Hace tiempo que todo duerme. Tan sólo la joven esposa del boticario Chernomordik, propietario de la botica del lugar, está despierta. Tres veces se ha echado sobre la cama; pero, sin saber por qué, el sueño huye tercamente de ella. Sentada, en camisón, junto a la ventana abierta, mira a la calle. Tiene una sensación de ahogo, está aburrida y siente tal desazón que hasta quisiera llorar. ¿Por qué...? No sabría decirlo, pero un nudo en la garganta la oprime constantemente... Detrás de ella, unos pasos más allá y vuelto contra la pared, ronca plácidamente el propio Chernomordik. Una pulga glotona se ha adherido a la ventanilla de su nariz, pero no la siente y hasta sonríe, porque está soñando con que toda la ciudad tose y no cesa de comprarle Gotas del rey de Dinamarca. ¡Ni con pinchazos, ni con cañonazos, ni con caricias, podría despertárselo!
Everything had long been asleep. The only person not asleep was the young wife of Tchernomordik, a qualified dispenser who kept a chemist's shop at B----. She had gone to bed and got up again three times, but could not sleep, she did not know why. She sat at the open window in her nightdress and looked into the street. She felt bored, depressed, vexed . . . so vexed that she felt quite inclined to cry -- again she did not know why. There seemed to be a lump in her chest that kept rising into her throat. . . . A few paces behind her Tchernomordik lay curled up close to the wall, snoring sweetly. A greedy flea was stabbing the bridge of his nose, but he did not feel it, and was positively smiling, for he was dreaming that every one in the town had a cough, and was buying from him the King of Denmark's cough-drops. He could not have been wakened now by pinpricks or by cannon or by caresses.