Bunin. Late hour. Story Analysis

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LATE HOUR

Oh, it’s been so long since I’ve been there, I said to myself. From the age of nineteen. I once lived in Russia, felt it was my own, had complete freedom to travel anywhere, and it was not difficult to travel just three hundred miles. But I didn’t go, I kept putting it off. And years and decades went by and by. But now we can’t put it off any longer: it’s either now or never. I must take advantage of the only and last opportunity, since the hour is late and no one will meet me.

And I walked across the bridge over the river, far away seeing everything around in the month-long light of the July night.

The bridge was so familiar, the same as before, as if I had seen it yesterday: crudely ancient, hunchbacked and as if not even stone, but somehow petrified from time to eternal indestructibility - as a high school student I thought it was still under Batu. However, only some traces of the city walls on the cliff under the cathedral and this bridge speak of the antiquity of the city. Everything else is old, provincial, nothing more. One thing was strange, one thing indicated that something had changed in the world since I was a boy, a young man: before the river was not navigable, but now it has probably been deepened and cleared; The moon was to my left, quite far above the river, and in its unsteady light and in the flickering, trembling shine of the water there was a white paddle steamer, which seemed empty - it was so silent - although all its portholes were illuminated, like motionless golden eyes and all were reflected in the water as flowing golden pillars: the steamer was exactly standing on them. This happened in Yaroslavl, and in the Suez Canal, and on the Nile. In Paris, the nights are damp, dark, a hazy glow turns pink in the impenetrable sky, the Seine flows under the bridges with black tar, but below them also flowing columns of reflections from the lanterns on the bridges hang, only they are three-colored: white, blue and red - Russian national flags. There are no lights on the bridge here, and it is dry and dusty. And ahead, on the hill, the city is darkened by gardens; a fire tower sticks out above the gardens. My God, what an unspeakable happiness it was! It was during the night fire that I first kissed your hand and you squeezed mine in response - I will never forget this secret consent. The whole street turned black with people in an ominous, unusual illumination. I was visiting you when the alarm suddenly sounded and everyone rushed to the windows, and then behind the gate. It was burning far away, across the river, but terribly hot, greedily, urgently. There, clouds of smoke poured out thickly in a black-purple fleece, crimson sheets of flame burst out of them high, and near us they, trembling, shone copper in the dome of the Archangel Michael. And in the cramped space, in the crowd, amid the anxious, now pitiful, now joyful talk of the common people who had come running from everywhere, I heard the smell of your girlish hair, neck, canvas dress - and then suddenly I decided, I took, all trembling, your hand...

Beyond the bridge I climbed a hill and walked into the city along a paved road.

There was not a single fire anywhere in the city, not a single living soul. Everything was silent and spacious, calm and sad - the sadness of the Russian steppe night, of a sleeping steppe city. Some gardens faintly and cautiously fluttered their leaves from the steady current of the weak July wind, which pulled from somewhere from the fields and blew gently on me. I walked - the big moon also walked, rolling and passing through the blackness of the branches in a mirror circle; the wide streets lay in shadow - only in the houses on the right, which the shadow did not reach, the white walls were illuminated and the black glass shimmered with a mournful gloss; and I walked in the shadows, stepped along the spotted sidewalk - it was see-throughly covered with black silk lace. She had this Evening Dress, very elegant, long and slender. It suited her slim figure and black young eyes incredibly well. She was mysterious in him and insultingly did not pay attention to me. Where was it? Visiting who?

My goal was to visit Old Street. And I could have gone there by another, closer route. But I turned into these spacious streets in the gardens because I wanted to look at the gymnasium. And, having reached it, he marveled again: and here everything remained the same as half a century ago; a stone fence, a stone courtyard, a large stone building in the courtyard - everything is just as official, boring as it once was, with me. I hesitated at the gate, I wanted to evoke in myself sadness, the pity of memories - but I could not: yes, first a first-grader with a comb-haired haircut in a brand new blue cap with silver palms above the visor and in a new overcoat with silver buttons entered these gates, then a thin young man in a gray jacket and smart trousers with straps; but is it me?

