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Oblomov

✒ Author
📖 Pages873
⏰ Reading time 34 hours 45 minutes
💡 Originally published1859
🌏 Original language Russian
📌 Type Novels
📌 Genres Psychological, Realism, Social

Table of contents

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PART ONE1
11
222
357
466
589
6100
7113
8126
10245
11258
PART TWO262
1262
2277
3286
4297
5321
6352
7368
8382
9409
10429
11463
12485
PART THREE502
1502
2509
3526
4542
5570
6584
7594
8619
9626
10633
11637
12651
PART FOUR655
1655
2677
3689
4698
5747
6761
7777
8788
9828
10857
11867

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PART ONE

1

ILYA ILYICH OBLOMOV was lying in bed one morning in his flat in Gorokhovaya Street in one of those large houses which have as many inhabitants as a country town.
He was a man of about thirty-two or three, of medium height and pleasant appearance, with dark grey eyes, but with a total absence of any definite idea, any concentration, in his features.
Thoughts promenaded freely all over his face, fluttered about in his eyes, reposed on his half-parted lips, concealed themselves in the furrows of his brow, and then vanished completely – and it was at such moments that an expression of serene unconcern spread all over his face.
This unconcern passed from his face into the contours of his body and even into the folds of his dressing-gown.
Occasionally a sombre look of something like fatigue or boredom crept into his eyes; but neither fatigue nor boredom could banish for a moment the mildness which was the predominant and fundamental expression not only of his face but of his whole soul, so serenely and unashamedly reflected in his eyes, his smile and every movement of his head and hands.
A cold and superficial observer, casting a passing glance at Oblomov, would have said:
‘A good-natured fellow, I’ll be bound, a simpleton!’
A more thoughtful and sympathetic man, after a long scrutiny of his face, would have walked away with a smile, full of pleasant thoughts.
Oblomov’s complexion was not ruddy, nor dark, nor particularly pale, but rather nondescript, or seemed to be so because he had grown so fat and flabby – which was unusual for a man of his age – whether because of lack of exercise, or fresh air, or both, it is difficult to say.
Generally speaking, his body, if one were to judge by the dull and excessively white colour of his neck, his small, chubby hands, and his soft shoulders, seemed too effeminate for a man.
His movements, too, even when he was excited, were kept in check by a certain kind of mildness and laziness which was not without its own touch of gracefulness.
If his mind was troubled, his eyes were clouded over, lines appeared on his forehead, and he was plunged into doubt, sadness, and fear; but his anxiety seldom took the form of any definite idea and still more seldom was it transformed into a decision.
All his anxiety resolved itself into a sigh and dissolved into apathy or drowsiness.
How well Oblomov’s indoor clothes went with the calm features of his countenance and his effeminate body!
He wore a dressing-gown of Persian cloth – a real oriental dressing-gown, without the slightest hint of Europe, without tassels, without velvet trimmings, and so capacious that he could wrap it round him twice.
Page 1 of 873

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Download the free e-book by Ivan Goncharov, «Oblomov» , in English. You can also print the text of the book. For this, the PDF and DOC formats are suitable.

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