekhov to return home
earlier than he had intended. Someone suggested to Chekhov that he should
enter the Government service and immediately retire from it, as retired
officials used at that time to receive a permanent passport from the
department in which they had served. Chekhov sent a petition to the
Department of Medicine for a post to be assigned to him, and received an
appointment as an extra junior medical clerk in that Department, and soon
afterwards sent in his resignation, after which he had no more trouble.
Chekhov spent the
whole spring of 1893 at Melihovo, planted roses, looked after his
fruit-trees, and was enthusiastic over country life. That summer Melihovo was
especially crowded with visitors. Chekhov was visited not only by his
friends, but also by people whose acquaintance he neither sought nor desired.
People were sleeping on sofas and several in a room; some even spent the
night in the passage. Young ladies, authors, local doctors, members of the
Zemstvo, distant relations with their sons—all these people flitted through
Melihovo. Life was a continual whirl, everyone was gay; this rush of visitors
and the everlasting readiness of Chekhov’s mother to regale them with food
and drink seemed like a return to the good old times of country life in the
past. Chekhov was the centre on which all attention was concentrated.
Everyone sought him, lived in him, and caught up every word he uttered. When
he was with friends he liked taking walks or making expeditions to the
neighbouring monastery. The chaise, the cart, and the racing droshky were
brought out. Chekhov put on his white tunic, buckled a strap round his waist,
and got on the racing droshky. A young lady would sit sideways behind him,
holding on to the strap. The white tunic and strap used to make Chekhov call
himself an Hussar. The party would set off; the “Hussar” in the racing
droshky would lead the way, and then came the cart and the chaise full of
visitors.
The numbers of
guests necessitated more building, as the house would not contain them all.
Instead of a farm, new buildings close to the house itself were begun. Some
of the farm buildings were pulled down, others were put up after Chekhov’s
own plans. A new cattle yard made its appearance, and by it a hut with a well
and a hurdle fence in the Little Russian style, a bathhouse, a barn, and
finally Chekhov’s dream—a lodge. It was a little house with three tiny rooms,
in one of which a bedstead was put with difficulty, and in another a writing-table.
At first this lodge was intended only for visitors, but afterwards Chekhov
moved into it and there he wrote his “Seagull.” This little lodge was built
among the fruit-bushes, and to reach it one had to pass through the orchard.
In spring, when the apples and cherries were in blossom, it was pleasant to
live in this lodge, but in winter it was so buried in the snow that pathways
had to be cut to it through drifts as high as a man.
Chekhov suffered
terribly about this time from his cough. It troubled him particularly in the
morning. But he made light of it. He was afraid of worrying his family. His
younger brother once saw his handkerchief spattered with blood, and asked
what it meant. Chekhov seemed disconcerted and said:
“Oh, nothing; it is
no matter.... Don’t tell Masha and Mother.”
The cough was the
reason for Chekhov’s going in 1894 to the Crimea. He stayed in Yalta, though
he evidently did not like it and longed to be home.
Chekhov’s activity
in the campaign against the cholera resulted in his being elected a member of
the Zemstvo. He was keenly interested in everything to do with the new roads
to be constructed, and the new hospitals and schools it was intended to open.
Besides this public work the neighbourhood was indebted to him for the making
of a highroad from the station of Lopasnya to Melihovo, and for the building
of schools at Talezh, Novoselka, and Melihovo. He made the plans for these
schools himself, bought the material, and superintended the building of them.
When he talked about them his eyes kindled, and it was evident that if he had
had the means he would have built, not three, but a multitude.
At the opening of
the school at Novoselka, the peasants brought him the ikon and offered him
bread and salt. Chekhov was much embarrassed in responding to their
gratitude, but his face and his shining eyes showed that he was pleased.
Besides the schools he built a fire-station for the village and a belfry for
the church, and ordered a cross made of looking-glass for the cupola, the flash
of which in the sun or moonlight was visible more than eight miles away.
Chekhov spent the
year 1894 at Melihovo, began writing “The Seagull,” and did a great deal of
work. He paid a visit to Tolstoy at Yasnaya Polyana, and returned enchanted
with the old man and his family. Chekhov was already changing; he looked
haggard, older, sallower. He coughed, he was tortured by intestinal trouble.
Evidently he was now aware of the gravity of his illness, but, as before,
made no complaint and tried to hide it from others.
In 1896 “The
Seagull” was performed at the Alexandrinsky Theatre in Petersburg. It was a
fiasco. The actors did not know their parts; in the theatre there was “a
strained condition of boredom and bewilderment.” The notices in the press
were prejudiced and stupid. Not wishing to see or meet anyone, Chekhov kept
out of sight after the performance, and by next morning was in the train on
his way back to Melihovo. The subsequent performances of “The Seagull,” when
the actors understood it, were successful.