The old street seemed to me only a little narrower than it had seemed before. Everything else was unchanged. Bumpy pavement, not a single tree, on both sides there are dusty merchant houses, the sidewalks are also bumpy, such that it is better to walk in the middle of the street, in full monthly light... And the night was almost the same as that one. Only that one was at the end of August, when the whole city smells of apples that lie in mountains in the markets, and it was so warm that it was a pleasure to walk in one blouse, belted with a Caucasian strap... Is it possible to remember this night somewhere there, as if in sky?

LATE HOUR

Oh, it’s been so long since I’ve been there, I said to myself. From the age of nineteen. I once lived in Russia, felt it was my own, had complete freedom to travel anywhere, and it was not difficult to travel just three hundred miles. But I didn’t go, I kept putting it off. And years and decades went by and by. But now we can’t put it off any longer: it’s either now or never. I must take advantage of the only and last opportunity, since the hour is late and no one will meet me.

And I walked across the bridge over the river, far away seeing everything around in the month-long light of the July night.

The bridge was so familiar, the same as before, as if I had seen it yesterday: crudely ancient, hunchbacked and as if not even stone, but somehow petrified from time to eternal indestructibility - as a high school student I thought it was still under Batu. However, only some traces of the city walls on the cliff under the cathedral and this bridge speak of the antiquity of the city. Everything else is old, provincial, nothing more. One thing was strange, one thing indicated that something had changed in the world since I was a boy, a young man: before the river was not navigable, but now it has probably been deepened and cleared; The moon was to my left, quite far above the river, and in its unsteady light and in the flickering, trembling shine of the water there was a white paddle steamer, which seemed empty - it was so silent - although all its portholes were illuminated, like motionless golden eyes and all were reflected in the water as flowing golden pillars: the steamer was exactly standing on them. This happened in Yaroslavl, and in the Suez Canal, and on the Nile. In Paris, the nights are damp, dark, a hazy glow turns pink in the impenetrable sky, the Seine flows under the bridges with black tar, but below them also flowing columns of reflections from the lanterns on the bridges hang, only they are three-colored: white, blue and red - Russian national flags. There are no lights on the bridge here, and it is dry and dusty. And ahead, on the hill, the city is darkened by gardens; a fire tower sticks out above the gardens. My God, what an unspeakable happiness it was! It was during the night fire that I first kissed your hand and you squeezed mine in response - I will never forget this secret consent. The whole street turned black with people in an ominous, unusual illumination. I was visiting you when the alarm suddenly sounded and everyone rushed to the windows, and then behind the gate. It was burning far away, across the river, but terribly hot, greedily, urgently. There, clouds of smoke poured out thickly in a black-purple fleece, crimson sheets of flame burst out of them high, and near us they, trembling, shone copper in the dome of the Archangel Michael. And in the cramped space, in the crowd, amid the anxious, now pitiful, now joyful talk of the common people who had come running from everywhere, I heard the smell of your girlish hair, neck, canvas dress - and then suddenly I decided, I took, all trembling, your hand...

Beyond the bridge I climbed a hill and walked into the city along a paved road.

There was not a single fire anywhere in the city, not a single living soul. Everything was silent and spacious, calm and sad - the sadness of the Russian steppe night, of a sleeping steppe city. Some gardens faintly and cautiously fluttered their leaves from the steady current of the weak July wind, which pulled from somewhere from the fields and blew gently on me. I walked - the big moon also walked, rolling and passing through the blackness of the branches in a mirror circle; the wide streets lay in shadow - only in the houses on the right, which the shadow did not reach, the white walls were illuminated and the black glass shimmered with a mournful gloss; and I walked in the shadows, stepped along the spotted sidewalk - it was see-throughly covered with black silk lace. She had this evening dress, very elegant, long and slender. It suited her slim figure and black young eyes incredibly well. She was mysterious in him and insultingly did not pay attention to me. Where was it? Visiting who?

