—⁠Trans.
  • Orenburg has as high a reputation for woolens as Sheffield has for steel. —⁠Trans.

  • Schoolbooks (taking their names from their authors), upon which generation after generation of gymnazists have been brought up. —⁠Trans.

  • This story is Lit No. 29, by Guy de Maupassant. —⁠Trans.

  • In English, a “toff”; in American, a “swell.” —⁠Trans.

  • “My mastery of the German language is a trifle worse than that of the French, but I can always keep up my end in parlor small talk.”

  • “O, splendid!⁠ ⁠… You have a bewitching Riga enunciation, the most correct of all the German ones. And so, let us continue in my tongue. That is far sweeter to my ear⁠—my mother tongue. All right?”

  • “All right.”

  • “In the very end you will give in, as though unwillingly, as though against your will, as though from infatuation, a momentary caprice, and⁠—which is the main thing⁠—as though on the sly from me. You understand? For this the fools pay enormous money. However, it seems I will not have to teach you.”

  • “Yes, my dear madam. You say very wise things. But this is no longer small talk; it is, rather, serious conversation⁠ ⁠…”

  • Zolotorotzi⁠—a subtle euphemism for cleaners of cesspools and carters of the wealth contained therein. —⁠Trans.

  • The first edition in English consisted⁠—if the publisher is to be believed⁠—of 1,225 copies, retailing from ten to sixty dollars per copy; the next edition⁠—with the same qualification of its publisher’s statement⁠—was of 1,550 copies, also prohibitively priced. This revised, augmented edition is the third. —⁠Trans.

  • In a delightful letter to me Kuprin has written: “I am not at all mistaken in saying that Yama was translated in all lands and realms⁠—with the possible exception of the Touaregs and the Bottoludi.⁠ ⁠… I must say that in England and in Holland neither Yama nor Sulamith was allowed: the first for its naked truth; the second for its light-minded attitude toward the Bible.⁠ ⁠…” I myself, as a bookseller, have had occasion to supply Yama in Yiddish. And since the above was written, this version of Yama has been published in England and has met with deserved success. —⁠Trans.

  • Colophon

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    Yama
    was published between 1909 and 1915 by
    Aleksandr Kuprin.
    It was translated from Russian in 1922 by
    Bernard Guilbert Guerney.

    This ebook was produced for
    Standard Ebooks
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    Robin Whittleton,
    and is based on a transcription produced in 2003 by
    Robert Rowe, Charles Franks and The Online Distributed Proofreading Team
    for
    Project Gutenberg
    and on digital scans available at the
    Internet Archive.

    The cover page is adapted from
    Vampire,
    a painting completed in 1893 by
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    The cover and title pages feature the
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