The Death of a Government Clerk

1883 short story by Anton Chekhov
"The Death of a Government Clerk"
Short story by Anton Chekhov
1955 illustration by Anatoly Bazilevich
Original titleСмерть чиновника
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
Publication
Published inOskolki
Publication date2 July 1883

"The Death of a Government Clerk" (Russian: Смерть чиновника, romanized: Smert chinovnika) is a short story by Anton Chekhov published originally the Oskolki magazine's 2 July, No. 27 issue, subtitled "The Incident" (Случай) and signed A. Chekhonte (А. Чехонте). "Received the "Fragments of Moscow Life" and "The Death of the Government Clerk. Both are delicious", Nikolai Leykin, the Oskolki's editor, informed the author by a 29 June letter. It was included (without the subtitle) into Chekhov's 1886 collection Motley Stories (Пёстрые рассказы) published in Saint Petersburg and featured unchanged in its 2–14 editions (1891–1899).[1]

Plot

Ivan Chervyakov, a petty government official, while in the theatre, sneezes right upon the head of a man sitting in front of him, who happens to be General Brizzhalov, a high-ranking government official. He spends the evening and the next day fawning before his sneeze victim trying to extract forgiveness, but what he succeeds instead is only bringing out a fit of rage in him. Shocked, Chervyakov returns home to lie there and die, due to the sheer stress of having endured such horror.

References

  1. ^ Yezhova, I., Shub, E. Commentaries to Cмерть чиновника. The Works by A.P. Chekhov in 12 volumes. Khudozhestvennaya Literatura. Moscow, 1960. Vol. 2, p. 550

External links

  • Смерть чиновника. Original Russian text
  • The Death of a Government Clerk. Translation by Constance Garnett
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Anton Chekhov
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(1894)
Little Trilogy (1898)
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