Insulted and Injured
Fyodor DostoevskyThe Insulted and Injured by Fyodor Dostoevsky
appropriately. She cried all the time, and Pfefferkuchen whimpered, and many years passed like that, and the baby grew into a little girl. And everything went right for the prince, only one thing was wrong, he hadn't succeeded in getting back the promise of marriage. 'You're a base man,' she had said to him at parting. 'You have robbed me, you have dishonoured me and now you abandon me. Good-bye. But I won't give you back your promise. Not because I ever want to marry you, but because you're afraid of that document. So I shall always keep it in my hands.' She lost her temper in fact, but the prince felt quite easy. Such scoundrels always come off well in their dealings with so-called lofty souls. They're so noble that it's always easy to deceive them, and besides they invariably confine themselves to lofty and noble contempt instead of practically applying the law to the case if it can be applied. That young mother, for instance, she took refuge in haughty contempt, and though she kept the promise of marriage, the prince knew, of course, that she'd sooner hang herself than make use of it; so he felt secure for the time. And though she spat in his nasty face, she had her Volodka left on her hands; if she had died what would have become of him? But she didn't think about that. Bruderschaft, too, encouraged her and didn't think about it. They read Schiller. At last Bruderschaft sickened of something and died." "You mean Pfefferkuchen?" "To be sure-hang him! And she . . ." "Stay. How many years had they been travelling?" "Exactly two hundred. Well, she went back to Cracow. Her father wouldn't receive her, cursed her. She died, and the prince crossed himself for joy. I was there too, drank goblets not a few, our ears full of mead, but our mouths full of need; they gave me a flip, and I gave them the slip. . . . Let's drink, brother Vanya." "I suspect that you are helping him in that business, Masloboev." "You will have it so, will you? "Only I can't understand what you can do in it." "Why, you see, when she went back under another name to Madrid after being away for ten years, all this had to be verified, and about Bruderschaft too, and about the old man and about the kid, and whether she was dead, and whether she'd any papers, and so on, to infinity. And something else besides, too. He's a horrid man, be on your guard, Vanya, and remember one thing about Masloboev, don't let anything make you call him a scoundrel. Though he's a scoundrel (to my thinking there's no man who isn't) he's not a scoundrel in his dealings with you. I'm very drunk, but listen. If ever, sooner or later, now or next year, it seems to you that Masloboev has hoodwinked you (and please don't forget that word hoodwinked), rest assured that it's with no evil intent. Masloboev is watching over you. And so don't believe your suspicions, but come to Masloboev and have it out with him like a friend. Well, now, will you have a drink?" "No." "Something to eat?" "No, brother, excuse me." "Well then, get along with you. It's a quarter to nine and you're in a hurry. It's time for you to go." "Well, what next? He's been drinking till he's drunk and now he sends away a guest. He's always like that. Ach, you shameless fellow!" cried Alexandra Semyonovna, almost in tears. "A man on foot's poor company for a man on horseback, Alexandra Semyonovna; we shall be left alone to adore on another. And this is a general! No, Vanya, I'm lying, you're not a general, but I'm a scoundrel! Only see what I look like now! What am I beside you? Forgive me, Vanya, don't judge me and let me pour out . . ." He embraced me and burst into tears. I prepared to go away. "Good heavens! And we've prepared supper for you!" cried Alexandra Semyonovna in terrible distress. "And will you come to us on Friday?" "I will, Alexandra Semyonovna. Honour bright, I will." "Perhaps you look down on him because he's so . . . tipsy. Don't look down upon him, Ivan Petrovitch! He's a good- hearted man, such a good-hearted man, and how he loves you. He talks to me about you day and night, nothing but you. He bought your books on purpose for me. I haven't read the yet. I'm going to begin to-morrow. And how glad I shall be when you come! I never see anyone. No one ever comes to sit with us. We've everything we can want, but we're always alone. Here I've been sitting listening all the while you've been talking, and how nice it's been. . . . So good-by till Friday."
CHAPTER VII I WENT out and hurried home. Masloboev's words had made a great impression on me. All sorts of ideas occurred to me. . . . As luck would have it, at home an incident awaited me which startled me like an electric shock. Exactly opposite the gate of the house where I lodged stood a street-lamp. just as I was in the gateway a strange figure rushed out from under the street-lamp, so strange that I uttered a cry. It was a living thing, terror-stricken, shaking, half- crazed, and it caught at my hand with a scream. I was over- whelmed with horror. It was Nellie. "Nellie, what is it?" I cried. "What's the matter?" "There, upstairs . . . he's in our . . . rooms." "Who is it? Come along, come with me." "I won't, I won't. I'll wait till he's gone away . . . in the passage . . . I won't." I went up to my room with a strange foreboding in my heart, opened the door and saw Prince Valkovsky. He was sitting at the table reading my novel. At least, the book was open. "Ivan Petrovitch," he cried, delighted. "I'm so glad you've come back at last. I was on the very point of going away. I've been waiting over an hour for you. I promised the countess at her earnest and particular wish to take you to see her this evening. She begged me so specially, she's so anxious to make your acquaintance. So as you had already promised me I thought I would come and see you earlier before you'd had time to go out anywhere, and invite you to come with me. Imagine my distress. When I arrived your servant told me you were not at home. What could I do? I had given my word of honour that I'd take you with me. And so I sat down to wait for you, making up my mind to wait a quarter of an hour for you. But it's been a long quarter of an hour! I opened your novel and forgot the time, reading it. Ivan Petrovitch! It's a master- piece! They don't appreciate you enough! You've drawn tears from me, do you know? Yes, I've been crying, and I don't often cry," "So you want me to come? I must confess that just now . . . not that I'm against it, but . . ." "For God's sake let us go! What a way to treat me! Why, I have been waiting an hour and a half for you. . . . Besides, I do so want to talk to you. You know what about. You under- stand the whole affair better than I do. . . . Perhaps we shall decide on something, come to some conclusion. Only think of it For God's sake, don't refuse." I reflected that sooner or later I should have to go. Of course Natasha was alone now, and needed me, but she had herself charged me to get to know Katya as soon as possible. Besides, Alyosha might be there. I knew that Natasha would not be satisfied till I had brought her news of Katya, and I decided to go. But I was worried about Nellie. "Wait a minute," I said to the prince, and I went out on the stairs. Nellie was standing there in a dark comer. "Why won't you come in, Nellie? What did he do? What did he say to you?" "Nothing. . . . I don't want to, I won't . . ." she repeated. "I'm afraid." I tried hard to persuade her, but nothing was any use. I agreed with her that as soon as I had gone out with the prince she should return and lock herself in. "And don't let anyone in, Nellie, however much they try and persuade you." "But are you going with him?" "Yes." She shuddered and clutched at my arm, as though to beg me not to go, but she didn't utter one word. I made up my mind to question her more minutely next day. Apologizing to the prince, I began to dress. He began assuring me that I had no need to dress, no need to get myself up to go to the countess. "Perhaps something a little more spruce," he added, eyeing me inquisitively from head to foot. "You know . . . these conventional prejudices . . . it's impossible to be rid of them altogether. It'll be a long time before we get to that ideal state in our society," he concluded, seeing with satisfaction that I had a dress-coat. We went out. But I left him on the stairs, went back into the room into which Nellie had already slipped, and said good-bye to her again. She was terribly agitated. Her face looked livid. I was worried about her; I disliked having to leave her. "That's a queer servant of yours," the prince said as we went downstairs. "I suppose that little girl is your servant? "No . . . she . . . is staying with me for the time." "Queer little girl. I'm sure she's mad. Only fancy, at first she answered me civilly, but afterwards when she'd looked at me she rushed at me, screaming and trembling, clung to me . . . tried to say something, but couldn't. I must own I was scared. I wanted to escape from her, but thank God she ran away herself. I was astounded. How do you manage to get on with her?" "She has epileptic fits," I answered. "Ah, so that's it! Well, it's no wonder then . . . if she has fits." The idea suddenly struck me that Masloboev's visit of the previous day when he knew I was not at home, my visit to Masloboev that morning, the story that Masloboev had just told me, when he was drunk and against his will, his pressing invitation for me to come at seven o'clock that evening, his urging me not to believe in his hoodwinking me and, finally, the prince's waiting for an hour and a half for me while perhaps he knew I was at Masloboev's, and while Nellie had rushed away from him into the street, that all these facts were somehow connected. I had plenty to think about. Prince Valkovsky's carriage was waiting at the gate. We got in and drove off.
CHAPTER VIII
WE had not far to go, to the Torgovoy Bridge. For the first
minute we were silent. I kept wondering how he would begin.
I fancied that he would try me, sound me, probe me. But he
spoke without any beating about the bush, and went straight
to the point.
"I am very uneasy about one circumstance, Ivan Petrovitch,"
he began, "about which I want to speak to you first of all, and
to ask your advice. I made up my mind some time ago to forgo
what I have won from my lawsuit and to give up the disputed
ten thousand to Ichmenyev. How am I to do this?"
"It cannot be that you really don't know how to act," was the
thought that flashed through my mind. "Aren't you making
fun of me?"
"I don't know, prince," I answered as simply as I could; "in
something else, that is, anything concerning Natalya Nikolaevna,
I am ready to give you any information likely to be of use to you
or to us, but in this matter you must know better than I do."
"No, no, I don't know so well, of course not. You know
them, and perhaps Natalya Nikolaevna may have given you
her views on the subject more than once, and they would be my
guiding principle. You can be a great help to me. It's an
extremely difficult matter. I am prepared to make a conces-
sion. I'm even determined to make a concession, however other
matters may end. You understand? But how, and in what
form, to make that concession? That's the question. The
old man's proud and obstinate. Very likely he'll insult me for
my good-nature, and throw the money in my face."
"But excuse me. How do you look upon that money? As
your own or as his?"
"I won the lawsuit, so the money's mine."
"But in your conscience?"
"Of course I regard it as mine," he answered, somewhat
piqued at my unceremoniousness. "But I believe you don't
know all the facts of the case. I don't accuse the old man of
intentional duplicity, and I will confess I've never accused
him. It was his own choice to take it as an insult. He was to
blame for carelessness, for not looking more sharply after busi-
ness entrusted to him. And by our agreement he was bound
to be responsible for some of his mistakes. But, do you know,
even that's not really the point. What was really at the bottom
of it was our quarrelling, our mutual recriminations at the time,
in fact, wounded vanity on both sides. I might not have
taken any notice of that paltry ten thousand, but you know, of
course, how the whole case began and what it arose from. I'm
ready to admit that I was suspicious and perhaps unjust (that
is, unjust at the time), but I wasn't aware of it, and in my
vexation and resentment of his rudeness I was unwilling to let
the chance slip, and began the lawsuit. You may perhaps think
all that not very generous on my part. I don't defend myself;
only I may observe that anger, or, still more, wounded pride is
not the same as lack of generosity, but is a natural human thing,
and I confess, I repeat again, that I did not know Ichmenyev
at all, and quite believed in those rumours about Alyosha and
his daughter, and so was able to believe that the money had
been intentionally stolen. . . . But putting that aside, the real
question is, what am I to do now? I might refuse the money,
but if at the same time I say that I still consider my claim was
a just one, it comes to my giving him the money, and, add to
that the delicate position in regard to Natalya Nikolaevna, he'll
certainly fling the money in my face. . . ."
