The banker enters the prisoner's lodge with the intent to murder the lawyer. Just in time, he discovers a letter in which the lawyer announces his decision to renounce the world of material wealth and forfeit the bet that has ultimately driven the banker nearly to the point of homicide.
Full Answer
 · Correspondingly, what decision does the lawyer announce in a letter and why? The banker enters the prisoner's lodge with the intent to murder the lawyer . Just in time, he discovers a letter in which the lawyer announces his decision to renounce the world of material wealth and forfeit the bet that has ultimately driven the banker nearly to the point of homicide.
 · What decision does the lawyer announce in a letter and why? The banker enters the prisoner's lodge with the intent to murder the lawyer . Just in time, he discovers a letter in which the lawyer announces his decision to renounce the world of material wealth and forfeit the bet that has ultimately driven the banker nearly to the point of homicide.
 · An opinion letter can offer a specialized opinion, helping you stay on the right, and lawful, path for all your business endeavors. Usually, an opinion letter is drafted at your request. Understanding the Opinion Letter. The opinion letter is a formal letter drafted by an attorney. The aim is to verify the legal status of either you or your business.
 · A lawyer letter is exactly what it sounds like – a letter from a lawyer indicating the lawyer represents one of your former (or potentially current) employees who is asserting certain claims against the company. The letter usually claims that before filing a formal lawsuit, the lawyer would like to see if the matter can be resolved.
So at this point, the letter is a substitute for speech. It's basically the paper version of the guy cowering before a hit man begging "please don't kill me, you can have your money." In other words, it's connected pretty totally to the lawyer.
- The reason the lawyer says that in his letter is because, according to the lawyer, he realizes through the wisdom he has gained through the books he has read that the blessings of the world are “worthless,” and “illusory,” and that the banker prefers to follow those earthly blessings rather than heaven, “so I marvel ...
A note written by the lawyer reveals that he has chosen to abandon the bet, having learned that material goods are fleeting and that divine salvation is worth more than money. Shocked and moved after reading the note, the banker kisses the lawyer on the head and returns to bed.
The banker takes his letter and hides it in his fireproof safe. The banker has learned nothing from this experience! (static character) He hides the letter so he doesn't have to admit that he is materialistic and that the lawyer doesn't want the money.
What do you think this says about his life? The lawyer takes the bet so he won't be proven wrong. This says he is daring. At the beginning of the story they want the fortunes and by the end they don't.
The lawyer provoked the banker's decision to place the bet by proposing that he will remain in solitary confinement even longer than the banker suggests. The Banker places the bet on the confidence that capital punishment kills a person but lifetime imprisonment is worse than death.
At the end of Anton Chekhov's "The Bet", the lawyer survives the 15 years in prison but refuses to take the money.
In Anton Chekhov's "The Bet," the banker contends that capital punishment is more humane than life imprisonment. But, most of the guests at his party disagree. Among the banker's guests are journalists and intellectuals; they disapprove of the death penalty, finding it immoral and against Christian purposes.
The terms of the bet are that the lawyer must live in isolation for fifteen years. At the end of that time, if he fulfills his bet of having no human contact for this period, the banker will pay him two million rubles. The bet arises out of an argument on which is crueler, the death penalty or life imprisonment.
After reading the letter, the banker feels “contempt for himself,” presumably because he is guilty of just what the prisoner is writing about: believing in the lies mankind has lived by. He locks up the letter so that he will have proof that the prisoner has lost the bet.
In the short story “The Bet”, Anton Chekhov wrote about two gentleman who make bet on whether life imprisonment or execution is more moral than the other. The lawyer, who went to prison tried to prove that going to prison is better than execution, later regrets making the bet.
The banker thought that the lawyer was asleep, dreaming about the 2 million dollars, and he only has to throw him on the bed, suffocate him a little with the pillow, and the most conscientious expert would find no sign of a violent death, but he should first read the letter on the table.
A lawyer letter is exactly what it sounds like – a letter from a lawyer indicating the lawyer represents one of your former (or potentially current) employees who is asserting certain claims against the company. The letter usually claims that before filing a formal lawsuit, the lawyer would like to see if the matter can be resolved.
You employment counsel can advise as to the actions the company is legally required to take. If the company has Employment Practices Liability Insurance, your carrier should be put on notice of the claims. Coordinate with your employment counsel regarding these steps as well.
Yes, the lawyer is looking for money for their client. No, you should not ignore the letter. It is unlikely that the lawyer is going to be rejected by the company’s failure to respond to a lawyer letter. Most likely, the company will either get a second letter – or a formal law suit.
Most likely, the company will either get a second letter – or a formal law suit. Depending on the nature of the situation, it may be better for the company to attempt to resolve the asserted claims in response to a letter.