My goal was to visit Old Street. And I could have gone there by another, closer route. But I turned into these spacious streets in the gardens because I wanted to look at the gymnasium. And, having reached it, he marveled again: and here everything remained the same as half a century ago; a stone fence, a stone courtyard, a large stone building in the courtyard - everything is just as official, boring as it once was, with me. I hesitated at the gate, I wanted to evoke in myself sadness, the pity of memories - but I could not: yes, first a first-grader with a comb-haired haircut in a brand new blue cap with silver palms above the visor and in a new overcoat with silver buttons entered these gates, then a thin young man in a gray jacket and smart trousers with straps; but is it me?

The old street seemed to me only a little narrower than it had seemed before. Everything else was unchanged. Bumpy pavement, not a single tree, on both sides there are dusty merchant houses, the sidewalks are also bumpy, such that it is better to walk in the middle of the street, in full monthly light... And the night was almost the same as that one. Only that one was at the end of August, when the whole city smells of apples that lie in mountains in the markets, and it was so warm that it was a pleasure to walk in one blouse, belted with a Caucasian strap... Is it possible to remember this night somewhere there, as if in sky?

I still didn’t dare go to your house. And he, it’s true, hasn’t changed, but it’s all the more terrifying to see him. Some strangers, new people live in it now. Your father, your mother, your brother - they all outlived you, the young one, but they also died in due time. Yes, and everyone died for me; and not only relatives, but also many, many with whom I, in friendship or friendship, began life; how long ago did they start, confident that there would be no end to it, but it all began, proceeded and ended before my eyes - so quickly and before my eyes! And I sat down on a pedestal near some merchant’s house, impregnable behind its locks and gates, and began to think what she was like in those distant times, our times: simply pulled back dark hair, clear eyes, a light tan of a young face, a light summer look. a dress under which there is purity, strength and freedom of a young body... This was the beginning of our love, a time of unclouded happiness, intimacy, trust, enthusiastic tenderness, joy...

There is something very special about the warm and bright nights of Russian provincial towns at the end of summer. What peace, what prosperity! An old man with a mallet wanders around the cheerful city at night, but only for his own pleasure: there is nothing to guard, sleep peacefully, good people, you will be guarded by God's favor, this high shining sky, which the old man looks at carelessly, wandering along the pavement that has warmed up during the day and only occasionally, for fun, starting a dance trill with a mallet. And on such a night, on that late hour, when he was the only one awake in the city, you were waiting for me in your garden, which had already dried up by autumn, and I secretly slipped into it: quietly opened the gate that you had previously unlocked, quietly and quickly ran across the yard and behind the shed in the depths of the yard entered the motley twilight of the garden, where your dress faintly whitened in the distance, on a bench under the apple trees, and, quickly approaching, with joyful fear I met the sparkle of your waiting eyes.

Current page: 1 (book has 1 pages in total)

Ivan Alekseevich Bunin
Late hour

Oh, it’s been so long since I’ve been there, I said to myself. From the age of nineteen. I once lived in Russia, felt it was my own, had complete freedom to travel anywhere, and it was not difficult to travel just three hundred miles. But I didn’t go, I kept putting it off. And years and decades went by and by. But now we can’t put it off any longer: it’s either now or never. I must take advantage of the only and last opportunity, since the hour is late and no one will meet me.

And I walked across the bridge over the river, far away seeing everything around in the month-long light of the July night.