"There, you see, you say yourself he'll fling it in your face
so you do consider him an honest man, and that's why you can be
perfectly certain that he did not steal your money. And if so,
why shouldn't you go to him and tell him straight out that you
consider your claim as unjustified. That would be honourable,
and Ichmenyev would not perhaps find it difficult then to accept
his money."
"Hm! His money . . . that's just the question; what sort
of position do you put me into? Go to him and tell him I con-
sider my claim illegal. Why did you make it then, if you
considered it illegal? that's what every one would say to my
face. And I've not deserved it, for my claim was legal. I have
never said and never written that he stole the money, but I am
still convinced of his carelessness, his negligence, and incapacity
in managing business. That money is undoubtedly mine, and
therefore it would be mortifying to make a false charge against
myself, and finally, I repeat, the old man brought the ignominy
of it upon himself, and you want to force me to beg his pardon
for that ignominy - that's hard."
"It seems to me that if two men wanted to be reconciled,
then . . ."
"You think it's easy?
"Yes."
"No, sometimes it's very far from easy, especially . . ."
"Especially if there are other circumstances connected with
it. Yes, there I agree with you, prince. The position of
Natalya Nikolaevna and of your son ought to be settled by you
in all those points that depend upon you, and settled so as to be
fully satisfactory to the Ichmenyevs. Only then can you be
quite sincere with Ichmenyev about the lawsuit too. Now,
while nothing has been settled, you have only one course open to
you: to acknowledge the injustice of your claim, and to acknow-
ledge it openly, and if necessary even publicly, that's my opinion.
I tell you so frankly because you asked me my opinion yourself.
And probably you do not wish me to be insincere with you.
And this gives me the courage to ask you why you are troubling
your head about returning this money to Ichmenyev? If you
consider that you were just in your claim, why return it? For-
give my being so inquisitive, but this has such an intimate
bearing upon other circumstances."
"And what do you think?" he asked suddenly, as though he
had not heard my question. "Are you so sure that old Ichmenyev
would refuse the ten thousand if it were handed to him without
any of these evasions and . . . and . . . and blandishments?"
"Of course he would refuse it."
I flushed crimson and positively trembled with indignation.
This impudently sceptical question affected me as though he had
spat into my face. My resentment was increased by something
else: the coarse, aristocratic manner in which, without answering
my question, and apparently without noticing it, he interrupted
it with another, probably to give me to understand that I had
gone too far and had been too familiar in venturing to ask him
such a question. I detested, I loathed that aristocratic manoeuvre
and had done my utmost in the past to get Alyosha out of it.
"Hm! You are too impulsive, and things are not done in
real life as you imagine," the prince observed calmly, at my
exclamation. "But I think that Natalya Nikolaevna might do
something to decide the question; you tell her that she might
give some advice."
"Not a bit of it," I answered roughly. "You did not deign to
listen to what I was saying to you just now, but interrupted
me. Natalya Nikolaevna will understand that if you return the
money without frankness and without all those blandishments,
as you call them, it amounts to your paying the father for the
loss of his daughter, and her for the loss of Alyosha - in other
words your giving them money compensation . . ."
"Hm! . . . so that's how you understand me, my excellent
Ivan Petrovitch," the prince laughed. Why did he laugh?
"And meanwhile," he went on, "there are so many, many
things we have to talk over together. But now there's no time.
I only beg you to understand one thing: Natalya Nikolaevna
and her whole future are involved in the matter, and all this
depends to some extent on what we decide. You are indis-
pensable, you'll see for yourself. So if you are still devoted to
Natalya Nikolaevna, you can't refuse to go frankly into things
with me, however little sympathy you may feel for me. But
here we are . . . a bientot."
CHAPTER IX
THE countess lived in good style. The rooms were furnished
comfortably and with taste, though not at all luxuriously.
Everything, however, had the special character of a temporary
residence, not the permanent established habitation of a wealthy
family with all the style of the aristocracy, and all the whims
that they take for necessities. There was a rumour that the
countess was going in the summer to her ruined and mortgaged
property in the province of Simbirsk, and that the prince would
accompany her. I had heard this already, and wondered un-
easily how Alyosha would behave when Katya went away with
the countess, I had not vet spoken of this to Natasha. I was
afraid to. But from some signs I had noticed, I fancied that
she, too, knew of the rumour. But she was silent and suffered
in secret.
The countess gave me an excellent reception, held out her
hand to me cordially, and repeated that she had long wished to,
make my acquaintance. She made tea herself from a handsome
silver samovar, round which we all sat, the prince, and I and
another gentleman, elderly and extremely aristocratic wearing
a star on his breast, somewhat starchy and diplomatic in his
manners. This visitor seemed an object of great respect. The
countess had not, since her return from abroad, had time that
winter to make a large circle of acquaintances in Petersburg
and to establish her position as she had hoped and reckoned
upon doing. There was no one besides this gentleman, and no
one else came in all the evening. I looked about for Katerina
Fyodorovna; she was in the next room with Alyosha, but
hearing that we had arrived she came in at once. The prince
kissed her hand politely, and the countess motioned her towards
me. The prince at once introduced us. I looked at her with
impatient attention. She was a short, soft little blonde dressed
in a white frock, with a mild and serene expression of face, with
eyes of perfect blue, as Alyosha had said, she had the beauty
of youth, that was all. I had expected to meet the perfection
of beauty, but it was not a case of beauty. The regular, softly
outlined oval of the face, the fairly correct features, the thick
and really splendid hair, the simple and homely style in which
it was arranged, the gentle, attentive expression - all this I
should have passed by without paying special attention to it if I
had met her elsewhere. But this was only the first impression,
and I succeeded in getting a fuller insight into her in the course
of that evening. The very way in which she shook hands with
me, standing looking into my face with a sort of naively exag-
gerated intentness, without saying a word, impressed me by its
strangeness, and I could not help smiling at her. It was evident,
I felt at once, that I had before me a creature of the purest
heart. The countess watched her intently. After shaking
hands Katya walked away from me somewhat hurriedly, and
sat down at the other end of the room with Alyosha. As he
greeted me Alyosha whispered: "I'm only here for a minute.
I'm just going there."
The "diplomat," I don't know his name and call him a
diplomat simply to call him something, talked calmly and
majestically, developing some idea. The countess listened to
him attentively. The prince gave him an encouraging and
flattering smile. The orator often addressed himself to him,
apparently appreciating him as a listener worthy of his attention.
They gave me some tea and left me in peace, for which I was
very thankful. Meanwhile I was looking at the countess. At
first sight she attracted me in spite of myself. Perhaps she was
no longer young, but she seemed to me not more than twenty-
eight. Her face was still fresh, and in her first youth she must
have been very beautiful. Her dark. brown hair was still fairly
thick; her expression was extremely kindly, but frivolous, and
mischievously mocking. But just now she was evidently
keeping herself in check. There was a look of great intelligence,
too, in her eyes, but even more of good-nature and gaiety. It
seemed to me that her predominant characteristic was a certain
levity, an eagerness for enjoyment, and a sort of good-natured
egoism; a great deal of egoism, perhaps, She was absolutely
guided by the prince, who had an extraordinary influence on
her. I knew that they had a liaison; I had heard, too, that he
had been anything but a jealous lover while they had been
abroad; but I kept fancying, and I think so still, that apart
from their former relations there was something else, some
rather mysterious tie binding them together, something like a
mutual obligation resting upon motives of self-interest . . . in
fact there certainly was something of the sort. I knew, too,
that by now the prince was tired of her, and yet their relations
had not been broken off. Perhaps what kept them together
especially was their design for Katya,, which must have owed its
initiative to the prince. By persuading her to help him bring
about Alyosha's marriage with her stepdaughter, the prince
had good reasons for getting out of marriage with the countess,
which she really had urged upon him. So, at least, I concluded
from facts dropped in all simplicity by Alyosha; even he could
not help noticing something. I kept fancying, too, partly from
Alyosha's talk, that although the countess was completely under
the prince's control he had some reason for being afraid of her.
Even Alyosha had noticed this. I learnt afterwards that the
prince was very anxious to get the countess married to someone
else, and that it was partly with that object he was sending
her off to Simbirsk, hoping to pick up a suitable husband for her
in the province.
I sat still and listened, not knowing how I could quickly secure
a tete-a-tete interview with Katerina Fyodorovna. The diplomat
was answering some questions of the countess's about the present
political position, about the reforms that were being instituted,
and whether they were to be dreaded or not. He said a great
deal at great length, calmly, like one having authority. He
developed his idea subtly and cleverly, but the idea was a
repulsive one. He kept insisting that the whole spirit of reform
and improvement would only too soon bring forth certain results,
that seeing those results "they would come to their senses,"
and that not only in society (that is, of course, in a certain part
of it) would this spirit of reform pass away, but they would
learn their mistake from experience, and then with redoubled
energy would return to the old traditions; that the experience,
though distressing, would be of great benefit, because it would
teach them to maintain that salutary tradition, would give fresh
grounds for doing so, and that consequently it was to be hoped
that the extreme limit of recklessness would be reached as soon
as possible. "They cannot get on without us," he concluded
that no society has ever stood its ground without us. We shall
lose nothing. On the contrary we stand to win. We shall rise
to the surface, and our motto at the moment should be pire ca
va, mieux ca est! Prince Valkovsky smiled to him with revolting
sympathy. The orator was completely satisfied with himself.
I was so stupid as to want to protest; my heart was boiling.
But what checked me was the malignant expression of the prince;
he stole a glance in my direction, and it seemed to me that he
was just expecting some strange and youthful outburst from me.
Perhaps he even wanted this in order to enjoy my compromising
myself. Meanwhile I felt convinced that the diplomat would
not notice my protest, nor perhaps me either. It was revolting
for me to sit with them; but Alyosha rescued me.
He came up to me quietly, touched me on the shoulder, and
asked to have a few words with me. I guessed he came with a
message from Katya. And so it was. A minute later I was
sitting beside her. At first she kept watching me intently as
though saying to herself: "So that's what you're like," and
for the first minute neither of us could find words to begin our
conversation. I felt sure though that when once she began
she would be ready to go on without stopping till next morning.
The "five or six hours talk" of which Alyosha had spoken came
back to my mind. Alyosha sat by us, waiting impatiently for
us to begin.
"Why don't you say something?" he began, looking at us
with a smile. "They come together and sit silent."
