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509080
https://www.turkishbooks.com/books/on-russian-literature-vol-2-p509080.html
On Russian Literature Vol.2
4.284
In short, the letter produces a great sensation. The friends of the Governor are delighted to see
him and his family in such straits, all accuse each other, and finally fall upon the two gentlemen,
when a police soldier enters the room and announces in a loud voice: "A functionary from St.
Petersburg, with Imperial orders, wants to see you all immediately. He stays at the hotel."
Thereupon the curtain drops over a living picture of which Gógol himself had made a most
striking sketch in pencil, and which is usually reproduced in his works; it shows how admirably
well, with what a fine artistic sense, he represented to himself his characters.
him and his family in such straits, all accuse each other, and finally fall upon the two gentlemen,
when a police soldier enters the room and announces in a loud voice: "A functionary from St.
Petersburg, with Imperial orders, wants to see you all immediately. He stays at the hotel."
Thereupon the curtain drops over a living picture of which Gógol himself had made a most
striking sketch in pencil, and which is usually reproduced in his works; it shows how admirably
well, with what a fine artistic sense, he represented to himself his characters.
In short, the letter produces a great sensation. The friends of the Governor are delighted to see
him and his family in such straits, all accuse each other, and finally fall upon the two gentlemen,
when a police soldier enters the room and announces in a loud voice: "A functionary from St.
Petersburg, with Imperial orders, wants to see you all immediately. He stays at the hotel."
Thereupon the curtain drops over a living picture of which Gógol himself had made a most
striking sketch in pencil, and which is usually reproduced in his works; it shows how admirably
well, with what a fine artistic sense, he represented to himself his characters.
him and his family in such straits, all accuse each other, and finally fall upon the two gentlemen,
when a police soldier enters the room and announces in a loud voice: "A functionary from St.
Petersburg, with Imperial orders, wants to see you all immediately. He stays at the hotel."
Thereupon the curtain drops over a living picture of which Gógol himself had made a most
striking sketch in pencil, and which is usually reproduced in his works; it shows how admirably
well, with what a fine artistic sense, he represented to himself his characters.
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