The bridge was so familiar, the same as before, as if I had seen it yesterday: crudely ancient, humpbacked and as if not even stone, but somehow petrified from time to eternal indestructibility - as a high school student I thought that it was still under Batu. However, only some traces of the city walls on the cliff under the cathedral and this bridge speak of the antiquity of the city. Everything else is old, provincial, nothing more. One thing was strange, one thing indicated that something had changed in the world since I was a boy, a young man: before the river was not navigable, but now it has probably been deepened and cleared; The moon was to my left, quite far above the river, and in its unsteady light and in the flickering, trembling shine of the water there was a white paddle steamer, which seemed empty - it was so silent - although all its portholes were illuminated, like motionless golden eyes and all were reflected in the water as flowing golden pillars: the steamer was exactly standing on them. This happened in Yaroslavl, and in the Suez Canal, and on the Nile. In Paris, the nights are damp, dark, a hazy glow turns pink in the impenetrable sky, the Seine flows under the bridges with black tar, but below them also flowing columns of reflections from the lanterns on the bridges hang, only they are three-colored: white, blue, red - Russian national flags. There are no lights on the bridge here, and it is dry and dusty. And ahead, on the hill, the city is darkened by gardens; a fire tower sticks out above the gardens. My God, what an unspeakable happiness it was! It was during the night fire that I first kissed your hand and you squeezed mine in response - I will never forget this secret consent. The whole street turned black with people in an ominous, unusual illumination. I was visiting you when the alarm suddenly sounded and everyone rushed to the windows, and then behind the gate. It was burning far away, across the river, but terribly hot, greedily, urgently. There, clouds of smoke poured out thickly in black and purple fleeces, crimson sheets of flame burst out of them high, and near us they, trembling, glowed coppery in the dome of Michael the Archangel. And in the crowded space, in the crowd, amid the anxious, sometimes pitiful, sometimes joyful talk of the common people who had come running from everywhere, I heard the smell of your girlish hair, neck, canvas dress - and then suddenly I decided, and, freezing, I took your hand...

Beyond the bridge I climbed a hill and walked into the city along a paved road.

There was not a single fire anywhere in the city, not a single living soul. Everything was silent and spacious, calm and sad - the sadness of the Russian steppe night, of a sleeping steppe city. Some gardens faintly and cautiously fluttered their leaves from the steady current of the weak July wind, which pulled from somewhere from the fields and blew gently on me. I walked - the big moon also walked, rolling and passing through the blackness of the branches in a mirror circle; the wide streets lay in shadow - only in the houses on the right, which the shadow did not reach, the white walls were illuminated and the black glass shimmered with a mournful gloss; and I walked in the shadows, stepped along the spotted sidewalk - it was see-throughly covered with black silk lace. She had this evening dress, very elegant, long and slender. It suited her slim figure and black young eyes incredibly well. She was mysterious in him and insultingly did not pay attention to me. Where was it? Visiting who?

My goal was to visit Old Street. And I could have gone there by another, closer route. But I turned into these spacious streets in the gardens because I wanted to look at the gymnasium. And, having reached it, he marveled again: and here everything remained the same as half a century ago; a stone fence, a stone courtyard, a large stone building in the courtyard - everything is just as official, boring as it once was, with me. I hesitated at the gate, I wanted to evoke in myself sadness, the pity of memories - but I could not: yes, first a first-grader with a comb-haired haircut in a brand new blue cap with silver palms above the visor and in a new overcoat with silver buttons entered these gates, then a thin young man in a gray jacket and smart trousers with straps; but is it me?

The old street seemed to me only a little narrower than it had seemed before. Everything else was unchanged. Bumpy pavement, not a single tree, on both sides there are dusty merchant houses, the sidewalks are also bumpy, such that it is better to walk in the middle of the street, in full monthly light... And the night was almost the same as that one. Only that one was at the end of August, when the whole city smells of apples that lie in mountains in the markets, and it was so warm that it was a pleasure to walk in one blouse, belted with a Caucasian strap... Is it possible to remember this night somewhere out there, as if in the sky?

I still didn’t dare go to your house. And he, it’s true, hasn’t changed, but it’s all the more terrifying to see him. Some strangers, new people live in it now. Your father, your mother, your brother - they all outlived you, the young one, but they also died in due time. Yes, and everyone died for me; and not only relatives, but also many, many with whom I, in friendship or friendship, began life, how long ago did they begin, confident that there would be no end to it, but it all began, flowed and ended before my eyes - so quickly and before my eyes! And I sat down on a pedestal near some merchant’s house, impregnable behind its locks and gates, and began to think what she was like in those distant times, our times: simply pulled back dark hair, clear eyes, a light tan of a young face, a light summer look. a dress under which there is purity, strength and freedom of a young body... This was the beginning of our love, a time of unclouded happiness, intimacy, trust, enthusiastic tenderness, joy...