"Ach, Alyosha, how can you . . . we'll begin directly,"
answered Katya. "We have so much to talk over together,
Ivan Petrovitch, that I don't know where to begin. We've been
late in getting to know one another; we ought to have met
long ago, though I've known you for ages. And I was very
anxious to see you! I was even thinking of writing you a
letter . . ."
"What about?" I asked, smiling involuntarily.
"Ever so many things," she answered earnestly. "Why, if
only to know whether it's true what Alyosha says, that Natalya
Nikolaevna is not hurt at his leaving her alone at such a time.
Can anyone behave as he does? Why are you here now, tell
me that, please?"
"Why, good heavens, I'm just going! I just said that I should
only be here for a minute, simply to look at you two and see
how you talk to one another, and then I'll be off to Natasha."
"Well, here we are together, we're sitting here, do you see?
He's always like that," she added, flushing a little and pointing
her finger at him. "One minute, he always says, just one
minute and, mind, he'll stay on till midnight and then it's too
late to go there. 'She won't be angry,' he says, 'she's kind.'
That's how he looks at it. Is that right? Is that generous?"
"Well, I'll go if you like," Alyosha responded plaintively,
"but I do want dreadfully to stay with you two. . . ."
"What do you want with us? On the contrary we must
talk of lots of things alone. Listen, don't be cross. It's neces-
sary - take that in thoroughly."
"If it's necessary I'll be off at once - what is there to be
cross at? I'll just look in for a minute on Levinka, and then go
on to her at once. I say, Ivan Petrovitch," he added, taking up
his hat to go, "do you know that my father wants to refuse to
take the money he won by his lawsuit with Ichmenyev?
"I know. He told me."
"How generous he is in doing that. Katya won't believe
that he's acting generously. Talk to her about that. Good-
bye, Katya, and please don't doubt that I love Natasha. And
why do you both always tie me down like this, scold me, and
look after me - as though you had to watch over me? She knows
how I love her, and is sure of me, and I'm sure that she's sure of
me. I love her, apart from anything, apart from any obliga-
tions. I don't know how I love her, I simply love her. And
so there's no need to question me as though I were to blame.
You can ask Ivan Petrovitch, he's here now and he will confirm
what I say, that Natasha's jealous, and though she loves me so
much there's a great deal of egoism in her love, for she will
never sacrifice anything for me."
"What's that?" I asked in amazement, hardly able to
believe my ears.
"What are you saying, Alyosha?" Katya almost screamed,
clasping her hands.
"Why, what is there so surprising in that? Ivan Petrovitch
knows it. She's always insisting that I should stay with her.
Not that she insists, exactly, but one can see that's what she
wants."
"Aren't you ashamed? Aren't you ashamed?" said Katya,
turning crimson with anger.
"What is there to be ashamed of? What a person you are,
really, Katya! I love her more than she thinks, and if she
really loves me as I love her, she certainly would sacrifice her
pleasure to me. It's true she lets me go herself, but I see from
her face that she hates doing it, so that it comes to the same
thing as if she didn't let me."
"Oh, there's something behind that," cried Katya, turning
to me again with flashing, angry eyes. "Own up, Alyosha,
own up at once, it's your father who has put all that into your
head. He's been talking to you to-day, hasn't he? And please
don't try and deceive me: I shall find out directly! Is it so
or not?"
"Yes, he has been talking," Alyosha answered in confusion,
"what of it? He talked in such a kind and friendly way to-day,
and kept praising her to me. I was quite surprised, in fact, that
he should praise her like that after she had insulted him so."
"And you, you believed it?" said I. "You, for whom she
has given up everything she could give up! And even now,
this very day, all her anxiety was on your account, that you
might not be bored, that you might not be deprived of the
possibility of seeing Katerina Fyodorovna. She said that to me
to-day herself. And you believe those false insinuations at
once. Aren't you ashamed?"
"Ungrateful boy! But that's just it. He's never ashamed
of anything," said Katya, dismissing him with a wave of her
hand, as though he were lost beyond all hope.
"But really, how you talk!" Alyosha continued in a plaintive
voice. "And you're always like that, Katya! You're always
suspecting me of something bad... . . I don't count, Ivan Petro-
vitch! You think I don't love Natasha. I didn't mean that
when I said she was an egoist. I only meant that she loves
me too much, so that it's all out of proportion, and I suffer for it,
and she too. And my father never does influence me, though
he's tried to. I don't let him. He didn't say she was an egoist
in any bad sense; I understood him. He said exactly what I
said just now: that she loves me so much, too much, so intensely,
that it amounts to simple egoism and that that makes me suffer
and her too, and that I shall suffer even more hereafter. He
told the truth, and spoke from love of me, and it doesn't at all
follow that he meant anything offensive to Natasha; on the
contrary, he saw the strength of her love, her immense, almost
incredible love . . ."
But Katya interrupted him and would not let him finish. She
began hotly upbraiding him, and maintaining that the prince
had only praised Natasha to deceive him by a show of kind-
ness, all in order to destroy their attachment, with the idea
of invisibly and imperceptibly turning Alyosha against her.
Warmly and cleverly she argued that Natasha loved him, that no
love could forgive the way he was treating her, and that he
himself, Alyosha, was the real egoist. Little by little Katya
reduced him to utter misery and complete penitence. He sat
beside us, utterly crushed, staring at the floor with a look of
suffering on his face and gave up attempting to answer. But
Katya was relentless. I kept looking at her with the greatest
interest. I was eager to get to know this strange girl. She
was quite a child, but a strange child, a child of convictions,
with steadfast principles, and with a passionate, innate love
of goodness and justice. If one really might call her a child
she belonged to that class of thinking children who are fairly
numerous in our Russian families. It was evident that she had
pondered on many subjects. It would have been interesting
to peep into that little pondering head and to see the mixture
there of quite childish images and fancies with serious ideas
and notions gained from experience of life (for Katya really had
lived), and at the same time with ideas of which she had no real
knowledge or experience, abstract theories she had got out of
books, though she probably mistook them for generalizations
gained by her own experience. These abstract ideas must
have been very numerous. In the course of that evening and
subsequently I studied her, I believe, pretty thoroughly; her
heart was ardent and receptive. In some cases she, as it were,
disdained self-control, putting genuineness before everything,
and looking upon every restraint on life as a conventional
prejudice. And she seemed to pride herself on that conviction,
which is often the case indeed with persons of ardent tempera-
ment, even in those who are not very young. But it was just that
that gave her a peculiar charm. She was very fond of thinking
and getting at the truth of things, but was so far from being
pedantic, so full of youthful ways that from the first moment
one began to love all these originalities in her, and to accept them.
I thought of Levinka and Borinka, and it seemed to me that
that was all in the natural order of things. And, strange to say,
her face, in which I had seen nothing particularly handsome at
first sight, seemed that evening to grow finer and more attractive
every minute. This naive combination in her of the child and the
thinking woman, this childlike and absolutely genuine thirst for
truth and justice, and absolute faith in her impulses - all this
lighted up her face with a fine glow of sincerity, giving it a lofty,
spiritual beauty, and one began to understand that it was not so
easy to gauge the full significance of that beauty which was not
all at once apparent to every ordinary unsympathetic eye. And I
realized that Alyosha was bound to be passionately attached
to her. If he was himself incapable of thought and reasoning
he was especially attracted by those who could do his thinking,
and even wishing, for him, and Katya had already taken him
under her wing. His heart was generous, and it instantly
surrendered without a struggle to everything that was fine and
honourable. And Katya had spoken openly of many things
before him already with sympathy and all the sincerity of a
child. He was absolutely without a will of his own. She had
a very great deal of strong, insistent, and fervidly concentrated
will; and Alyosha would only attach himself to one who could
dominate and even command him. It was partly through this
that Natasha had attracted him at the beginning of their relations,
but Katya had a great advantage over Natasha in the fact
that she was still a child herself and seemed likely to remain so
for a long time. This childishness, her bright intelligence, and at
the same time a certain lack of judgement, all this made her
more akin to Alyosha. He felt this, and so Katya attracted
him more and more. I am certain that when they talked alone
together, in the midst of Katya's earnest discussion of "propa-
ganda" they sometimes relapsed into childish trivialities. And
though Katya probably often lectured Alyosha and already
had him under her thumb, he was evidently more at home with
her than with Natasha. They were more equals, and that
meant a great deal.
"Stop, Katya, stop. That's enough; you always have the
best of it, and I'm always wrong, That's because your heart is
purer than mine," said Alyosha, getting up and giving her his
hand at parting. I'm going straight to her and I won't look
in on Levinka. . ."
"There's nothing for you to do at Levinka's. But you're
very sweet to obey and go now."
"And you're a thousand times sweeter than anybody,"
answered Alyosha sadly. "Ivan Petrovitch, I've a word or two
I want to say to you."
We moved a couple of paces away.
"I've behaved shamefully to-day," he whispered to me.
"I've behaved vilely, I've sinned against everyone in the world,
and these two more than all. After dinner to-day father intro-
duced me to Mlle. Alexandrine (a French girl) - a fascinating
creature. I . . . was carried away and . . . but what's the
good of talking . . . .I'm unworthy to be with them. . . .
Good-bye, Ivan Petrovitch!"
"He's a kind, noble-hearted boy," Katya began hurriedly,
when I had sat down beside her again, "but we'll talk a great
deal about him later; first of all we must come to an under-
standing; what is your opinion of the prince?
"He's a very horrid man."
"I think so too. So we're agreed about that, and so we shall
be able to decide better. Now, of Natalya Nikolaevna . . .
Do you know, Ivan Petrovitch, I am still, as it were, in the
dark; I've been looking forward to you to bring me light. You
must make it all clear to me, for about many of the chief points
I can judge only by guesswork from what Alyosha tells me.
There is no one else from whom I can learn anything. Tell me,
in the first place (this is the chief point) what do you think:
will Alyosha and Natasha be happy together or not? That's
what I must know before everything, that I may make up my
mind once for all how I must act."
"How can one tell that with any certainty?"
"No, of course, not with certainty," she interrupted, "but
what do you think, for you are a very clever man?"
"I think that they can't be happy."
"Why?"
"They're not suited."
"That's just what I thought"
And she clasped her hands as though deeply distressed.
"Tell me more fully. Listen, I'm awfully anxious to see
Natasha, for there's a great deal I must talk over with her, and
it seems to me that she and I can settle everything together. I
keep picturing her to myself now. She must be very clever,
serious, truthful, and beautiful. Isn't she?"
"Yes."
"I was sure of it. Well, if she is like that how could she love
a baby like Alyosha? Explain that. I often wonder about
it."
"That can't be explained, Katerina Fyodorovna. It's
difficult to imagine how people can fall in love and what makes
them. Yes, he's a child. But you know how one may love a
child." (My heart melted looking at her and at her eyes fastened
upon me intently with profound, earnest and impatient atten-
tion.) "And the less Natasha herself is like a child, the more
serious she is, the more readily she might fall in love with him.
