chapter 10 the beggar class 9 summary
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The beggar is a story about a drunkard beggar named lushkoff. sergai, an advocate, gives him work at his house so that he can feed himself and stop begging. although he agrees he is not willing to work. the work given to him is done by ogla as she feels pity on his miserable condition. he goes to another place for work as recommended by sergai and becomes a notary. sergai meets him after 2 years and is happy to know about his job. he thinks that he responsible for changing him that it was ogla's kindness and unconditional help that had made his ways.
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hope its help uh
The beggar is a story about a drunkard beggar named lushkoff. sergai, an advocate, gives him work at his house so that he can feed himself and stop begging. although he agrees he is not willing to work. the work given to him is done by ogla as she feels pity on his miserable condition. he goes to another place for work as recommended by sergai and becomes a notary. sergai meets him after 2 years and is happy to know about his job. he thinks that he responsible for changing him that it was ogla's kindness and unconditional help that had made his ways.
✅✅✅✅✅✨✅✅✅✅✅✅✅✅
hope its help uh
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prosperous lawyer (Skvortsoff) encounters a ragged beggar, who claims to be a teacher fired unjustly from his job. Skvortsoff, however, remembers that he saw the same man the other day, when he had claimed to be an impoverished student. The beggar (Luskoff) breaks down and admits that he is simply a drunk without work. Skvortsoff offers him a job chopping wood, which he reluctantly accepts. Olga, the cook, takes Luskoff out and shows him the wood stack.
After that, Luskoff returns frequently to do odd jobs, and eventually Skvortsoff sets him up with a clerical position. Two years later, Skvortsoff sees the former beggar at the theater. He prides himself for having "saved" Lushkoff from a life of drunkenness, but Lushkoff reveals that it was Olga who saved him--she chopped the wood, and the compassion she showed led to a change in his heart.
Commentary
This is a moral tale in which the arrogant and self-righteous lawyer thinks he has "saved" the beggar by teaching him how to work for a living. In fact, he would have never continued the original task (or even begun it), if it weren't for the example of the lawyer's compassionate cook, who quietly chopped the wood for him without expecting anything in return. It was Olga's example of self-sacrifice, not Skvortsoff's example of "do-goodism" that inspired the man to change his life.
After that, Luskoff returns frequently to do odd jobs, and eventually Skvortsoff sets him up with a clerical position. Two years later, Skvortsoff sees the former beggar at the theater. He prides himself for having "saved" Lushkoff from a life of drunkenness, but Lushkoff reveals that it was Olga who saved him--she chopped the wood, and the compassion she showed led to a change in his heart.
Commentary
This is a moral tale in which the arrogant and self-righteous lawyer thinks he has "saved" the beggar by teaching him how to work for a living. In fact, he would have never continued the original task (or even begun it), if it weren't for the example of the lawyer's compassionate cook, who quietly chopped the wood for him without expecting anything in return. It was Olga's example of self-sacrifice, not Skvortsoff's example of "do-goodism" that inspired the man to change his life.
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