Chekhov used the affair as a model for the relationship to write the story “The Lady with The Dog”. “The Fiancée” occurred when Olga pressured Anton Chekhov to married her, Anton Chekhov, his fiancée didn’t want to spend time with Anton Chekhov and his family in Yelta. The time past Anton Chekhov agree to marriage and enjoy with Olga in Moscow to exchange vows; however, his family was hurt and disappointed. Anton Chekhov grows ability to render life from the minds of his characters of significant details and to expose experience without speaking or attitudinizing. According to Contemporary Authors Online implies, the years 1886 to 1887 were the most productive of Chekhov's career. Though he was still writing stories in an ironically comic vein, such as "Roman s kontrabasom" ("Romance With Double Bass," 1886), "Mest" ("Revenge," 1886), and"Proizvedeniye iskusstva" ("The Work of Art," 1886), his more serious plots were becoming attenuated almost to the point of stasis. In addition, while sounding a strong note of pathos, as in"Van'ka" ("Vanka," 1886),
Chekhov used the affair as a model for the relationship to write the story “The Lady with The Dog”. “The Fiancée” occurred when Olga pressured Anton Chekhov to married her, Anton Chekhov, his fiancée didn’t want to spend time with Anton Chekhov and his family in Yelta. The time past Anton Chekhov agree to marriage and enjoy with Olga in Moscow to exchange vows; however, his family was hurt and disappointed. Anton Chekhov grows ability to render life from the minds of his characters of significant details and to expose experience without speaking or attitudinizing. According to Contemporary Authors Online implies, the years 1886 to 1887 were the most productive of Chekhov's career. Though he was still writing stories in an ironically comic vein, such as "Roman s kontrabasom" ("Romance With Double Bass," 1886), "Mest" ("Revenge," 1886), and"Proizvedeniye iskusstva" ("The Work of Art," 1886), his more serious plots were becoming attenuated almost to the point of stasis. In addition, while sounding a strong note of pathos, as in"Van'ka" ("Vanka," 1886),