He's truthful, sincere, awfully naive, and sometimes charmingly
naive! Perhaps she fell in love with him - how shall I express
it? - as it were from a sort of compassion. A generous heart
may love from compassion. I feel though that I can't give
any explanation, but I'll ask you instead: do you love him?"
I boldly asked her this question and felt that I could not
disturb the infinite childlike purity of her candid soul by the
abruptness of such a question.
"I really don't know yet," she answered me quietly, looking
me serenely in the face, "but I think I love him very much. . . ."
"There, you see. And can you explain why you love him?"
"There's no falsehood in him," she answered after thinking
a moment, "and I like it when he looks into my eyes and says
something. Tell me, Ivan Petrovitch, here I'm talking about
this to you, I'm a girl and you're a man, am I doing right in this,
or not?"
"Why, what is there in it?"
"Nothing. Of course there's nothing in it. But they," she
glanced at the group sitting round the samovar, "they would
certainly say it was wrong. Are they right or not?"
"No. Why, you don't feel in your heart you've done wrong,
so . . ."
"That's how I always do," she broke in, evidently in haste
to get in as much talk with me as she could. "When I'm con-
fused about anything I always look into my own heart, and
when it's at ease then I'm at ease. That's how I must always
behave. And I speak as frankly to you as I would speak to
myself because for one thing you are a splendid man and I know
about your past, with Natasha, before Alyosha's time, and I
cried when I heard about it."
"Why, who told you?"
"Alyosha, of course, and he had tears in his eyes himself when
he told me. That was very nice of him, and I liked him for it.
I think he likes you better than you like him, Ivan Petrovitch.
It's in things like that I like him. And another reason why I
am so open with you is that you're a very clever man, and you
can give me advice and teach me about a great many things."
"How do you know that I'm clever enough to teach you?"
"Oh, well, you needn't ask!"
She grew thoughtful.
"I didn't mean to talk about that really. Let's talk of what
matters most. Tell me, Ivan Petrovitch; here I feel now that
I'm Natasha's rival, I know I am, how am I to act? That's
why I asked you: would they be happy. I think about it day
and night. Natasha's position is awful, awful! He has quite
left off loving her, you know, and he loves me more and more.
That is so, isn't it?"
"It seems so."
"Yet he is not deceiving her. He doesn't know that he is
ceasing to love her, but no doubt she knows it. How miserable
she must be!"
"What do you want to do, Katerina Fyodorovna?
"I have a great many plans," she answered seriously, "and
meanwhile I'm all in a muddle. That's why I've been so im-
patient to see you, for you to make it all clear to me. You know
all that so much better than I do. You're a sort of divinity to
me now, you know. Listen, this is what I thought at first: if
they love one another they must be happy, and so I ought to
sacrifice myself and help them - oughtn't I?"
"I know you did sacrifice yourself."
"Yes, I did. But afterwards when he began coming to me
and caring more and more for me, I began hesitating, and I'm
still hesitating whether I ought to sacrifice myself or not. That's
very wrong, isn't it?"
"That's natural," I answered, "that's bound to be so
and it's not your fault."
"I think it is. You say that because you are very kind. I
think it is because my heart is not quite pure. If I had a pure
heart I should know how to behave. But let us leave that.
Afterwards I heard more about their attitude to one another,
from the prince, from maman, from Alyosha himself, and guessed
they were not suited, and now you've confirmed it. I hesitated
more than ever, and now I'm uncertain what to do. If they're
going to be unhappy, you know, why, they had better part. And
so I made up my mind to ask you more fully about it, and to go
myself to Natasha, and to settle it all with her."
"But settle it how? That's the question."
"I shall say to her, 'You love him more than anything, don't
you, and so you must care more for his happiness than your own,
and therefore you must part from him.'"
"Yes, but how will she receive that? And even if she agrees
with you will she be strong enough to act on it?"
"That's what I think about day and night, and ... and ..."
And she suddenly burst into tears.
"You don't know how sorry I am for Natasha," she whispered,
her lips quivering with tears.
There was nothing more to be said. I was silent, and I too felt
inclined to cry as I watched her, for no particular reason, from
a vague feeling like tenderness. what a charming child she
was! I no longer felt it necessary to ask her why she thought
she could make Alyosha happy.
"Are you fond of music?" she asked, growing a little calmer,
though she was still subdued by her recent tears.
"Yes," I answered, with some surprise.
"If there were time I'd play you Beethoven's third concerto.
That's what I'm playing now. All those feelings are in it . . .
just as I feel them now. So it seems to me. But that must be
another time, now we must talk."
We began discussing how she could meet Natasha, and how it
was all to be arranged. She told me that they kept a watch on
her, and though her stepmother was kind and fond of her, she
would never allow her to make friends with Natalya Nikolaevna,
and so she had decided to have recourse to deception. She
sometimes went a drive in the morning, but almost always with
the countess. Sometimes the countess didn't go with her but
sent her out alone with a French lady, who was ill just now.
Sometimes the countess had headaches, and so she would have
to wait until she had one. And meanwhile she would over-
persuade her Frenchwoman (an old lady who was some sort of
companion), for the latter was very good-natured. The upshot
of it was that it was impossible to fix beforehand what day
she would be able to visit Natasha.
"You won't regret making Natasha's acquaintance," I said.
"She is very anxious to know you too, and she must, if only to
know to whom she is giving up Alyosha. Don't worry too much
about it all. Time will settle it all, without your troubling
You are going into the country, aren't you?"
"Quite soon. In another month perhaps," she answered
"And I know the prince is insisting on it."
"What do you think - will Alyosha go with you?
"I've thought about that," she said, looking intently at me
"He will go, won't he?"
"Yes, he will."
"Good heavens, how it will all end I don't know. I tell you
what, Ivan Petrovitch, I'll write to you about everything, I'll
write to you often, fully. Now I'm going to worry you, too.
Will you often come and see us?"
"I don't know, Katerina Fyodorovna. That depends upon
circumstances. Perhaps I may not come at all."
"Why not?"
"It will depend on several considerations, and chiefly what
terms I am on with the prince."
"He's a dishonest man," said Katya with decision. "I tell
you what, Ivan Petrovitch, how if I should come to see you?
Will that be a good thing, or not?"
"What do you think yourself?"
"I think it would be a good thing. In that way I could
bring you news," she added with a smile. "And I say this
because I like you very much as well as respect you. And
could learn a great deal from you. And I like you. . . . And
it's not disgraceful my speaking of it, is it?"
"Why should it be? You're as dear to me already as on
of my own family."
"Then you want to be my friend?
"Oh yes, yes!" I answered.
"And they would certainly say it was disgraceful and that
a young girl ought not to behave like this," she observed, again
indicating the group in conversation at the tea-table.
I may mention here that the prince seemed purposely to
leave us alone that we might talk to our heart's content.
"I know very well," she added, "that the prince wants my
money. They think I'm a perfect baby, and in fact they tell
me so openly. But I don't think so. I'm not a child now.
They're strange people: they're like children themselves
What are they in such a fuss about?"
"Katerina Fyodorovna, I forgot to ask you, who are these
Levinka and Borinka whom Alyosha goes to see so often?"
"They're distant relations. They're very clever and very
honest, but they do a dreadful lot of talking. . . . I know
them . . ."
And she smiled.
"Is it true that you mean to give them a million later on?
"Oh, well, you see, what if I do? They chatter so much about
that million that it's growing quite unbearable. Of course I
shall be delighted to contribute to everything useful; what's the
good of such an immense fortune? But what though I am going
to give it some day, they're already dividing it, discussing it,
shouting, disputing what's the best use to make of it, they even
quarrel about it, so that it's quite queer. They're in too great a
hurry. But they're honest all the same and clever. They are
studying. That's better than going on as other people do.
Isn't it?"
And we talked a great deal more. She told me almost her
whole life, and listened eagerly to what I told her. She kept
insisting that I should tell her more about Natasha and Alyosha.
It was twelve o'clock when Prince Valkovsky came and let me
know it was time to take leave. I said good-bye. Katya
pressed my hand warmly and looked at me expressively. The
countess asked me to come again; the prince and I went out.
I cannot refrain from one strange and perhaps quite inappro-
priate remark. From my three hours' conversation with
Katya I carried away among other impressions the strange but
positive conviction that she was still such a child that she had no
idea of the inner significance of the relations of the sexes. This
gave an extraordinarily comic flavour to some of her reflections,
and in general to the serious tone in which she talked of many
very important matters.
CHAPTER X
"I TELL you what," said Prince Valkovsky, as he seated himself
beside me in the carriage, "what if we were to go to supper now,
hein? What do you say to that?"
"I don't know, prince," I answered, hesitating, "I never
eat supper."
"Well, of course, we'll have a talk, too, over supper," he
added, looking intently and slyly into my face.
There was no misunderstanding! "He means to speak out,"
I thought; "and that's just what I want." I agreed.
"That's settled, then. To B.'s, in Great Morskaya."
"A restaurant?" I asked with some hesitation.
"Yes, why not? I don't often have supper at home. Surely
you won't refuse to be my guest?"
"But I've told you already that I never take supper."
"But once in a way doesn't matter; especially as I'm inviting
you. . ."
Which meant he would pay for me. I am certain that he added
that intentionally. I allowed myself to be taken, but made up
my mind to pay for myself in the restaurant. We arrived. The
prince engaged a private room, and with the taste of a connois-
seur selected two or three dishes. They were expensive and so
was the bottle of delicate wine which he ordered. All this was
beyond my means. I looked at the bill of fare and ordered
half a woodcock and a glass of Lafitte. The prince looked
at this.
"You won't sup with me! Why, this is positively ridiculous!
Pardon, mon ami, but this is . . . revolting punctiliousness.
It's the paltriest vanity. There's almost a suspicion of class
feeling about this. I don't mind betting that's it. I assure
you you're offending me."
But I stuck to my point.
"But, as you like," he added. "I won't insist. . . . Tell
me, Ivan Petrovitch, may I speak to you as a friend?"
"I beg you to do so."
"Well, then, to my thinking such punctiliousness stands in
your way. All you people stand in your own light in that way.
You are a literary man; you ought to know the world, and you
hold yourself aloof from everything. I'm not talking of your
woodcock now, but you are ready to refuse to associate with
our circle altogether, and that's against your interests. Apart
from the fact that you lose a great deal, a career, in fact, if only
that you ought to know what you're describing, and in novels
we have counts and princes and boudoirs. . . . But what am I
saying! Poverty is all the fashion with you now, lost coats,*
inspectors, quarrelsome officers, clerks, old times, dissenters,
I know, I know. . . ."