Chekhov had
collected a large number of books, and in 1896 he resolved to present them to
the public library in his native town of Taganrog. Whole bales of books were
sent by Chekhov from Petersburg and Moscow, and Iordanov, the mayor of Taganrog, sent him lists of the books
needed. At the same time, at Chekhov’s suggestion, something like an
Information Bureau was instituted in connection with the Taganrog Library.
There were to be catalogues of all the important commercial firms, all the
existing regulations and government enactments on all current questions,
everything, in fact, which might be of immediate service to a reader in any
practical difficulty. The library at Taganrog has now developed into a fine
educational institution, and is lodged in a special building designed and
equipped for it and dedicated to the memory of Chekhov.
Chekhov took an
active interest in the census of the people in 1896. It will be remembered
that he had made a census of the whole convict population of the island of Sahalin on his own initiative and at
his own expense in 1890. Now he was taking part in a census again. He studied
peasant life in all its aspects; he was on intimate terms with his peasant
neighbours, to whom he was now indispensable as a doctor and a friend always
ready to give them good counsel.
Just before the
census was completed Chekhov was taken ill with influenza, but that did not
prevent his carrying out his duties. In spite of headache, he went from hut
to hut and village to village, and then had to work at putting together his
materials. He was absolutely alone in his work. The Zemsky Natchalniks, upon
whom the government relied principally to carry out the census, were inert,
and for the most part the work was left to private initiative.
In February, 1897,
Chekhov was completely engrossed by a project of building a “People’s Palace”
in Moscow. “People’s Palaces” had not been thought of; the common people
spent their leisure in drink-shops. The “People’s Palace” in Moscow was designed on broad principles;
there was to be a library, a reading-room, lecture-rooms, a museum, a
theatre. It was proposed to run it by a company of shareholders with a
capital of half a million rubles. Owing to various causes in no way connected
with Chekhov, this scheme came to nothing.
In March he paid a
visit to Moscow, where Suvorin was expecting him. He had hardly sat down to
dinner at The Hermitage when he had a sudden haemorrhage from the lungs. He
was taken to a private hospital, where he remained till the 10th of April.
When his sister, who knew nothing of his illness, arrived in Moscow, she was met by her brother Ivany
who gave her a card of admission to visit the invalid at the hospital. On the
card were the words: “Please don’t tell father or mother.” His sister went to
the hospital. There casting a casual glance at a little table, she saw on it
a diagram of the lungs, in which the upper part of the left lung was marked
with a red pencil. She guessed at once that this was what was affected in
Chekhov’s case. This and the sight of her brother alarmed her. Chekhov, who
had always been so gay, so full of spirits and vitality, looked terribly ill;
he was forbidden to move or to talk, and had hardly the strength to do so.
He was declared to
be suffering from tuberculosis of the lungs, and it was essential to try and
ward it off at all costs, and to escape the unwholesome northern spring. He
recognized himself that this was essential.
When he left the
hospital he returned to Melihovo and prepared to go abroad. He went first to Biarritz, but there he
was met by bad weather. A fashionable, extravagant way of living did not suit
his tastes, and although he was delighted with the sea and the life led
(especially by the children) on the beach, he soon moved on to Nice. Here he
stayed for a considerable time at the Pension Russe in the Rue Gounod. He
seemed to be fully satisfied with the life there. He liked the warmth and the
people he met, M. Kovalevsky, V. M. Sobolesky, V. T. Nemirovitch-Dantchenko,
the artist V. T. Yakobi and I. N. Potapenko. Prince A. I. Sumbatov arrived at
Nice too, and Chekhov used sometimes to go with him to Monte Carlo to
roulette.
Chekhov followed
all that he had left behind in Russia with keen attention: he was anxious
about the Chronicle of Surgery, which he had more than once saved
from ruin, made arrangements about Melihovo, and so on.
He spent the autumn
and winter in Nice, and in February, 1898, meant to go to Africa. He wanted
to visit Algiers and Tunis, but Kovalevsky, with whom he meant
to travel, fell ill, and he had to give up the project. He contemplated a
visit to Corsica, but did not carry out that
plan either, as he was taken seriously ill himself. A wretched dentist used
contaminated forceps in extracting a tooth, and Chekhov was attacked by
periostitis in a malignant form. In his own words, “he was in such pain that
he climbed up the wall.”
As soon as the
spring had come he felt an irresistible yearning for Russia. He was weary of
enforced idleness; he missed the snow and the Russian country, and at the
same time he was depressed at having gained no weight in spite of the
climate, good nourishment, and idleness.
While he was at
Nice France was in the throes of the Dreyfus affair. Chekhov began studying
the Dreyfus and Zola cases from shorthand notes, and becoming convinced of
the innocence of both, wrote a heated letter to Suvorin, which led to a
coolness between them.
