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To: Aliska
The book made no mention of cancer. I think that is an adaption in the screenplay. The instigating event that led to his slow and painful death in the written work was as follows:
Once when mounting a step ladder to show the upholsterer, who did not understand, how he wanted the hangings draped, he made a false step and slipped, but being a strong and agile man he clung on and only knocked his side against the knob of the window frame. The bruised place was painful but the pain soon passed, and he felt particularly bright and well just then. He wrote: "I feel fifteen years younger." He thought he would have everything ready by September, but it dragged on till mid-October. But the result was charming not only in his eyes but to everyone who saw it. 

In reality it was just what is usually seen in the houses of people of moderate means who want to appear rich, and therefore succeed only in resembling others like themselves: there are damasks, dark wood, plants, rugs, and dull and polished bronzes -- all the things people of a certain class have in order to resemble other people of that class. His house was so like the others that it would never have been noticed, but to him it all seemed to be quite exceptional. He was very happy when he met his family at the station and brought them to the newly furnished house all lit up, where a footman in a white tie opened the door into the hall decorated with plants, and when they went on into the drawing-room and the study uttering exclamations of delight. He conducted them everywhere, drank in their praises eagerly, and beamed with pleasure. At tea that evening, when Praskovya Fedorovna among others things asked him about his fall, he laughed, and showed them how he had gone flying and had frightened the upholsterer. 

"It's a good thing I'm a bit of an athlete. Another man might have been killed, but I merely knocked myself, just here; it hurts when it's touched, but it's passing off already -- it's only a bruise." 

Actually, it is a pretty short story. Here it is. I am generally not a fan of Tolstoy- I have this thing about anarchists and especially ones who tend to write in a boring matter. But this was a good story. A troubling work about dying.
57 posted on 07/23/2002 6:01:55 PM PDT by Dales
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To: Dales
Sounds a little like us, the way we live and all. I went through a Tolstoy phase and read a lot of his short stories and Anna Karenina. Never could wade through War and Peace. I didn't know he was an anarchist and I was never very philosophically astue, reading for entertainment value. Chekhov was one of my favorites. Guess I could have used some mentoring as I read them all on my own. Who wrote Brothers Karamazov?
65 posted on 07/23/2002 6:09:45 PM PDT by Aliska
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