Anton Chekhov: 16 June 1904 Gregorian Calendar 29 June I just cannot get used to German silence and calm. One day is like any other day in Badenweiler. There’s not a sign of good taste or talent anywhere. At 7 in the morning a band plays in the garden: they’re awful. But there’s loads of order and formality and honesty. Names: Doktor Formula, Frau und Fraulein Bassoon, Herr Lipp. My health has improved, not so much out of breath. Never submit a manuscript to two publishers at once. They might both publish at once, ignoring your protests. Out walking I don’t notice I’m ill, no aches and pains. My legs are thinner than ever they’ve been. Anyway, my play would seem to have been received well. At 7.30 a German visits, a kind of masseur. Herr Spa rubs me over with water, then I rest a while. Idea for a novella: all one man’s thoughts over course of one day. His thoughts about their thoughts and so on and so forth. At 8 I drink some acorn cocoa....
An anti-ode entitled ‘Fire’ opens with a line from a letter of Anton Chekhov written to Dmitri Grigorovich, March 28, 1886, Moscow, and published in the Picador edition of selected letters in 1984. The whole poem is about Chekhov, reading him in Melbourne during the January bushfires. FIRE “I have composed my stories as reporters write their accounts of fires – mechanically, half-consciously, “with no concern either for the reader or myself,” fire being the given, the sudden cause of all decisions the story tells as people run one way snatching belongings or would stay put and fight heat they cannot beat. Leave now, it is too late to leave, abandon your plans is the language of fire coming over the hill towards us. Staying doesn’t make you a hero. Fire came from nowhere. We’ve lost everything. The whole place has just gone. Fire quietens the township’s dreams of a world trip. Fire has leapt the r...