There is something very special about the warm and bright nights of Russian provincial towns at the end of summer. What peace, what prosperity! An old man with a mallet wanders around the cheerful city at night, but only for his own pleasure: there is nothing to guard, sleep peacefully, good people, you will be guarded by God's favor, this high shining sky, which the old man carelessly looks at, wandering along the pavement heated during the day and only occasionally, for fun, starting a dance trill with a mallet. And on such a night, at that late hour, when he was the only one awake in the city, you were waiting for me in your garden, already dry by autumn, and I secretly slipped into it: quietly opened the gate that you had previously unlocked, quietly and quickly ran through the yard and behind the shed in the depths of the yard, he entered the motley gloom of the garden, where your dress faintly whitened in the distance, on a bench under the apple trees, and, quickly approaching, with joyful fear he met the sparkle of your waiting eyes.

And we sat, sat in some kind of bewilderment of happiness. With one hand I hugged you, hearing your heartbeat, in the other I held your hand, feeling all of you through it. And it was already so late that you couldn’t even hear the beater - the old man lay down somewhere on a bench and dozed off with a pipe in his teeth, basking in the monthly light. When I looked to the right, I saw how high and sinlessly the moon shines over the yard and the roof of the house glistens like a fish. When I looked to the left, I saw a path overgrown with dry grasses, disappearing under other grasses, and behind them a lone green star peeking low from behind some other garden, glowing impassively and at the same time expectantly, silently saying something. But I saw both the courtyard and the star only briefly - there was only one thing in the world: a light dusk and the radiant twinkle of your eyes in the dusk.

And then you walked me to the gate, and I said:

“If there is a future life and we meet in it, I will kneel there and kiss your feet for everything you gave me on earth.”

I walked out into the middle of the bright street and went to my yard. Turning around, I saw that everything was still white at the gate.

Now, having risen from the pedestal, I went back the same way I had come. No, besides Old Street, I had another goal, which I was afraid to admit to myself, but the fulfillment of which, I knew, was inevitable. And I went to take a look and leave forever.

The road was familiar again. Everything goes straight, then to the left, along the bazaar, and from the bazaar - along Monastyrskaya - to the exit from the city.

The bazaar is like another city within the city. Very smelly rows. In Obzhorny Row, under the awnings above long tables and benches, gloomy. In Skobyany, an icon of the big-eyed Savior in a rusty frame hangs on a chain above the middle of the passage. In Muchnoye, a whole flock of pigeons were always running and pecking along the pavement in the morning. You go to the gymnasium - there are so many of them! And all the fat ones, with rainbow-colored crops, peck and run, femininely, delicately wagging, swaying, twitching their heads monotonously, as if not noticing you: they take off, whistling with their wings, only when you almost step on one of them. And at night, large dark rats, nasty and scary, rushed around quickly and anxiously.

Monastyrskaya Street - a span into the fields and a road: one from the city to home, to the village, the other to City of dead. In Paris, for two days, house number such and such on such and such a street stands out from all other houses with the plague props of the entrance, its mournful frame with silver, for two days a sheet of paper with a mourning border lies in the entrance on the mourning cover of the table - they sign it as a sign of sympathy polite visitors; then, at some point deadline, a huge chariot with a mourning canopy stops at the entrance, the wood of which is black and resinous, like a plague coffin, the rounded carved floors of the canopy indicate the heavens with large white stars, and the corners of the roof are crowned with curly black plumes - ostrich feathers from the underworld; the chariot is harnessed to tall monsters in coal-horned blankets with white eye socket rings; an old drunkard sits on an infinitely high trestle and waits to be taken out, also symbolically dressed up in a fake coffin uniform and the same triangular hat, inwardly probably always grinning at these solemn words: “Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luseat eis” 1
Give them eternal rest, Lord, and may eternal light shine on them (lat.).