"But you are mistaken, prince. If I don't want to get into
your so-called higher circle, it's because in the first place it's
boring, and in the second I've nothing to do there; though,
after all, I do sometimes. . . ."
Translated by Constance Garnett.
PART I
"I know; at Prince R.'s, once a year. I've met you there.
But for the rest of the year you stagnate in your democratic
pride, and languish in your garrets, though not all of you behave
like that. Some of them are such adventurers that they sicken
me. . . ."
"I beg you, prince, to change the subject and not to return
to our garrets."
"Dear me, now you're offended. But you know you gave
me permission to speak to you as a friend. But it's my fault;
I have done nothing to merit your friendship. The wine's very
decent. Try it."
He poured me out half a glass from his bottle.
"You see, my dear Ivan Petrovitch, I quite understand that
to force one's friendship upon anyone is bad manners. We're
not all rude and insolent with you as you imagine. I quite
understand that you are not sitting here from affection for me,
but simply because I promised to talk to you. That's so, isn't
it?"
He laughed.
"And as you're watching over the interests of a certain person
you want to hear what I am going to say. That's it, isn't it?"
he added with a malicious smile.
"You are not mistaken," I broke in impatiently. (I saw that
he was one of those men who if anyone is ever so little in their
power cannot resist making him feel it. I was in his power. I
could not get away without hearing what he intended to say, and
he knew that very well. His tone suddenly changed and became
more and more insolently familiar and sneering.) "You're not
mistaken, prince, that's just what I've come for, otherwise I
should not be sitting here . . . so late."
I had wanted to say "I would not on any account have been
supping with you," but I didn't say this, and finished my phrase
differently, not from timidity, but from my cursed weakness
and delicacy. And really, how can one be rude to a man to
his face, even if he deserves it, and even though one may wish
to be rude to him? I fancied the prince detected this from my
eyes, and looked at me ironically as I finished my sentence, as
though enjoying my faintheartedness, and as it were challenging
me with his eyes: "So you don't dare to be rude; that's it,
my boy!" This must have been so, for as I finished he chuckled,
and with patronizing friendliness slapped me on the knee.
"You're amusing, my boy!" was what I read in his eyes.
"Wait a bit!" I thought to myself.
"I feel very lively to-night!" said he," and I really don't
know why. Yes, yes, my boy! It was just that young person
I wanted to talk to you about. We must speak quite frankly;
talk till we reach some conclusion, and I hope that this time you
will thoroughly understand me. I talked to you just now about
that money and that old fogey of a father, that babe of sixteen
summers. . . . Well! It's not worth mentioning it now.
That was only talk, you know! Ha-ha-ha! You're a literary
man, you ought to have guessed that."
I looked at him with amazement, I don't think he was
drunk.
"As for that girl, I respect her, I assure you; I like her in
fact. She's a little capricious but 'there's no rose without
thorn,' as they used to say fifty years ago, and it was well said
too: thorns prick. But that's alluring and though my Alexey's
a fool, I've forgiven him to some extent already for his good
taste. In short, I like such young ladies, and I have" (and
he compressed his lips with immense significance) "views of
my own, in fact. . . . But of that later. . . ."
"Prince! Listen, prince! " I cried. "I don't understand
your quick change of front but . . . change the subject, if you
please."
"You're getting hot again! Very good. . . . I'll change it,
I'll change it! But I'll tell you what I want to ask you, my
good friend: have you a very great respect for her?"
"Of course," I answered, with gruff impatience.
"Ah, indeed. And do you love her?" he continued, grinning
revoltingly and screwing up his eyes.
"You are forgetting yourself!" I cried.
"There, there, I won't! Don't put yourself out! I'm in
wonderful spirits to-day. I haven't felt so gay for a long time.
Shall we have some champagne? What do you say, my poet?
"I won't have any. I don't want it."
"You don't say so! You really must keep me company to-
day. I feel so jolly, and as I'm soft-hearted to sentimentality
I can't bear to be happy alone. Who knows, we may come to
drinking to our eternal friendship. Ha-ha-ha! No, my young
friend, you don't know me yet! I'm certain you'll grow to
love me. I want you this evening to share my grief and my
joy, my tears and my laughter, though I hope that I at least
may not shed any. Come, what do you say, Ivan Petrovitch?
You see, you must consider that if I don't get what I want,
all my inspiration may pass, be wasted and take wing and
you'll hear nothing. And you know you're only sitting here in
the hope of hearing something. Aren't you?" he added, winking
at me insolently again. "So make your choice."
The threat was a serious one. I consented. "Surely he
doesn't want to make me drunk?" I thought. This is the
place, by the way, to mention a rumour about the prince which
had reached me long before. It was said that though he was
so elegant and decorous in society he sometimes was fond of
getting drunk at night, of drinking like a fish, of secret de-
bauchery, of loathsome and mysterious vices. . . . I had heard
awful rumours about him. It was said that Alyosha knew his
father sometimes drank, and tried to conceal the fact from
everyone, especially from Natasha. Once he let something slip
before me, but immediately changed the subject and would
not answer my questions. I had not heard it from him, however,
and I must admit I had not believed it. Now I waited to see
what was coming.
The champagne was brought; the prince poured out a glass
for himself and another for me.
"A sweet, sweet girl, though she did scold me," he went on,
sipping his wine with relish, "but these sweet creatures are
particularly sweet just at those moments. . . . And, you know,
she thought no doubt she had covered me with shame; do you
remember that evening when she crushed me to atoms? Ha-
ha-ha! And how a blush suits her! Are you a connoisseur
in women? Sometimes a sudden flush is wonderfully becoming
to a pale cheek. Have you noticed that? Oh dear, I believe
you're angry again!"
"Yes, I am angry!" I cried, unable to restrain myself. "And
I won't have you speak of Natalya Nikolaevna . . . that is,
speak in that tone . . . I . . . I won't allow you to do it!"
"Oho! Well, as you like, I'll humour you and change the
conversation. I am as yielding and soft as dough. Let's talk
of you. I like you, Ivan Petrovitch. If only you knew what a
friendly, what a sincere interest I take in you."
"Prince, wouldn't it be better to keep to the point?" I
interrupted.
"You mean talk of our affair. I understand you with half a
word, mon ami, but you don't know how closely we are touching
on the point if we speak of you and you don't interrupt me of
course. And so I'll go on. I wanted to tell you, my priceless
Ivan Petrovitch, that to live as you're living is simply self-
destruction, Allow me to touch on this delicate subject; I
speak as a friend. You are poor, you ask your publisher for
money in advance, you pay your trivial debts, with what's left
you live for six months on tea, and shiver in your garret while
you wait for your novel to be written for your publisher's
magazine. That's so, isn't it?
"If it is so, anyway it's . . ."
"More creditable than stealing, cringing, taking bribes,
intriguing and so on, and so on. I know, I know what you
want to say, all that's been printed long ago."
"And so there's no need for you to talk about my affairs.
Surely, prince, I needn't give you a lesson in delicacy!"
"Well, certainly you needn't. But what's to be done if it's
just that delicate chord we must touch upon? There's no
avoiding it. But there, let's leave garrets alone. I'm by no
means fond of them, except in certain cases," he added with a
loathsome laugh. "But what surprises me is that you should
be so set on playing a secondary part. Certainly one of you
authors, I remember, said somewhere that the greatest achieve-
ment is for a man to know how to restrict himself to a secondary
role in life. . . . I believe it's something of that sort. I've
heard talk of that somewhere too, but you know Alyosha has
carried off your fiancee. I know that, and you, like some Schiller,
are ready to go to the stake for them, you're waiting upon them,
and almost at their beck and call. . . . You must excuse me,
my dear fellow, but it's rather a sickening show of noble feeling.
I should have thought you must be sick of it! It's really
shameful! I believe I should die of vexation in your place,
and worst of all the shame of it, the shame of it!"
"Prince, you seem to have brought me here on purpose to
insult me!" I cried, beside myself with anger.
"Oh no, my dear boy, not at all. At this moment I am
simply a matter-of-fact person, and wish for nothing but your
happiness. In fact I want to put everything right. But let's
lay all that aside for a moment; you hear me to the end, try not
to lose your temper if only for two minutes. Come, what do
you think, how would it be for you to get married? You see,
I'm talking of quite extraneous matters now. Why do you
look at me in such astonishment?"
"I'm waiting for you to finish," I said, staring at him indeed
with astonishment.
"But there's no need to enlarge. I simply wanted to know
what you'd say if any one of your friends, anxious to secure your
genuine permanent welfare, not a mere ephemeral happiness,
were to offer you a girl, Young and pretty, but ... of some
little experience; I speak allegorically but you'll understand,
after the style of Natalya Nikolaevna, say, of course with a
suitable compensation (observe I am speaking of an irrelevant
case, not of our affair); well, what would you say?"
"I say you're . . . mad."
"Ha-ha-ha! Bah! Why, you're almost ready to beat
me!"
I really was ready to fall upon him. I could not have
restrained myself longer. He produced on me the impression
of some sort of reptile, some huge spider, which I felt an intense
desire to crush. He was enjoying his taunts at me. He was
playing with me like a cat with a mouse, supposing that I was
altogether in his power. It seemed to me (and I understood it)
that he took a certain pleasure, found a certain sensual gratifica-
tion in the shamelessness, in the insolence, in the cynicism with
which at last he threw off his mask before me. He wanted to
enjoy my surprise, my horror. He had a genuine contempt
for me and was laughing at me.
I had a foreboding from the very beginning that this was all
premeditated, and that there was some motive behind it, but I
was in such a position that whatever happened I was bound to
listen to him. It was in Natasha's interests and I was obliged
to make up my mind to everything and endure it, for perhaps
the whole affair was being settled at that moment. But how
could I listen to his base, cynical jeers at her expense, how could
I endure this coolly! And, to make things worse, he quite
realized that I could not avoid listening to him, and that re-
doubled the offensiveness of it. Yet he is in need of me himself,
I reflected, and I began answering him abruptly and rudely.
He understood it.
"Look here, my young friend," he began, looking at me
seriously, "we can't go on like this, you and I, and so we'd
better come to an understanding. I have been intending, you
see, to speak openly to you about something, and you are bound
to be so obliging as to listen, whatever I may say. I want to
speak as I choose and as I prefer; yes, in the present case that's
necessary. So how is it to be, my young friend, will you be so
obliging?"
I controlled myself and was silent, although he was looking
at me with such biting mockery, as though he were challenging
me to the most outspoken protest. But he realized that I had
already agreed not to go, and he went on,
"Don't be angry with me, my friend! You are angry at
something, aren't you? Merely at something external, isn't
it? Why, you expected nothing else of me in substance, how-
ever I might have spoken to you, with perfumed courtesy, or
as now; so the drift would have been the same in any case.
