The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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CHAPTER VII.  
"
And it was very easy to capture me, since I was brought up under  
artificial conditions, like cucumbers in a hothouse. Our too abundant  
nourishment, together with complete physical idleness, is nothing but  
systematic excitement of the imagination. The men of our society are  
fed and kept like reproductive stallions. It is sufficient to close the  
valve,--that is, for a young man to live a quiet life for some  
time,--to produce as an immediate result a restlessness, which, becoming  
exaggerated by reflection through the prism of our unnatural life,  
provokes the illusion of love.  
"
All our idyls and marriage, all, are the result for the most part of  
our eating. Does that astonish you? For my part, I am astonished that  
we do not see it. Not far from my estate this spring some moujiks  
were working on a railway embankment. You know what a peasant's food  
is,--bread, kvass,* onions. With this frugal nourishment he lives, he is  
alert, he makes light work in the fields. But on the railway this bill  
of fare becomes cacha and a pound of meat. Only he restores this meat by  
sixteen hours of labor pushing loads weighing twelve hundred pounds.  
*
Kvass, a sort of cider.  
"And we, who eat two pounds of meat and game, we who absorb all sorts  
of heating drinks and food, how do we expend it? In sensual excesses.  
If the valve is open, all goes well; but close it, as I had closed it  
3
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37 38 39 40 41

Quick Jump
1 73 145 218 290