He spent March,
1898, in Paris. He sent three hundred and nineteen volumes of French
literature from Paris to the public library at Taganrog.
The lateness of the
spring in Russia forced Chekhov to remain in Paris till May, when he returned
to Melihovo. Melihovo became gay and lively on his arrival. Visitors began
coming again; he was as hospitable as ever, but he was quieter, no longer
jested as in the past, and perhaps owing to his illness talked little. But he
still took as much pleasure in his roses.
After a
comparatively good summer there came days of continual rain, and on the 14th
of September Chekhov went away to Yalta. He had to choose between Nice and Yalta. He did not want
to go abroad, and preferred the Crimea, reckoning that he might possibly
seize an opportunity to pay a brief visit to Moscow,
where his plays were to appear at the Art Theatre.
His choice did not disappoint him. That autumn in Yalta was splendid; he felt
well there, and the progress of his disease led him to settle in Yalta
permanently.
Chekhov obtained a
piece of land at Autka, and the same autumn began building. He spent whole
days superintending the building. Stone and plaster was brought, Turks and
Tatars dug the ground and laid the foundation, while he planted little trees
and watched with fatherly anxiety every new shoot on them. Every stone, every
tree there is eloquent of Chekhov’s creative energy. That same autumn he
bought the little property of Kutchuka. It was twenty-four miles from Yalta, and attracted
him by its wildness and primitive beauty. To reach it one had to drive along
the road at a giddy height. He began once more dreaming and drawing plans.
The possible future began to take a different shape to him now, and he was
already dreaming of moving from Melihovo, farming and gardening and living
there as in the country. He wanted to have hens, cows, a horse and donkeys,
and, of course, all of this would have been quite possible and might have
been realized if he had not been slowly dying. His dreams remained dreams,
and Kutchuka stands uninhabited to this day.
The winter of 1898
was extremely severe in the Crimea. The cold, the snow, the stormy sea, and
the complete lack of people akin to him in spirit and of “interesting women”
wearied Chekhov; he began to be depressed. He was irresistibly drawn to the
north, and began to fancy that if he moved for the winter to Moscow, where
his plays were being acted with such success and where everything was so full
of interest for him, it would be no worse for his health than staying in
Yalta, and he began dreaming of buying a house in Moscow. He wanted at one
moment to get something small and snug in the neighbourhood of Kursk Station,
where it might be possible to stay the three winter months in every comfort;
but when such a house was found his mood changed and he resigned himself to
life at Yalta.
The January and
February of 1899 were particularly irksome to Chekhov: he suffered from an
intestinal trouble which poisoned his existence. Moreover consumptive
patients from all over Russia
began appealing to him to assist them to come to Yalta. These invalids were almost always
poor, and on reaching Yalta
mostly ended their lives in miserable conditions, pining for their native
place. Chekhov exerted himself on behalf of everyone, printed appeals in the
papers, collected money, and did his utmost to alleviate their condition.
After the
unfavourable winter came an exquisite warm spring, and on the 12th of April
Chekhov was in Moscow and by May in Melihovo. His father had died the
previous October, and with his death a great link with the place was broken.
The consciousness of having to go away early in the autumn gradually brought
Chekhov to decide to sell the place.
On the 25th of
August he went back to his own villa at Yalta, and soon afterwards Melihovo
was sold, and his mother and sister joined him. During the last four and a
half years of his life Chekhov’s health grew rapidly worse. His chief
interest was centred in Moscow, in the Art Theatre, which had just been
started, and the greater part of his dramatic work was done during this
period.
Chekhov was ill all
the winter of 1900, and only felt better towards the spring. During those
long winter months he wrote “In the Ravine.” The detestable spring of that
year affected his mood and his health even more. Snow fell on the 5th of
March, and this had a shattering effect on him. In April he was again very
ill. An attack of intestinal trouble prevented him from eating, drinking, or
working. As soon as it was over Chekhov, homesick for the north, set off for Moscow, but there he
was met by severe weather. Returning in August to Yalta, he wrote “The Three Sisters.”
He spent the autumn
in Moscow, and at the beginning of December went to the French Riviera,
settled in Nice, and dreamed again of a visit to Africa, but went instead to
Rome. Here, as usual, he met with severe weather. Early in February he
returned to Yalta.
That year there was a soft, sunny spring. Chekhov spent whole days in the
open air, engaged in his favourite occupations; he planted and pruned trees,
looked after his garden, ordered all sorts of seeds, and watched them coming
up. At the same time he was working on behalf of the invalids coming to
Yalta, who appealed to him for help, and also completing the library he had
founded at Taganrog, and planning to open a picture gallery there.
