illustration of a man looking out a window at a woman in a hat and dress walking her little dog

The Lady with the Pet Dog

by Anton Chekhov

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Student Question

What is the significance of the setting and Gurov's conversation about the weather with his daughter in "The Lady with the Pet Dog"?

"It's three degrees above zero, yet it's snowing... But it's only warm on the surface of the earth, the temperature's quite different in the upper layers of the atmosphere"

"Papa, why isn't there thunder in the winter?"

Quick answer:

In short, the snow and weather at the beginning of this section is symbolic of the duality that Gurov faces in his public and private lives. The coldness and sterility of what is seen by all (his public life) can be compared to the snow-covered city around him, while the warmer levels above are symbolic of what he leads a "secret" double-life about. This sense of duality continues for the rest of the section as Gurov does not recognise that Anna Sergeyevna from his past is in fact Nataisya Fyodorovna from his present. He cannot accept that she has not changed. As he says himself: "

Expert Answers

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Yes, the description of the weather at the beginning of the fourth section of this great short story is rather curious. Yet, if we read it in the context of the rest of this section, we can draw some parallels between Gurov's situation and the weather. The key description to focus on is the way that the temperature is drastically different depending on where you are in the atmosphere:

"You see it is only above freezing close to the ground, the temperature in the upper layers of the atmosphere is quite different."

This presents the theme or concept of duality. Just as on the ground, the temperature can be freezing, yet higher in the atmosphere it can be a lot warmer, so Gurov himself leads a life that is characterised by two different realities. His public life is the frozen, snowcovered city in which he walks with his daughter--marked by marriage to a woman that he does not love and the superficiality of relationships. However, his private life can be compared to the warmth that is not visible but hidden above the snow-covered scene below:

He led a double life--one in public, in the sight of all whom it concerned, full of conventional truth and conventional deception, exactly like the lives of his friends and acquaintances, and another which flowed in secret. And, owing to some strange, possibly quite accidental chain of circumstances, everything that was important, interesting, essential, everything about which he was sincere and never deceived himself, everything that composed the kernel of his life, went on in secret...

Thus this quote shows that the warmer, higher levels of the atmosphere that are hidden from sight find their parallel in the meaningfulness of Gurov's hidden life and relationship. The snow and frozen landscape of what is seen by everybody is paralleled by the sterility, cold and emotionally withdrawn nature of his public life.

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