You despise me, don't you? You see how much charming
simplicity there is in me, what candour, what bonhomie! I
confess everything to you, even my childish caprices. Yes,
mon cher, yes, a little more bonhomie on your side too, and we
should agree and get on famously, and understand one another
perfectly in the end. Don't wonder at me. I am so sick of
all this innocence, all these pastoral idyllics of Alyosha's, all
this Schillerism, all the loftiness of this damnable intrigue with
this Natasha (not that she's not a very taking little girl) that I
am, so to speak, glad of an opportunity to have my fling at
them. Well, the opportunity has come. Besides, I am longing
to pour out my heart to you. Ha! ha! ha!"
"You surprise me, prince, and I hardly recognize you. You
are sinking to the level of a Polichinello. These unexpected
revelations. . . ."
"Ha! ha! ha! to be sure that's partly true! A charming
comparison, ha-ha-ha! I'm out for a spree, my boy, I'm out
for a spree! I'm enjoying myself! And you, my poet, must
show me every possible indulgence. But we'd better drink,"
he concluded filling up his glass, perfectly satisfied with himself.
"I tell you what, my boy, that stupid evening at Natasha's,
do you remember, was enough to finish me off completely. It's
true she was very charming in herself, but I came away feeling
horribly angry, and I don't want to forget it. Neither to forget
it nor to conceal it. Of course our time will come too, and
it's coming quickly indeed, but we'll leave that for now. And
among other things, I wanted to explain to you that I have one
peculiarity of which you don't know yet, that is my hatred for
all these vulgar and worthless naivities and idyllic nonsense;
and one of the enjoyments I relish most has always been putting
on that style myself, falling in with that tone, making much of
some ever-young Schiller, and egging him on, and then, suddenly,
all at once, crushing him at one blow, suddenly taking off my mask
before him, and suddenly distorting my ecstatic countenance into
a grimace, putting out my tongue at him when he is least of all
expecting such a surprise. What? You don't understand that,
you think it nasty, stupid, undignified perhaps, is that it?"
"Of course it is."
"You are candid. I dare say, but what am I to do if they
plague me? I'm stupidly candid too, but such is my character.
But I want to tell you some characteristic incidents in my life.
It will make you understand me better, and it will be very
interesting. Yes, I really am, perhaps, like a Polichinello to-
day, but a Polichinello is candid, isn't he?"
"Listen, prince, it's late now, and really ..."
"What? Good heavens, what impatience! Besides what's
the hurry? You think I'm drunk. Never mind. So much
the better. Ha-ha-ha! These friendly interviews are always
remembered so long afterwards, you know, one recalls them
with such enjoyment. You're not a good-natured man, Ivan
Petrovitch. There's no sentimentality, no feeling about you.
What is a paltry hour or two to you for the sake of a friend
like me? Besides, it has a bearing on a certain affair. . . . Of
course you must realize that, and you a literary man too; yes,
you ought to bless the chance. You might create a type from
me, ha-ha-ha! My word, how sweetly candid I am to-day!"
He was evidently drunk. His face changed and began to
assume a spiteful expression. He was obviously longing to
wound, to sting, to bite, to jeer. "In a way it's better he's
drunk," I thought, "men always let things out when they're
drunk." But he knew what he was about.
"My young friend," he began, unmistakably enjoying himself,
"I made you a confession just now, perhaps an inappropriate
one, that I sometimes have an irresistible desire to put out my
tongue at people in certain cases. For this naive and simple-
hearted frankness you compare me to Polichinello, which really
amuses me. But if you wonder or reproach me for being rude
to you now, and perhaps as unmannerly as a peasant, with having
changed my tone to you in fact, in that case you are quite unjust.
In the first place it happens to suit me, and secondly I am not
at home, but out with you . . . by which I mean we're out for
a spree together like good friends, and thirdly I'm awfully
given to acting on my fancies. Do you know that once I had a
fancy to become a metaphysician and a philanthropist, and came
round almost to the same ideas as you? But that was ages ago,
in the golden days of my youth. I remember at that time
going to my home in the country with humane intentions, and
was, of course, bored to extinction. And you wouldn't believe
what happened to me then. In my boredom I began to make the
acquaintance of some pretty little girls . . . What, you're not
making faces already? Oh, my young friend! Why, we're
talking as friends now! One must sometimes enjoy oneself,
one must sometimes let oneself go! I have the Russian tem-
perament, you know, a genuine Russian temperament, I'm a
patriot, I love to throw off everything; besides one must snatch
the moment to enjoy life.. We shall die - and what comes
then! Well, so I took to dangling after the girls. I remember
one little shepherdess had a husband, a handsome lad he was.
I gave him a sound thrashing and meant to send him for a
soldier (past pranks, my poet), but I didn't send him for a soldier.
He died in my hospital. I had a hospital in the village, with
twelve beds, splendidly fitted up; such cleanliness, parquet
floors. I abolished it long ago though, but at that time I was
proud of it: I was a philanthropist. Well, I nearly flogged
the peasant to death on his wife's account. . . . Why are you
making faces again? It disgusts you to hear about it? It
revolts your noble feelings? There, there, don't upset yourself!
All that's a thing of the past. I did that when I was in my
romantic stage. I wanted to be a benefactor of humanity, to
found a philanthropic society. . . . That was the groove I was
in at that time. And then it was I went in for thrashing.
Now I never do it; now one has to grimace about it; now we
all grimace about it - such are the times.... But what amuses
me most of all now is that fool Ichmenyev. I'm convinced
that he knew all about that episode with the peasant . . . and
what do you think? In the goodness of his heart, which is
made, I do believe, of treacle, and because he was in love with
me at that time, and was cracking me up to himself, he made
up his mind not to believe a word of it, and he didn't believe a
word of it; that is, he refused to believe in the fact and for
twelve years he stood firm as a rock for me, till he was touched
himself. Ha-ha-ha! But all that's nonsense! Let us drink,
my young friend. Listen: are you fond of women?"
I made no answer. I only listened to him. He was already
beginning the second bottle.
"Well, I'm fond of talking about them over supper. I could
introduce you after supper to a Mlle. Philiberte I know. Hein?
What do you say? But what's the matter? You won't even
look at me ... hm!"
He seemed to ponder. But he suddenly raised his head,
glanced at me as it were significantly, and went on:
"I tell you what, my poet, I want to reveal to you a mystery
of nature of which it seems to me you are not in the least aware,
I'm certain that you're calling me at this moment a sinner,
perhaps even a scoundrel, a monster of vice and corruption.
But I can tell you this. If it were only possible (which, however,
from the laws of human nature never can be possible), if it were
possible for every one of us to describe all his secret thoughts,
without hesitating to disclose what he is afraid to tell and would
not on any account tell other people, what he is afraid to tell
his best friends, what, indeed, he is even at times afraid to
confess to himself, the world would be filled with such a stench
that we should all be suffocated. That's why, I may observe
in parenthesis, our social proprieties and conventions are so
good. They have a profound value, I won't say for morality,
but simply for self-preservation, for comfort, which, of course,
is even more, since morality is really that same comfort, that is,
it's invented simply for the sake of comfort. But we'll talk of
the proprieties later; I'm wandering from the point, remind
me later. I will conclude by saying: you charge me with vice,
corruption, immorality, but perhaps I'm only to blame for being
more open than other people, that's all; for not concealing
what other people hide even from themselves, as I said before.
... It's horrid of me but it's what I want to do just now. But
don't be uneasy," he added with an ironical smile, "I said to
blame but I'm not asking forgiveness. Note this too: I'm
not putting you to the blush. I'm not asking you whether you
haven't yourself some such secrets, in order to justify myself.
I am behaving quite nicely and honourably. I always behave
like a gentleman ..."
"This is simply silly talk," I said, looking at him with con-
tempt.
"Silly talk! Ha-ha-ha! But shall I tell you what you're
thinking? You're wondering why I brought you here, and am
suddenly, without rhyme or reason, beginning to be so open with
you. Isn't that it?"
"Yes."
"Well, that you will find out later."
"The simplest explanation is that you've drunk two bottles
and ... are not sober."
"You mean I'm simply drunk. That maybe, too. Not
sober! That's a milder way of putting it than drunk. Oh,
youth, brimming over with delicacy! But . . . we seem to
have begun abusing one another again, and we were talking of
something so interesting. Yes, my poet, if there is anything
sweet and pretty left in the world it's women."
"Do you know, prince, I still can't understand why you have
selected me as a confidant of your secrets and your amorous
propensities."
"Hm! But I told you that you'd learn that later on, Don't
excite yourself; but what if I've no reason; you're a poet,
you'll understand me, but I've told you that already. There's
a peculiar gratification in suddenly removing the mask, in the
cynicism with which a man suddenly exposes himself before
another without even deigning to consider decency in his presence.
I'll tell you an anecdote. There was a crazy official in Paris,
who was afterwards put into a madhouse when it was realized
that he was mad. Well, when he went out of his mind this is
what he thought of to amuse himself. He undressed at home,
altogether, like Adam, only keeping on his shoes and socks, put
on an ample cloak that came down to his heels, wrapped himself
round in it, and with a grave and majestic air went out into the
street. Well, if he's looked at sideways - he's a man like anyone
else, going for a walk in a long cloak to please himself. But
whenever he met anyone in a lonely place where there was no one
else about, he walked up to him in silence, and with the most
serious and profoundly thoughtful air suddenly stopped before
him, threw open his cloak and displayed himself in all the . . .
purity of his heart! That used to last for a minute, then he
would wrap himself up again, and in silence, without moving
a muscle of his face, he would stalk by the petrified spectator,
as grave and majestic as the ghost in Hamlet. That was how
he used to behave with everyone, men, women, and children, and
that was his only pleasure. Well, some degree of the same
pleasure may be experienced when one flabbergasts some romantic
Schiller, by putting out one's tongue at him when he least expects
it. Flabbergast - what a word! I met it somewhere in one
of you modern writers!"
"Well, that was a madman, but you. . ."
"I'm in my right mind?"
"Yes."
Prince Valkovsky chuckled.
"You're right there, my boy!" he added, with a most
insolent expression of face.
"Prince," I said, angered by his insolence, "you hate us
all, including me, and you're revenging yourself on me for
everyone and everything. It all comes from your petty vanity.
You're spiteful, and petty in your spite. We have enraged
you, and perhaps what you are most angry about is that evening.
Of course, there's no way in which you could pay me out more
effectually than by this absolute contempt. You throw off
the most ordinary, universally obligatory civility which we
all owe to one another. You want to show me clearly that
you don't even deign to consider decency before me, so openly
and unexpectedly throwing off your filthy mask before me, and
exhibiting yourself in such moral cynicism ..."
"Why are you saying all this to me?" he asked, looking
rudely and maliciously at me. "To show your insight?"
"To show that I understand you, and to put it plainly before
you."
"Quelle idle, mon cher," he went on, changing his note and
suddenly reverting to his former light-hearted, chatty and good-
humoured tone. "You are simply turning me from my subject.
