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corrected error: the Chekhov text reads five 'minutes'--not 'hours'.(easily confirmed...).
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As the story opens, the banker is recalling the occasion of the bet fifteen years before. Guests at a party that he was hosting that day fell into a discussion of capital punishment; the banker argued that capital punishment is more humane than life imprisonment, while the young lawyer disagreed, insisting that he would choose life in prison rather than death the bet was on and the lawyer cast himself into isolation for fifteen years. They agree to a bet of two million [[rubles]] that the lawyer cannot spend fifteen years in solitary confinement.
As the story opens, the banker is recalling the occasion of the bet fifteen years before. Guests at a party that he was hosting that day fell into a discussion of capital punishment; the banker argued that capital punishment is more humane than life imprisonment, while the young lawyer disagreed, insisting that he would choose life in prison rather than death the bet was on and the lawyer cast himself into isolation for fifteen years. They agree to a bet of two million [[rubles]] that the lawyer cannot spend fifteen years in solitary confinement.
The man spends his time in confinement reading books, writing, playing piano, and studying, among other activities. In the meantime, the banker's fortune declines and he realizes that if he loses, paying off the bet will leave him impoverished. The day before the fifteen-year period concludes, the banker resolves to kill the lawyer so as to not owe him the money. However, the banker finds a note written by the lawyer. The note declares that in his time in confinement he has learned to despise material goods for the fleeting things they are. Therefore, to demonstrate his contempt, he intends to leave confinement five hours prior to when the bet would be up, thus losing the bet and unwittingly saving his own life.
The man spends his time in confinement reading books, writing, playing piano, and studying, among other activities. In the meantime, the banker's fortune declines and he realizes that if he loses, paying off the bet will leave him impoverished. The day before the fifteen-year period concludes, the banker resolves to kill the lawyer so as to not owe him the money. However, the banker finds a note written by the lawyer. The note declares that in his time in confinement he has learned to despise material goods for the fleeting things they are. Therefore, to demonstrate his contempt, he intends to leave confinement five minutes prior to when the bet would be up, thus losing the bet and unwittingly saving his own life.


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Revision as of 13:32, 29 January 2012

The Bet is an 1889 short story by Anton Chekhov about a banker and a young lawyer who make a bet with each other about whether the death penalty is better or worse than life in prison. The story has a twist ending.

As the story opens, the banker is recalling the occasion of the bet fifteen years before. Guests at a party that he was hosting that day fell into a discussion of capital punishment; the banker argued that capital punishment is more humane than life imprisonment, while the young lawyer disagreed, insisting that he would choose life in prison rather than death the bet was on and the lawyer cast himself into isolation for fifteen years. They agree to a bet of two million rubles that the lawyer cannot spend fifteen years in solitary confinement.

The man spends his time in confinement reading books, writing, playing piano, and studying, among other activities. In the meantime, the banker's fortune declines and he realizes that if he loses, paying off the bet will leave him impoverished. The day before the fifteen-year period concludes, the banker resolves to kill the lawyer so as to not owe him the money. However, the banker finds a note written by the lawyer. The note declares that in his time in confinement he has learned to despise material goods for the fleeting things they are. Therefore, to demonstrate his contempt, he intends to leave confinement five minutes prior to when the bet would be up, thus losing the bet and unwittingly saving his own life.