Diary Of A Madman

Diary Of A Madman
Nikolai Gogol
(Translator:
Claud Field)
Published: 1835
Categorie(s): Non-Fiction, Biography & autobiography,
Diary
Source: www.BookishMall.com
About Gogol:
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol (April 1, 1809 — March 4, 1852) was a
Russian-language writer of Ukrainian origin. Although his early
works were heavily influenced by his Ukrainian heritage and
upbringing, he wrote in Russian and his works belong to the
tradition of Russian literature. The novel Dead Souls (1842), the
play Revizor (1836, 1842), and the short story The Overcoat (1842)
count among his masterpieces. Source: Wikipedia
Also available on Feedbooks
Gogol:
Dead
Souls (1842)
The
Nose (1836)
A May
Evening (1887)
The
Cloak (1835)
Taras Bulba
(1835)
The
Mysterious Portrait (1842)
How
the two Ivans quarrelled (1835)
The
Calash (1836)
St.
John's Eve (1831)
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THE DIARY OF A MADMAN
October 3rd.
A strange occurrence has taken place to-day. I
got up fairly late, and when Mawra brought me my clean boots, I
asked her how late it was. When I heard it had long struck ten, I
dressed as quickly as possible.
To tell the truth, I would rather not have gone to the office at
all to-day, for I know beforehand that our department-chief will
look as sour as vinegar. For some time past he has been in the
habit of saying to me, “Look here, my friend; there is something
wrong with your head. You often rush about as though you were
possessed. Then you make such confused abstracts of the documents
that the devil himself cannot make them out; you write the title
without any capital letters, and add neither the date nor the
docket-number.” The long-legged scoundrel! He is certainly envious
of me, because I sit in the director's work-room, and mend His
Excellency's pens. In a word, I should not have gone to the office
if I had not hoped to meet the accountant, and perhaps squeeze a
little advance out of this skinflint.
A terrible man, this
accountant! As for his advancing one's salary once in a way—you
might sooner expect the skies to fall. You may beg and beseech him,
and be on the very verge of ruin—this grey devil won't budge an
inch. At the same time, his own cook at home, as all the world
knows, boxes his ears.
I really don't see what good one gets by serving in our
department. There are no plums there. In the fiscal and judicial
offices it is quite different. There some ungainly fellow sits in a
corner and writes and writes; he has such a shabby coat and such an
ugly mug that one would like to spit on both of them. But you
should see what a splendid country-house he has rented. He would
not condescend to accept a gilt porcelain cup as a present. “You
can give that to your family doctor,” he would say. Nothing less
than a pair of chestnut horses, a fine carriage, or a beaver-fur
coat worth three hundred roubles would be good enough for him. And
yet he seems so mild and quiet, and asks so amiably, “Please lend
me your penknife; I wish to mend my pen.” Nevertheless, he knows
how to scarify a petitioner till he has hardly a whole stitch left
on his body.
In our office it must be admitted everything is done in a proper
and gentlemanly way; there is more cleanness and elegance than one
will ever find in Government offices. The tables are mahogany, and everyone is addressed
as “sir.” And truly, were it not for this official propriety, I
should long ago have sent in my resignation.
I put on my old cloak, and took my umbrella, as a light rain was
falling. No one was to be seen on the streets except some women,
who had flung their skirts over their heads. Here and there one saw
a cabman or a shopman with his umbrella up. Of the higher classes
one only saw an official here and there. One I saw at the
street-crossing, and thought to myself, “Ah! my friend, you are not
going to the office, but after that young lady who walks in front
of you. You are just like the officers who run after every
petticoat they see.”
As I was thus following the train of my thoughts, I saw a
carriage stop before a shop just as I was passing it. I recognised
it at once; it was our director's carriage. “He has nothing to do
in the shop,” I said to myself; “it must be his daughter.”
I pressed myself close against the wall. A lackey opened the
carriage door, and, as I had expected, she fluttered like a bird
out of it. How proudly she looked right and left; how she drew her
eyebrows together, and shot lightnings from her eyes—good heavens!
I am lost, hopelessly lost!
But why must she come out in such abominable weather? And yet they say women are so
mad on their finery!
She did not recognise me.
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