The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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other. All that we could think of concerning the life that was before us  
and our home was said.  
"And then what? If we had been animals, we should have known that we had  
not to talk. But here, on the contrary, it was necessary to talk, and  
there were no resources! For that which occupied our minds was not a  
thing to be expressed in words.  
"And then that silly custom of eating bon-bons, that brutal gluttony  
for sweetmeats, those abominable preparations for the wedding, those  
discussions with mamma upon the apartments, upon the sleeping-rooms,  
upon the bedding, upon the morning-gowns, upon the wrappers, the linen,  
the costumes! Understand that if people married according to the old  
fashion, as this old man said just now, then these eiderdown coverlets  
and this bedding would all be sacred details; but with us, out of ten  
married people there is scarcely to be found one who, I do not say  
believes in sacraments (whether he believes or not is a matter of  
indifference to us), but believes in what he promises. Out of a hundred  
men, there is scarcely one who has not married before, and out of fifty  
scarcely one who has not made up his mind to deceive his wife.  
"The great majority look upon this journey to the church as a condition  
necessary to the possession of a certain woman. Think then of the  
supreme significance which material details must take on. Is it not a  
sort of sale, in which a maiden is given over to a debauche, the sale  
being surrounded with the most agreeable details?"  
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