Many factors go into making the decision as to whether to respond to the letter or to ignore it. They would best be evaluated in conjunction with your employment counsel who can review the situation and provide you with advice regarding the strength of the employee’s claims. Where the company may not think that the former employee has a leg to stand on, your employment counsel may see serious exposure for the company based on certain laws that may not have been being applied.
It is a good idea to seek the advice of a lawyer if you receive a letter from a lawyer. Whether you are guilty or not, having a lawyer to advise you in how to respond to the letter can be very helpful. A lawyer can advise you of what your chances are if you decide to fight what you have been accused of and what your potential liabilities might be. If you recently received a letter from a lawyer, contact the office of Eric Harron for a free consultation.
A lawyer can advise you of what your chances are if you decide to fight what you have been accused of and what your potential liabilities might be. If you recently received a letter from a lawyer, contact the office of Eric Harron for a free consultation.
If the letter is not legitimately from a lawyer, it may be an attempt by a con artist to obtain your personal or banking information. Examine the letter and determine what is the sender accusing you of, and if the facts that they are stating, point to your culpability.
Going to court puts the onus of the plaintiff to prove that you are in the wrong. Do not admit to anything that is in the letter if you are contacted by the lawyer who sent the letter. Anything that you respond with could be used against you in court.
However here we see that he hides the letter because he is ashamed. Also, preserving the letter makes it even worse as it suggests that he wants to keep it for evidence, because he does not trust the lawyer's declaration to give up the money that he could have earned . This demonstrates that the banker, in sharp contrast to the lawyer, has not evolved beyond his greed and self-interest.
When the bet is due to be finished, the watchmen rush in and tell the banker that the lawyer has been seen leaving the lodge leave and disappear. We are told the following:
If you have received a lawyer letter, you probably need to, at least, contact a lawyer and discuss with them your situation and the contents of the message. It’s a good idea to have a competent, experienced lawyer tell you where you stand. Also, don’t expect this service to be offered pro bono.
Be reasonable. This involves taking positions that you feel others can relate to, understand, or agree with. Being reasonable also involves giving others the benefit of the doubt, when possible.
If mediation doesn’t work, they can take their case before an arbiter, and agree, in writing, to abide by whatever decision the arbiter makes in arbitration. If you have received a “lawyer letter,” consider ADR as a next step for conflict resolution.
There are several Alternative Dispute Resolution (“ADR”) techniques parties can use to resolve disputes. If the parties cannot directly negotiate a compromise, they can engage in good faith mediation to resolve the dispute. If mediation doesn’t work, they can take their case before an arbiter, and agree, in writing, to abide by whatever decision the arbiter makes in arbitration.
Much of human miscommunication involves one party or the other (or both) refusing to listen to the other side (or each other). Let the person with whom you’re speaking know that you have heard what they have said, and that you understand their position. Then, focus your contribution to the discussion on the specific issues of disagreement at the heart of the conversation. Don’t just stubbornly repeat your own talking points; doing so implicitly communicates that you are not interested in listening to any voice but your own.
Despite feeling contempt for himself, the banker still realizes that it looks awfully suspicious that the lawyer mysteriously disappears shortly before the end of his incarceration when he would collect his winnings. To avoid arousing suspicion (that the banker might have killed or banished the lawyer), the banker keeps the lawyer's letter in a fireproof box. Therefore, he would always have proof that the lawyer renounced the two million and voluntarily escaped from the lodge. (This would keep the banker from being criticized by others or even perhaps imprisoned, the subject of their original conversation.)
The answer to the question "Why did the banker lock the letter written by the lawyer in a fireproof safe?" is given by the author himself as "To avoid arousing unnecessary talk , he took from the table the writing in which the millions were renounced, and when he got home locked it up in the fireproof safe." I suppose we have to take the author's word that this was the banker's motive. Chekhov establishes that the banker does not have to worry about being suspected of foul play, because in the very first sentence of the above-quoted paragraph he establishes that not one but two witnesses saw the prisoner voluntarily "climb out of the window into the garden, go to the gate, and disappear." The banker goes to the lodge with these two witnesses and verifies that the prisoner has indeed vacated the premises and therefore forfeited the bet.
Since the reader is in the banker's point of view throughout the entire story, the reader will naturally sympathize with the banker even though he may not be the most admirable man in the world. The reader will want to feel assured that the matter is finally and definitely resolved, that the banker's terrible problem is solved, and that he will only be troubled by a bad conscience. Once we identify with a character, then whatever happens to him happens to us!
Chekhov invented those two witnesses to guarantee that the banker could not be suspected of doing what he actually had intended to do , that is, to murder the prisoner in order to get out of paying him all that money. But locking the papers in a fireproof safe "to avoid arousing unnecessary talk" does not sound plausible. It seems that Chekhov wanted to make the reader feel that the banker was doubly secure. He had the witnesses, the fact that the prisoner had fled, and the handwritten papers to produce if any question should come up.