
THREE MEN - A NOVEL - BY - MAXIM GORKY - Author of "Foma Gordyeeff," etc. - TRANSLATED BY - CHARLES HORNE - LONDON - ISBISTER AND COMPANY LIMITED - 15 & 16 TAVISTOCK STREET COVENT GARDEN - 1902
In the deep woods of Kerschentz, an austere peasant named Antipa Lunev abandons his prosperous life to become a hermit, spending eight silent years in a crude cell that he guards with unwavering prayer. When soldiers finally break into his refuge, the old man’s calm forgiveness echoes through the forest, marking his death as a testament to stubborn devotion and the stark contrast between worldly turmoil and inner peace.
The story then shifts to Antipa’s sons, especially the reckless Jakov, whose wild habits and disdain for the village’s pious ways make him a notorious trouble‑maker. As he spirals through drunken revelry, reckless spending, and strained family ties, Jakov’s defiant swagger hints at a deeper struggle between inherited guilt and the longing for redemption. The opening act sets a vivid portrait of rural hardship, spiritual conflict, and the fragile line between sin and salvation, inviting listeners to follow the tangled paths of three men bound by blood and fate.
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (646K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Dagny and Marc D'Hooghe at Free Literature (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2018-01-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1868–1936
A giant of Russian literature, he turned hardship, wandering, and political turmoil into vivid stories about workers, outcasts, and people pushed to the edges of society. His writing helped shape modern Russian prose and made him one of the defining literary voices of the early 20th century.
View all books
by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky

by Maksim Gorky