Misplaced Pages

Home (short story)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Not to be confused with At Home (short story). Short story by Anton Chekhov
"Home"
Short story by Anton Chekhov
Original titleДома
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
Publication
Published inNovoye Vremya
PublisherAdolf Marks (1899–1901)
Publication date7 March 1887 (old style)

"Home" (Russian: Дома, romanizedDoma) is an 1887 short story by Anton Chekhov.

Publication

The story was first published by Novoye Vremya, in this newspaper's No. 3958, 20 (old style: 7) March 1887 issue, Subbotniki (Saturdays) section. It then appeared in an 1887 collection called In the Twilight (В сумерках, Saint Petersburg, in all of its thirteen, 1888–1899 editions) and later Children (Детвора, 1889 anthology). Chekhov included it into Volume 3 of his Collected Works published by Adolf Marks in 1899–1901.

Synopsis

Seryozha, a seven-year old, had been caught smoking, and his father Evgeny Petrovich, a court prosecutor, tries to put it to him how detrimental to one's health this habit is, and how wrong it is to steal somebody else's tobacco. All his efforts to impress his son prove to be futile, until finally, responding to a request, before sending Seryozha to bed, he tells him one of his improvisational fairytales, this one involving a young prince who dies young due to being a smoker and thus fails to fulfill his obligations towards his king father and his kingdom. Profoundly shaken by the tragedy, the boy solemnly decides not to have anything to do with tobacco again.

Reception

The story received no reviews in the contemporary press, but several authors and friends expressed their enthusiasm. "Today read your Subbotnik. Portraying children is what you are a master of", Viktor Bilibin wrote in a 20 (7) March letter.

Dmitry Grigorovich in a January 1888 letter mentioned the story among those which show "how perfectly horizon... embraces the motif of love in all its most subtle or hidden manifestations".

The writer and an avid Tolstoyan Ivan Gorbunov-Posadov, who was also the head of the Posrednik publishing company, while discussing one of his future anthologies, gave "At Home" a special mention. "This story had been included on my recommendation. For me, this is one of your most profound things. The clash of these two worlds, the pure, humane child's world, and our confused, crippled, deceitful one, in this little, simple piece is shown brilliantly," he wrote in a 29 (old style: 16) May 1893 letter to Chekhov.

Lev Tolstoy included it in his personal list of Chekhov's best stories.

Notes

  1. A diminutive for Sergey

References

  1. ^ Sakharova, E.M. Commentaries to Дома. The Works by A.P. Chekhov in 12 volumes. Khudozhestvennaya Literatura. Moscow, 1960. Vol. 5, pp. 499
  2. "Сегодня читал ваш Субботник. "Дети" всегда Вам очень удаются."
  3. The Slovo anthology, 1914, p. 208 // "Слово". Сб. второй, Москва, 1914, стр. 208

External links

  • Дома, the original Russian text
  • Home, the English translation
Anton Chekhov
Plays
Novel
Novellas
Short stories
Motley Stories (1886)
In the Twilight (1887)
Stories (1888)
Gloomy People (1890)
Ward No. 6 (1893)
Novellas and
Stories
(1894)
Little Trilogy (1898)
Stories (1901)
Other stories
Non-fictionSakhalin Island (1893–1895)
Related
Categories: