“That’s the village where the deacon ate all the caviar at the funeral.“

    The village of Ukleevo lay in a ravine so that only the belfry and the chimneys of the printed cotton factories could be seen from the high-road and the railway-station. When visitors asked what village this was, they were told:
   “That’s the village where the deacon ate all the caviar at the funeral.”
   It had happened at the dinner at the funeral of Kostukov that the old deacon saw among the savories some large-grained caviar and began eating it greedily; people nudged him, tugged at his arm, but he seemed petrified with enjoyment, felt nothing, and only went on eating. He ate up all the caviar, and there were four pounds in the jar. And years had passed since then, the deacon had long been dead, but the caviar was till remembered.  Whether life was so poor here or people had not been clever enough to notice anything but that unimportant incident that had occurred ten years before, anyway the people had nothing else to tell about the village Ukleevo.


-Chekhov, from his story, “The Ravine”

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