. - Everything is different here. A breeze blows from the fields along Monastyrskaya, and is carried towards it on towels open coffin, a rice face sways with a motley corolla on its forehead, above closed convex eyelids. So they carried her too.

At the exit, to the left of the highway, there is a monastery from the time of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, fortress, always closed gates and fortress walls, from behind which the gilded turnips of the cathedral shine. Further, completely in the field, there is a very spacious square of other walls, but low: they contain a whole grove, broken up by intersecting long avenues, on the sides of which, under old elms, lindens and birches, everything is dotted with various crosses and monuments. Here the gates were wide open, and I saw the main avenue, smooth and endless. I timidly took off my hat and entered. How late and how dumb! The moon was already low behind the trees, but everything around, as far as the eye could see, was still clearly visible. The entire space of this grove of the dead, its crosses and monuments was patterned in a transparent shadow. The wind died down towards the pre-dawn hour - the light and dark spots, all colorful under the trees, were sleeping. In the distance of the grove, from behind the cemetery church, suddenly something flashed and with furious speed, a dark ball rushed towards me - I, beside myself, darted to the side, my whole head immediately froze and tightened, my heart rushed and froze... What It was? It flashed and disappeared. But the heart remained standing in my chest. And so, with my heart stopping, carrying it inside me like a heavy cup, I moved on. I knew where to go, I kept walking straight along the avenue - and at the very end of it, already a few steps from the back wall, I stopped: in front of me, on level ground, among the dry grasses, lay a lonely elongated and rather narrow stone, with its head to Wall. From behind the wall, a low green star looked out like a wondrous gem, radiant like the old one, but silent and motionless.


Ivan Alekseevich Bunin

Late hour

Oh, it’s been so long since I’ve been there, I said to myself. From the age of nineteen. I once lived in Russia, felt it was my own, had complete freedom to travel anywhere, and it was not difficult to travel just three hundred miles. But I didn’t go, I kept putting it off. And years and decades went by and by. But now we can’t put it off any longer: it’s either now or never. I must take advantage of the only and last opportunity, since the hour is late and no one will meet me.

And I walked across the bridge over the river, far away seeing everything around in the month-long light of the July night.

The bridge was so familiar, the same as before, as if I had seen it yesterday: crudely ancient, humpbacked and as if not even stone, but somehow petrified from time to eternal indestructibility - as a high school student I thought that it was still under Batu. However, only some traces of the city walls on the cliff under the cathedral and this bridge speak of the antiquity of the city. Everything else is old, provincial, nothing more. One thing was strange, one thing indicated that something had changed in the world since I was a boy, a young man: before the river was not navigable, but now it has probably been deepened and cleared; The moon was to my left, quite far above the river, and in its unsteady light and in the flickering, trembling shine of the water there was a white paddle steamer, which seemed empty - it was so silent - although all its portholes were illuminated, like motionless golden eyes and all were reflected in the water as flowing golden pillars: the steamer was exactly standing on them. This happened in Yaroslavl, and in the Suez Canal, and on the Nile. In Paris, the nights are damp, dark, a hazy glow turns pink in the impenetrable sky, the Seine flows under the bridges with black tar, but below them also flowing columns of reflections from the lanterns on the bridges hang, only they are three-colored: white, blue, red - Russian national flags. There are no lights on the bridge here, and it is dry and dusty. And ahead, on the hill, the city is darkened by gardens; a fire tower sticks out above the gardens. My God, what an unspeakable happiness it was! It was during the night fire that I first kissed your hand and you squeezed mine in response - I will never forget this secret consent. The whole street turned black with people in an ominous, unusual illumination. I was visiting you when the alarm suddenly sounded and everyone rushed to the windows, and then behind the gate. It was burning far away, across the river, but terribly hot, greedily, urgently. There, clouds of smoke poured out thickly in black and purple fleeces, crimson sheets of flame burst out of them high, and near us they, trembling, glowed coppery in the dome of Michael the Archangel. And in the crowded space, in the crowd, amid the anxious, sometimes pitiful, sometimes joyful talk of the common people who had come running from everywhere, I heard the smell of your girlish hair, neck, canvas dress - and then suddenly I decided, and, freezing, I took your hand...