Buvons, mon ami, allow me to fill your glass. I only wanted
to tell you about a charming and most curious adventure. I
will tell it you in outline. I used at one time to know a lady;
she was not in her first youth, but about twenty-seven or twenty-
eight. She was a beauty of the first rank. What a bust, what
a figure, what a carriage! Her eyes were as keen as an eagle's,
but always stem and forbidding; her manner was majestic
and unapproachable. She was reputed to be as cold as the driven
snow, and frightened everyone by her immaculate, her
menacing virtue. Menacing's the word. There was no one in
the whole neighbourhood so harsh in judgement as she. She
punished not only vice, but the faintest weakness in other
women, and punished it inflexibly, relentlessly. She had great
influence in her circle. The proudest and most terribly virtuous
old women respected her and even made up to her. She looked
upon everyone with impartial severity, like the abbess of a
mediaeval convent. Young women trembled before her glances
and her criticism. A single remark, a single hint, from her was
able to ruin a reputation, so great was her influence in society;
even men were afraid of her. Finally she threw herself into a
sort of contemplative mysticism of the same calm dignified
character. . . . And, would you believe? You couldn't have
found a sinner more profligate than she was, and I was so happy
as to gain her complete confidence. I was, in fact, her secret
and mysterious lover. Our meetings were contrived in such a
clever, masterly fashion that none even of her own household
could have the slightest suspicion of them. Only her maid, a
very charming French girl, was initiated into all her secrets,
but one could rely on that girl absolutely. She had her share
in the proceedings - in what way? - I won't enter into that now.
My lady's sensuality was such that even the Marquis de Sade
might have taken lessons from her. But the intensest, the most
poignant thrill in this sensuality was its secrecy, the audacity of
the deception. This jeering at everything which in public the
countess preached as being lofty, transcendent and inviolable, this
diabolic inward chuckle, in fact, and conscious trampling on
everything held sacred, and all this unbridled and carried to the
utmost pitch of licentiousness such as even the warmest imagina-
tion could scarcely conceive - in that, above all, lay the keenness
of the gratification. Yes, she was the devil incarnate, but it was
a devil supremely fascinating. I can't think of her now without
ecstasy. In the very heat of voluptuousness she would suddenly
laugh like one possessed, and I understood it thoroughly, I under-
stood that laughter and laughed too. It makes me sigh now
when I think of it, though it's long ago now. She threw me over
in a year. If I had wanted to injure her I couldn't have. Who
would have believed me? A character like hers. What do
you say, my young friend?"
"Foo, how disgusting!" I answered, listening to this avowal
with repulsion.
"You wouldn't be my young friend if your answer were
different. I knew you'd say that. Ha-ha-ha! Wait a bit,
mon ami, live longer and you'll understand, but now, now you
still need gilt on your gingerbread. No, you're not a poet if
that's what you say. That woman understood life and knew
how to make the most of it."
"But why descend to such beastliness?"
"What beastliness?"
"To which that woman descended, and you with her."
"Ah, you call that beastliness - a sign that you are still in
bonds and leading-strings. Of course, I recognize that in-
dependence may be shown in quite an opposite direction. Let's
talk more straightforwardly, my friend. . . . you must admit
yourself that all that's nonsense."
"What isn't nonsense?"
"What isn't nonsense is personality - myself. All is for me,
the whole world is created for me. Listen, my friend, I still
believe that it's possible to live happily on earth. And that's
the best faith, for without it one can't even live unhappily:
there's nothing left but to poison oneself. They say that this
was what some fool did. He philosophised till he destroyed
everything, everything, even the obligation of all normal and
natural human duties, till at last he had nothing left. The sum
total came to nil, and so he declared that the best thing in life
was prussic acid. You say that's Hamlet. That's terrible
despair in fact, something so grand that we could never dream
of it. But you're a poet, and I'm a simple mortal, and so I say
one must look at the thing from the simplest, most practical
point of view. I, for instance, have long since freed myself
from all shackles, and even obligations. I only recognize
obligations when I see I have something to gain by them. You,
of course, can't look at things like that, your legs are in fetters,
and your taste is morbid. You talk of the ideal, of virtue.
Well, my dear fellow, I am ready to admit anything you tell me
to, but what am I to do if I know for a fact that at the root of
all human virtues lies the completest egoism? And the more
virtuous anything is, the more egoism there is in it. Love
yourself, that's the one rule I recognize. Life is a commercial
transaction, don't waste your money, but kindly pay for your
entertainment, and you will be doing your whole duty to your
neighbour. Those are my morals, if you really want to know
them, though I confess that to my thinking it is better not to pay
one's neighbour, but to succeed in making him do things for
nothing. I have no ideals and I don't want to have them;
I've never felt a yearning for them. One can live such a gay
and charming life without ideals . . . and, en somme, I'm very
glad that I can get on without prussic acid. If I were a little
more virtuous I could not perhaps get on without it, like that
fool philosopher (no doubt a German). No! There's still so
much that's good left in life! I love consequence, rank, a
mansion, a huge stake at cards (I'm awfully fond of cards).
But best of all, best of all - woman . . . and woman in all her
aspects: I'm even fond of secret, hidden vice, a bit more strange
and original, even a little filthy for variety, ha-ha-ha! I'm
looking at your face: with what contempt you are looking at
me now!"
"You are right," I answered.
"Well, supposing you are right, anyway filth is better than
prussic acid, isn't it?"
"No. Prussic acid is better."
"I asked you 'isn't it' on purpose to enjoy your answer
knew what you'd say. No, my young friend. If you're a genuine
lover of humanity, wish all sensible men the same taste as mine,
even with a little filth, or sensible men will soon have nothing to
do in the world and there'll be none but the fools left. It will be
good luck for them. Though, indeed, there's a proverb even now
that fools are lucky. And do you know there's nothing pleasanter
than to live with fools and to back them up; it pays! You
needn't wonder at my valuing convention, keeping up certain
traditions, struggling for influence; I see, of course, that I'm
living in a worthless world; but meanwhile it's snug there and I
back it up, and show I stand firm for it. Though I'd be the first
to leave it if occasion arose. I know all your modern ideas,
though I've never worried about them, and had no reason to.
I've never had any conscience-pricks about anything. I'll agree
to anything so long as I'm all right, and there are legions like me,
and we really are all right. Everything in the world may perish,
but we shall not perish. We shall exist as long as the world exists.
All the world may sink, but we shall float, we shall always float
to the top. Consider, by the way, one thing: how full of life
people like us are. We are pre-eminently, phenomenally
tenacious of life; has that ever struck you? We live to be
eighty, ninety. So nature itself protects us, he-he-he! I particu-
larly want to live to be ninety. I'm not fond of death, and I'm
afraid of it. The devil only knows what dying will be like. But
why talk of it? It's that philosopher who poisoned himself that
has put me on that track. Damn philosophy! Buvons, mon cher.
We began talking about pretty girls... Where are you off to?"
"I'm going home, and it's time for you to go."
"Nonsense, nonsense! I've, so to speak, opened my whole
heart to you, and you don't seem to feel what a great proof of
friendship it is. He-he-he! There's not much love in you, my
poet. But wait a minute, I want another bottle ..."
"A third?"
"Yes, As for virtue, my young hopeful (you will allow me to
call you by that sweet name), who knows, maybe my precepts
may come in useful one day. And so, my young hopeful, about
virtue I have said already: the more virtuous virtue is, the more
egoism there is in it. I should like to tell you a very pretty story
apropos of that. I once loved a young girl, and loved her almost
genuinely. She even sacrificed a great deal for me."
"Is that the one you robbed?" I asked rudely, unwilling to
restrain myself longer.
Prince Valkovsky started, his face changed, and he fixed his
blood-shot eyes on me. There was amazement and fury in them.
"Wait a minute, wait a minute," he said as though to himself,
"let me consider, I really am drunk, and it's difficult for me to
reflect."
He paused, and looked searchingly, with the same spitefulness,
at me, holding my hand in his as though afraid I should go away.
I am convinced that at that moment he was going over things in
his mind, trying to discover where I could have heard of this
affair which scarcely anyone knew; and whether there were any
danger in my knowing of it. This lasted for a minute; but
suddenly his face changed quickly. The same mocking, drunken,
good-humoured expression appeared in his eyes. He laughed.
"Ha-ha-ha! You're a Talleyrand, there's no other word for
you. Why, I really stood before her dumbfounded when she
sprang it upon me that I had robbed her! How she shrieked then,
how she scolded! She was a violent woman and with no self-
control. But, judge for yourself : in the first place I hadn't
robbed her as you expressed it just now. She gave me her money
herself, and it was mine. Suppose you were to give me your best
dress-coat" (as he said this he looked at my only and rather un-
shapely dress-coat which had been made for me three years ago
by a tailor called Ivan Skornyagin), "that I thanked you and
wore it and suddenly a year later you quarrel with me and ask
for it back again when I've worn it out. . . . That would be
ungentlemanly; why give it at all? And, secondly, though the
money was mine I should certainly have returned it, but think:
where could I have got hold of such a sum all at once? And,
above all, I can't endure all this Schillerism and idyllic nonsense :
I've told you so already - and that was at the back of it all.
You can't imagine how she posed for my benefit, protesting that
she would give me the money (which was mine already). I got
angry at last and I suddenly succeeded in judging the position
quite correctly, for I never lose my presence of mind; I reflected
that by giving her back the money I should perhaps make her
unhappy. I should have deprived her of the enjoyment of being
miserable entirely owing to me, and of cursing me for it all her
life. Believe me, my young friend, there is positively a lofty
ecstasy in unhappiness of that kind, in feeling oneself magnani-
mous and absolutely in the right, and in having every right to
call one's opponent a scoundrel. This ecstasy of spite is often to
be met with in these Schilleresque people, of course; afterwards
perhaps she may have had nothing to cat, but I am convinced
that she was happy. I did not want to deprive her of that
happiness and I did not send her back the money. And this fully
justified my maxim that the louder and more conspicuous a
person's magnanimity, the greater the amount of revolting
egoism underlying it... Surely that's clear to you... But
... you wanted to catch me, ha-ha-ha! ... Come, confess you
were trying to catch me.... Oh, Talleyrand!
"Good-bye," I slid, getting up.
"One minute! Two words in conclusion!" he shouted,
suddenly dropping his disgusting tone and speaking seriously.
"Listen to my last words: from all I have said to you it follows
clearly and unmistakably (I imagine you have observed it your-
self) that I will never give up what's to my advantage for anyone.
I'm fond of money and I need it. Katerina Fyodorovna has
plenty. Her father held a contract for the vodka tax for ten
years. She has three millions and those three millions would be
very useful to me. Alyosha and Katya are a perfect match for
one another; they are both utter fools; and that just suits me.
