The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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word, it is a feeling of animal, sensual maternity. But as for any idea  
as to the mysterious significance of the appearance of a new human being  
to replace us, there is scarcely a sign of it.  
"Nothing of it appears in all that is said and done. No one has any  
faith now in a baptism of the child, and yet that was nothing but a  
reminder of the human significance of the newborn babe.  
"They have rejected all that, but they have not replaced it, and there  
remain only the dresses, the laces, the little hands, the little  
feet, and whatever exists in the animal. But the animal has neither  
imagination, nor foresight, nor reason, nor a doctor.  
"No! not even a doctor! The chicken droops its head, overwhelmed, or the  
calf dies; the hen clucks and the cow lows for a time, and then these  
beasts continue to live, forgetting what has happened.  
"With us, if the child falls sick, what is to be done, how to care for  
it, what doctor to call, where to go? If it dies, there will be no more  
little hands or little feet, and then what is the use of the sufferings  
endured? The cow does not ask all that, and this is why children are a  
source of misery. The cow has no imagination, and for that reason cannot  
think how it might have saved the child if it had done this or that, and  
its grief, founded in its physical being, lasts but a very short time.  
It is only a condition, and not that sorrow which becomes exaggerated  
to the point of despair, thanks to idleness and satiety. The cow has not  
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76 77 78 79 80

Quick Jump
1 73 145 218 290