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First Love

Chapter 0
The party had long ago broken up. The clock struck half-past twelve. There was left in the room only the master of the house and Sergei Nikolaevitch and Vladimir Petrovitch. Voice Reading
The master of the house rang and ordered the remains of the supper to be cleared away. 'And so it's settled,' he observed, sitting back farther in his easy-chair and lighting a cigar; 'each of us is to tell the story of his first love. It's your turn, Sergei Nikolaevitch.' Voice Reading
Sergei Nikolaevitch, a round little man with a plump, light-complexioned face, gazed first at the master of the house, then raised his eyes to the ceiling. 'I had no first love,' he said at last; 'I began with the second.' Voice Reading
'How was that?' Voice Reading
'It's very simple. Voice Reading
I was eighteen when I had my first flirtation with a charming young lady, but I courted her just as though it were nothing new to me; just as I courted others later on. Voice Reading
To speak accurately, the first and last time I was in love was with my nurse when I was six years old; but that's in the remote past. Voice Reading
The details of our relations have slipped out of my memory, and even if I remembered them, whom could they interest?' Voice Reading
'Then how's it to be?' began the master of the house. Voice Reading
'There was nothing much of interest about my first love either; I never fell in love with any one till I met Anna Nikolaevna, now my wife, and everything went as smoothly as possible with us; our parents arranged the match, we were very soon in love with each other, and got married without loss of time. Voice Reading
My story can be told in a couple of words. Voice Reading
I must confess, gentlemen, in bringing up the subject of first love, I reckoned upon you, I won't say old, but no longer young, bachelors. Voice Reading
Can't you enliven us with something, Vladimir Petrovitch?' Voice Reading
'My first love, certainly, was not quite an ordinary one,' responded, with some reluctance, Vladimir Petrovitch, a man of forty, with black hair turning grey. Voice Reading
'Ah!' said the master of the house and Sergei Nikolaevitch with one voice: 'So much the better... Tell us about it.' Voice Reading
'If you wish it ... or no; I won't tell the story; I'm no hand at telling a story; I make it dry and brief, or spun out and affected. If you'll allow me, I'll write out all I remember and read it you.' Voice Reading
His friends at first would not agree, but Vladimir Petrovitch insisted on his own way. A fortnight later they were together again, and Vladimir Petrovitch kept his word. Voice Reading
His manuscript contained the following story: Voice Reading
Chapter I
I was sixteen then. It happened in the summer of 1833. Voice Reading
I lived in Moscow with my parents. They had taken a country house for the summer near the Kalouga gate, facing the Neskutchny gardens. I was preparing for the university, but did not work much and was in no hurry. Voice Reading
No one interfered with my freedom. Voice Reading
I did what I liked, especially after parting with my last tutor, a Frenchman who had never been able to get used to the idea that he had fallen 'like a bomb' (comme une bombe) into Russia, and would lie sluggishly in bed with an expression of exasperation on his face for days together. Voice Reading
My father treated me with careless kindness; my mother scarcely noticed me, though she had no children except me; other cares completely absorbed her. Voice Reading

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