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Virgin Soil

chapter 1 

Word Count: 2071    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

plough going well into the earth, not a surface plough g

e-storied house on Officers Street in St. Petersburg. Noisily shuffling his down-trodden goloshes and slowly swinging his heavy, clumsy figure, the man at last reached th

e?" he called out i

" an equally coarse woman's voice

urina?" asked

I. Are you

s goloshes, and hanging his shabby coat on a nail, he

ble sat a woman of about thirty. She was bareheaded, clad in a black stuff dress, and was smoking a cigarette. On catching sight of Ostrodumov she extended her broad, red hand without a word. He shook it, also without saying anything, dropped into a

a bit alike. In these two slovenly figures, with their coarse lips, teeth, and noses (

Nejdanov?" Os

ectly. He has gone to the

v spat to

g about nowadays? One ca

ok out anoth

e remarked, ligh

ence! One would think we had no work to do. Heaven knows how w

Moscow?" Mashurina

er came thre

you re

v nodded

? Wha

s must go

the cigarette o

"They say everything i

eliable and must be got rid of. Besides that, th

ay so in t

es

h was twisted into a small plait at the b

thing is settled, then there

do anything without money, an

became t

e money," she said so

at I have come about,

letter?" Mashuri

d you like

ever mind, we can read

say. I am speaking the tr

king and, as before, clouds of smoke rose silently from

shes was heard

s," Mashuri

a head was thrust in, but it

came into the room with its feeble body, short arms, and bandy legs, which were a little lame. As soon as Mashurina and Ostrodumov caught sight of this head, an expression of contempt mixed with condescension came over their f

ed in a squeaky voice. "A duet? Why n

v, Mr. Paklin?" Ostr

r. Ostr

ack directly,

hear that, M

urina. She frowned, and continued

. I am so sorry. I always forget your

hrugged her

ame. What more do you want? And why do you always keep on aski

seeing you here, and of talking to you! My curiosity is due to a bad, old-fashioned habit. But with regard to your name, it is awkward, somehow,

you to talk

a nervous,

your hand. Don't be cross. I know yo

Mashurina looked at him se

he said with the same expression of sev

Ostrodumov added

a! and you, Oh Pemien! why you are so unfrien

nd not only Mashurina, that you are not to be depe

ed round on

en if I were, that is no reason why you should not trust me. In the second, I have been flattered with your confidenc

s teeth, but Paklin continued without th

I am not at all a cheerful pers

assumed a dejected, almost scared expression; it became funny and rather sarcastic only when he

ogress in your truly philanthropical art? Is it very hard to hel

had left her home in the south of Russia about two years before, and with about twelve shillings in her pocket had arrived in Moscow, where she had entered a lying- in institution and had worked very hard to gain the ne

ughed at

But it serves me right for being such a d

ld have given anything to be attractive to them. The consciousness of his pitiful appearance was a much sorer point with him than his low origin and unenviable position in society. His father, a member of the lower middle class, had, through all sorts of dishonest means

f our story Paklin was twenty-eight years old. He had a great many acquaintances among students and young people, who liked him for his cynical wit, his harmless, though biting, self-confident speeches, his one-sided, unpedantic, though genuine, learning, but occasionally they sat on him severely. Once, on arriving late at a political meeting, he hastily began excusing himself. "Paklin was afraid!" some one sang out from a corner of th

repeated. "He has been out of sorts lately

ina sc

s. As for falling in love, he has ne

u?" almost escap

e I have an important matter to t

strodumov asked

that is, our c

believe him. "Who knows? He's

small unattractive eyes, fixed on the door, brightened, as if

with a cap on his head and a bundle of books under his arm

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Virgin Soil
Virgin Soil
“Sergeevich Turgenev was a major 19th century Russian novelist. His novel Fathers and Sons is his best-known work. The author has written a number of critical essays, plays, poems, and several novelettes. Virgin Soil is a classic of Russian literature published in 1877. Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev portrays educated young people who, under the influence of the Populist movement, renounce the life of their class to take on the dress and life of workers and peasants and conspire with them.”
1 Introduction2 chapter 13 chapter 24 chapter 35 chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 1012 Chapter 1113 Chapter 1214 Chapter 1315 Chapter 1416 Chapter 1517 Chapter 1618 Chapter 1719 Chapter 1820 Chapter 1921 Chapter 2022 Chapter 2123 Chapter 2224 Chapter 2325 Chapter 2426 Chapter 2527 Chapter 2628 Chapter 2729 Chapter 2830 Chapter 2931 Chapter 3032 Chapter 3133 Chapter 3234 Chapter 3335 Chapter 3436 Chapter 3537 Chapter 3638 Chapter 3739 Chapter 38