The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Gentleman from San Francisco, by
Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin
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Title: The Gentleman from San Francisco
and Other Stories
Author: Ivan Alekseyevich Bunin
Translator: Samuel Solomonovich Koteliansky
Leonard Woolf
David Herbert Lawrence
Release Date: February 24, 2014 [EBook #44998]
Language: English
Produced by Dianna Adair, Terrie Westman and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)
SAN FRANCISCO
THE GENTLEMAN FROM SAN FRANCISCO AND OTHER STORIES
The first story in this book "The Gentleman from San Francisco" is translated by D. H. Lawrence and S. S. Koteliansky. Owing to a mistake Mr. Lawrence's name has been omitted from the title-page. The three other stories are translated by S. S. Koteliansky and Leonard Woolf.
THE HOGARTH PRESS, PARADISE ROAD, RICHMOND
1922
SAN FRANCISCO
AND OTHER STORIES
BY
I. A. BUNIN
TRANSLATED FROM THE RUSSIAN BY
S. S. KOTELIANSKY AND LEONARD WOOLF
PUBLISHED BY LEONARD & VIRGINIA WOOLF AT
THE HOGARTH PRESS, PARADISE ROAD, RICHMOND
1922
by
William Clowes and Sons, Limited,
London and Beccles.
PAGE | |
The Gentleman from San Francisco | 1 |
Gentle Breathing | 41 |
Kasimir Stanislavovitch | 51 |
Son | 66 |
THE GENTLEMAN FROM SAN FRANCISCO
"Woe to thee, Babylon, that mighty city!"
Apocalypse.
The gentleman from San Francisco--nobody either in Capri or Naples ever remembered his name--was setting out with his wife and daughter for the Old World, to spend there two years of pleasure.
He was fully convinced of his right to rest, to enjoy long and comfortable travels, and so forth. Because, in the first place he was rich, and in the second place, notwithstanding his fifty-eight years, he was just starting to live. Up to the present he had not lived, but only existed; quite well, it is true, yet with all his hopes on the future. He had worked incessantly--and the Chinamen whom he employed by the thousand in his factories knew what that meant. Now at last he realized that a great deal had been accomplished, and that he had almost reached the level of those whom he had taken as his ideals, so he made up his mind to pause for a breathing space. Men of his class usually began their enjoyments with a trip to Europe, India, Egypt. He decided to do the same. He wished naturally to reward himself in the first place for all his years of toil, but he was quite glad that his wife and daughter should also share in his pleasures. True, his wife was not distinguished by any marked susceptibilities, but then elderly American women are all passionate travellers. As for his daughter, a girl no longer young and somewhat delicate, travel was really necessary for her: apart from the question of health, do not happy meetings often take place in the course of travel One may find one's self sitting next to a multimillionaire at table, or examining frescoes side by side with him.