Beyond the bridge I climbed a hill and walked into the city along a paved road.

There was not a single fire anywhere in the city, not a single living soul. Everything was silent and spacious, calm and sad - the sadness of the Russian steppe night, of a sleeping steppe city. Some gardens faintly and cautiously fluttered their leaves from the steady current of the weak July wind, which pulled from somewhere from the fields and blew gently on me. I walked - the big moon also walked, rolling and passing through the blackness of the branches in a mirror circle; the wide streets lay in shadow - only in the houses on the right, which the shadow did not reach, the white walls were illuminated and the black glass shimmered with a mournful gloss; and I walked in the shadows, stepped along the spotted sidewalk - it was see-throughly covered with black silk lace. She had this evening dress, very elegant, long and slender. It suited her slim figure and black young eyes incredibly well. She was mysterious in him and insultingly did not pay attention to me. Where was it? Visiting who?

End of introductory fragment.

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The work tells about a peculiar meeting of an elderly man who has lived abroad for a long time with his past. He went out late in the evening (more precisely, it was already a bright July night) for a walk in familiar places. Observing his surroundings (a bridge over a river, a hill, a paved road), he indulges in memories. He lives in the past, where main character- his beloved. First she made it the happiest man in the world - and he is in future life ready to kneel and kiss her feet. In the details of her appearance (dark hair, slender figure, lively eyes) the main thing is flowing White dress, so remembered by the hero of the story.

Relationship touches: touching, shaking hands, hugging, meeting at night. He even remembers smells, shades of colors - happy memories are made from this. Other visions join them. These are fragments from pictures of urban places where he spent his youth. Here is a noisy bazaar, here is Monastyrskaya Street, a bridge over the river. Paris - the place of his current residence - always loses to the memory of the old street along which he ran to the gymnasium, of the old bridge and the walls of the monastery.

The thoughts of a strolling man return to the girl who, with a handshake and a light hug, gave him hope for happiness. But then it came great sorrow. Life is cruel - and the girl you love dies. Mutual love ends with her death, but continues to live in the heart of the now old man, who has experienced the departure of almost all his loved ones and many friends. There is nothing more in this life - the hero realizes, continuing his journey in the silence of a bright summer night.

At the end of his walk, as if the logical, most significant place appeared by itself - he ended up in the cemetery. This is undoubtedly the very place where his beloved was buried long ago. And it points not only to end soon his life, but also to his inner death. While remaining alive, with the death of his beloved and subsequent departure from Russia, even then, long ago, he had already died.

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  4. Caucasus The narration is in the first person. The author arrived in Moscow and stayed in a modest hotel room near Arbat. He is in love and lives, dreaming of new meetings with the lady of his heart. So far they have only met three times. The young lady also fell in love with Read More......
  5. Chang's dreams Chang (the dog) is dozing, remembering how six years ago in China he met his current owner, the captain. During this time, their fate changed dramatically: they no longer swim, they live in the attic, in a large and cold room with low ceilings. Read More......
  6. Damned days In 1918-1920, Bunin wrote down his direct observations and impressions of events in Russia at that time in the form of diary notes. Here are a few fragments: Moscow, 1918, January 1 (old style). This damn year is over. But what next? Maybe Read More......
  7. Brothers The road from Colombo goes along the ocean. Primitive pirogues sway on the surface of the water, black-haired teenagers lie on the silken sands in heavenly nakedness. It would seem, why do these forest people of Ceylon need cities, cents, rupees? Doesn't everyone give them the forest, the ocean, the sun? Read More......
  8. Dark alleys On a stormy autumn day, a mud-covered carriage with a half-raised top drove up along a broken dirt road to a long hut, in one half of which there was a postal station, and in the other a clean room where one could rest, eat and even spend the night. Read More......
Summary Late hour Bunin

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