Russian Poetry
POEMS IN PROSE
| Download PDF |
Russian Literature – Russian Poetry – Children’s books – Ivan Turgenev – Poems – Obsolete Russian Words and their meaning
< < < The Beggar Man
The Correspondent > > >
The Contented Man
Along a street of the capital is skipping a man who is still young.—His movements are cheerful, alert; his eyes are beaming, his lips are smiling, his sensitive face is pleasantly rosy…. He is all contentment and joy.
What has happened to him? Has he come into an inheritance? Has he been elevated in rank? Is he hastening to a love tryst? Or, simply, has he breakfasted well, and is it a sensation of health, a sensation of full-fed strength which is leaping for joy in all his limbs? Or they may have hung on his neck thy handsome, eight-pointed cross, O Polish King Stanislaus!
No. He has concocted a calumny against an acquaintance, he has assiduously disseminated it, he has heard it—that same calumny—from the mouth of another acquaintance—and has believed it himself.
Oh, how contented, how good even at this moment is that nice, highly-promising young man.
February, 1878.

Translated from the Russian by Isabel F. Hapgood
< < < The Beggar Man
The Correspondent > > >
Russian Literature – Russian Poetry – Children’s books – Ivan Turgenev – Poems – Obsolete Russian Words and their meaning
Copyright holders – Public Domain
| If you liked this article, subscribe , put likes, write comments! Share on social networks Find us on Facebook or Twitter |
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 14 décembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of December 14, 2025
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 7 décembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of December 7, 2025
- Poèmes et peinture, semaine du 30 novembre 2025
- Poems and painting, Week of November 30, 2025
© 2023 Akirill.com – All Rights Reserved