In May, 1901,
Chekhov went to Moscow and was thoroughly examined by a physician, who urged
him to go at once to Switzerland or to take a koumiss cure. Chekhov preferred
the latter.
On the 25th of May
he married Olga Knipper, one of the leading actresses at the Art Theatre, and
with her went off to the province of Ufa for the koumiss cure. On the way
they had to wait twenty-four hours for a steamer, in very unpleasant
surroundings, at a place called Pyany Bor (“Drunken Market”), in the province
of Vyatka.
In the autumn of
1901 Tolstoy was staying, for the sake of his health, at Gaspra. Chekhov was
very fond of him and frequently visited him. Altogether that autumn was an
eventful one for him: Kuprin, Bunin and Gorky visited the Crimea;
the writer Elpatyevsky settled there also, and Chekhov felt fairly well.
Tolstoy’s illness was the centre of general attention, and Chekhov was very
uneasy about him.
In 1902 there was
suddenly a change for the worse: violent haemorrhage exhausted him till the
beginning of February; he was for over a month confined to his study. It was
at this time that the incident of Gorky’s election to the Academy and
subsequent expulsion from it led Chekhov to write a letter to the Royal
President of the Academy asking that his own name should be struck off the
list of Academicians.
Chekhov had hardly
recovered when his wife was taken seriously ill. When she was a little better
he made a tour by the Volga and the Kama as far as Perm. On his return he settled with his
wife in a summer villa not far from Moscow; he
spent July there and returned home to Yalta
in August. But the longing for a life of movement and culture, the desire to
be nearer to the theatre, drew him to the north again, and in September he
was back in Moscow.
Here he was not left in peace for one minute; swarms of visitors jostled each
other from morning till night. Such a life exhausted him; he ran away from it
to Yalta in
December, but did not escape it there. His cough was worse; every day he had
a high temperature, and these symptoms were followed by an attack of
pleurisy. He did not get up all through the Christmas holidays; he still had
an agonizing cough, and it was in this enforced idleness that he thought out
his play “The Cherry Orchard.”
It is quite
possible that if Chekhov had taken care of himself his disease would not have
developed so rapidly or proved fatal. The feverish energy of his temperament,
his readiness to respond to every impression, and his thirst for activity,
drove him from south to north and hack again, regardless of his health and of
the climate. Like all invalids, he ought to have gone on living in the same
place, at Nice or at Yalta,
until he was better, but he lived exactly as though he had been in good
health. When he arrived in the north he was always excited and absorbed by
what was going on, and this exhilaration he mistook for an improvement in his
health; but he had only to return to Yalta for the reaction to set in, and it
would seem to him at once that his case was hopeless, that the Crimea had no beneficial
effect on consumptives, and that the climate was wretched.
The spring of 1903
passed fairly favourably. He recovered sufficiently to go to Moscow
and even to Petersburg.
On returning from Petersburg he began
preparing to go to Switzerland.
But his state of health was such that his doctor in Moscow
advised him to give up the idea of Switzerland
and even of Yalta, and to stay somewhere not
very far from Moscow.
He followed this advice and settled at Nar. Now that it was proposed that he
should stay the winter in the north, all that he had created in Yalta—his house and his
garden—seemed unnecessary and objectless. In the end he returned to Yalta and set to work
on “The Cherry Orchard.”
In October, 1903, the
play was finished and he set off to produce it himself in Moscow. He spent
days at a time in the Art
Theatre, producing his
“Cherry Orchard,” and incidentally supervising the setting and performance of
the plays of other authors. He gave advice and criticized, was excited and
enthusiastic.
On the 17th of
January, 1904, “The Cherry Orchard” was produced for the first time. The
first performance was the occasion of the celebration of the twenty-fifth
anniversary of Chekhov’s literary activity. A great number of addresses were
read and speeches were made. Chekhov was many times called before the
curtain, and this expression of universal sympathy exhausted him to such a
degree that the very day after the performance he began to think with relief
of going back to Yalta, where he spent the following spring.
His health was
completely shattered, and everyone who saw him secretly thought the end was
not far off; but the nearer Chekhov was to the end, the less he seemed to
realize it. Ill as he was, at the beginning
of May he set off for Moscow.
He was terribly ill all the way on the journey, and on arrival took to his
bed at once. He was laid up till June.
On the 3rd of June
he set off with his wife for a cure abroad to the Black Forest, and settled
in a little spa called Badenweiler. He was dying, although he wrote to
everyone that he had almost recovered, and that health was coming back to him
not by ounces but by hundredweights. He was dying, but he spent the time
dreaming of going to the Italian lakes and returning to Yalta by sea from
Trieste, and was already making inquiries about the steamers and the times
they stopped at Odessa.
He died on the 2nd
of July.
His body was taken
to Moscow and buried in the Novodyevitchy Monastery, beside his father’s
tomb.
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