Maxim Gorky (1868–1936), writer and political activist, was fiercely supportive of human rights and critical of czarist Russia. Orphaned early, he attempted suicide at age nineteen and then traveled on foot across the Russian Empire for five years, gathering material to be used in his writing. He left behind a body of work that helped to found Socialist realism, including the plays The Old Man and Counterfeit Money. In addition to his fiction, Gorky wrote an autobiographical trilogy: My Childhood, In the World, and My Universities.

Her Lover

A Story

by Maxim Gorky

An acquaintance of mine once told me the following story.

When I was a student at Moscow I happened to live alongside one of those ladies whose repute is questionable. She was a Pole, and they called her Teresa. She was a tallish, powerfully built brunette, with black, bushy eyebrows and a large coarse face as if carved out by a hatchet—the bestial gleam of her dark eyes, her thick bass voice, her cabman-like gait and her immense muscular vigour, worthy of a fishwife, inspired me with horror. I lived on the top flight and her garret was opposite to mine. I never left my door open when I knew her to be at home. But this, after all, was a very rare occurrence. Sometimes I chanced to meet her on the staircase or in the yard, and she would smile upon me with a smile which seemed to me to be sly and cynical. Occasionally, I saw her drunk, with bleary eyes, tousled hair, and a particularly hideous grin. On such occasions she would speak to me.

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