And, therefore, I desire and intend their marriage to take place
as soon as possible. In a fortnight or three weeks the countess
and Katya are going to the country. Alyosha must escort them.
Warn Natalya Nikolaevna that there had better be no idyllic
nonsense, no Schillerism, that they had better not oppose me.
I'm revengeful and malicious; I shall stand up for myself. I'm
not afraid of her. Everything will no doubt be as I wish it, and
therefore if I warn her now it is really more for her sake. Mind
there's no silliness, and that she behaves herself sensibly. Other-
wise it will be a bad look-out for her, very. She ought to be
grateful to me that I haven't treated her as I ought to have done,
by law. Let me tell you, my poet, that the law protects the peace
of the family, it guaranteed a son's obedience to his father, and
that those who seduce children from their most sacred duties to
their parents are not encouraged by the laws. Remember, too,
that I have connexions, that she has none, and ... surely you
must realize what I might do to her.... But I have not done it,
for so far she has behaved reasonably. Don't be uneasy. Every
moment for the last six months, every action they have taken has
been watched by sharp eyes. And I have known everything to
the smallest trifle. And so I have waited quietly for Alyosha to
drop her of himself, and that process is beginning and mean-
while it has been a charming distraction for him. I have re-
mained a humane father in his imagination, and I must have
him think of me like that. Ha-ha-ha! When I remember that
I was almost paying her compliments the other evening for having
been so magnanimous and disinterested as not to marry him!
I should like to know how she could have married him. As for
my visit to her then, all that was simply because the time had
come to put an end to the connexion. But I wanted to verify
everything with my own eyes, my own experience. Well, is that
enough for you? Or perhaps you want to know too why I
brought you here, why I have carried on like this before you,
why I have been so simple and frank with you, when all this
might have been said without any such frank avowals - yes?"
"Yes."
I controlled myself and listened eagerly. I had no need to
answer more.
"Solely, my young friend, that I have noticed in you more
common sense and clear-sightedness about things than in either
of our young fools. You might have known before the sort of
man I am, have made surmises and conjectures about me, but I
wanted to save you the trouble, and resolved to show you face to
face who it is you hare to deal with. A first-hand impression is
a great thing. Understand me, mon ami: you know whom you
have to deal with, you love her, and so I hope now that you will
use all your influence (and you have an influence over her) to
save her from certain* unpleasantness. Otherwise there will be
such unpleasantness, and I assure you, I assure you it will be no
joking matter. Finally, the third reason for my openness with
you . . . (but of course you've guessed that, my dear boy) yes,
I really did want to spit upon the whole business and to spit upon
it before your eyes, too!"
"And you've attained your object, too," said I, quivering with
excitement. "I agree that you could not have shown your spite
and your contempt for me and for all of us better than by your
frankness to me. Far from being apprehensive that your frank-
ness might compromise you in my eyes, you are not even ashamed
to expose yourself before me. You have certainly been like that
madman in the cloak. You have not considered me as a human
being."
"You have guessed right, my young friend," he said, getting
up, "you have seen through it all. You are not an author for
nothing. I hope that we are parting as friends. Shan't we drink
bruderschaft together?"
"You are drunk, and that is the only reason that I don't
answer you as you deserve. . . ."
"Again a figure of silence! - you haven't said all you might
have said. Ha-ha-ha! You won't allow me to pay for you?"
CHAPTER I
"Don't trouble yourself. I'll pay for myself." "Ah, no doubt of it. Aren't we going the same way?" "I am not coming with you." "Farewell, my poet. I hope you've understood me. . . ." He went out, stepping rather unsteadily and not turning to me again. The footman helped him into his carriage. I went my way. It was nearly three o'clock in the morning. It was raining The night was dark . . . .
PART IV
CHAPTER I
I WON'T attempt to describe my exasperation. Though I might have expected anything, it was a blow; it was as though he had appeared before me quite suddenly in all his hideousness. But I remember my sensations were confused, as though I had been knocked down, crushed by something, and black misery gnawed more and more painfully at my heart. I was afraid for Natasha. I foresaw much suffering for her in the future, and I cast about in perplexity for some way by which to avoid it, to soften these last moments for her, before the final catastrophe. Of that catas- trophe there could be no doubt. It was near at hand, and it was impossible not to see the form it would take. I did not notice how I reached home, though I was getting wet with the rain all the way. It was three o'clock in the morning. I had hardly knocked at the door of my room when I heard a moan, and the door was hurriedly unlocked, as though Nellie had not gone to bed but had been watching for me all the time at the door. There was a candle alight. I glanced into Nellie's face and was dismayed; it was completely transformed; her eyes were burning as though in fever, and had a wild look as though she did not recognize me. She was in a high fever. "Nellie, what's the matter, are you ill?" I asked, bending down and putting my arm round her. She nestled up to me tremulously as though she were afraid of something, said something, rapidly and impetuously, as though she had only been waiting for me to come to tell me it. But her words were strange and incoherent; I could understand nothing. She was in delirium. I led her quickly to bed. But she kept starting up and clinging to me as though in terror, as though begging me to protect her from someone, and even when she was lying in bed she kept seizing my hand and holding it tightly as though afraid that I might go away again. I was so upset and my nerves were so shaken that I actually began to cry as I looked at her. I was ill myself. Seeing my tears she looked fixedly at me for some time with strained, concentrated attention, as though trying to grasp and understand something. It was evident that this cost her great effort. At last something like a thought was apparent in her face. After a violent epileptic fit she was usually for some time unable to collect her thoughts or to articulate distinctly. And so it was now. After making an immense effort to say some- thing to me and realizing that I did not understand, she held out her little hand and began to wipe away my tears, then put her arm round my neck, drew me down to her and kissed me. It was clear that she had had a fit in my absence, and it had taken place at the moment when she had been standing at the door. Probably on recovery she had been for a long time unable come to herself. At such times reality is mixed up with delirium and she had certainly imagined something awful, some horror. At the same time she must have been dimly aware that I was to come back and should knock at the door, and so, lying right in the doorway on the floor, she had been on the alert for my coming and had stood up at my first tap. "But why was she just at the door," I wondered, and suddenly I noticed with amazement that she was wearing her little wadded coat. (I had just got it for her from an old pedlar woman I knew who sometimes came to my room to offer me goods in repayment of money I had lent her.) So she must have been meaning to go out, and had probably been already unlocking the door when she was suddenly struck down by the fit. Where could she have been meaning to go? Was she already in delirium? Meanwhile the fever did not leave her, and she soon sank into delirium and unconsciousness. She had twice already had a fit in my flat, but it had always passed off harmlessly; now, however, she seemed in a high fever. After sitting beside her for half an hour I pushed a chair up to the sofa and lay down, as I was, without undressing, close beside her that I might wake the more readily if she called me. I did not even put the candle out. I looked at her many times again before I fell asleep myself. She was pale; her lips were parched with fever and stained with blood, probably from the fall. Her face still retained the look of terror and a sort of poignant anguish which seemed to be still haunting her in her sleep, I made up my mind to go as early as possible next morning for the doctor, if she were worse. I was afraid that it might end in actual brain fever. "It must have been the prince frightened her!" I thought, with a shudder, and I thought of his story of the woman who had thrown the money in his face.
CHAPTER II
A FORTNIGHT passed by. Nellie was recovering. She did not develop brain fever but she was seriously ill. She began to get up again on a bright sunny day at the end of April. It was Passion Week. Poor little creature. I cannot go on with my story in the same consecutive way. Now that I am describing all this it is long past, but to this very minute I recall with an oppressive heart. rending anguish that pale, thin little face, the searching, intent gaze of her black eyes when we were sometimes left alone together and she fixed upon me from her bed a prolonged gaze as though challenging me to guess what was in her mind; but seeing that I did not guess and was still puzzled she would smile gently, as it were, to herself, and would suddenly hold out to me her hot little hand, with its thin, wasted little fingers. Now it is all over, and everything is understood, but to this day I do not know the secrets of that sick, tortured and outraged little heart. I feel that I am digressing, but at this moment I want to think only of Nellie. Strange to say, now that I am lying alone on a hospital bed, abandoned by all whom I loved so fondly and intensely, some trivial incident of that past, often unnoticed at the time and soon forgotten, comes back all at once to my mind and suddenly takes quite a new significance, completing and explaining to me what I had failed to understand till now. For the first four days of her illness, we, the doctor and I, were in great alarm about her, but on the fifth day the doctor took me aside and told me that there was no reason for anxiety and she would certainly recover. This doctor was the one I had known so long, a good-natured and eccentric old bachelor whom I had called in in Nellie's first illness, and who had so impressed her by the huge Stanislav Cross on his breast. "So there's no reason for anxiety," I said, greatly relieved. "No, she'll get well this time, but afterwards she will soon die." "Die! But why?" I cried, overwhelmed at this death sentence. "Yes, she is certain to die very soon. The patient has an organic defect of the heart, and at the slightest unfavourable circumstance she'll be laid up again. She will perhaps get better, but then she'll be ill again and at last she'll die." "Do you mean nothing can be done to save her? Surely that's impossible. " "But it's inevitable. However, with the removal of un- favourable circumstances, with a quiet and easy life with more pleasure in it, the patient might yet be kept from death and there even are cases . . . unexpected . . . strange and exceptional . . . in fact the patient may be saved by a concatenation of favourable conditions, but radically cured - never." "But, good heavens, what's to be done now?" "Follow my advice, lead a quiet life, and take the powders regularly. I have noticed this girl's capricious, of a nervous temperament, and fond of laughing. She much dislikes taking her powders regularly and she has just refused them absolutely." "Yes, doctor. She certainly is strange, but I put it all down to her invalid state. Yesterday she was very obedient; to-day, when I gave her her medicine she pushed the spoon as though by accident and it was all spilt over. When I wanted to mix another powder she snatched the box away from me, threw it on the ground and then burst into tears. Only I don't think it was because I was making her take the powders," I added, after a moment's thought. "Hm! Irritation! Her past great misfortunes." (I had told the doctor fully and frankly much of Nellie's history and my story had struck him very much.) "All that in conjunction, and from it this illness. For the time the only remedy is to take the powders, and she must take the powders. I will go and try once more to impress on her the duty to obey medical instructions, and ... that is, speaking generally . . . take the powders." We both came out of the kitchen (in which our interview had taken place) and the doctor went up to the sick child's bedside again. But I think Nellie must have overheard. Anyway she had raised her head from the pillow and turned her ear in our direction, listening keenly all the time. I noticed this through the crack of the half-opened door. When we went up to her the rogue ducked under the quilt, and peeped out at us with a mocking smile. The poor child had grown much thinner during the four days of her illness. Her eyes were sunken and she was still feverish, so that the mischievous expression and glittering, defiant glances so surprising to the doctor, who was one of the most good- natured Germans in Petersburg, looked all the more incongruous on her face. Gravely, though trying to soften his voice as far as he could, he began in a kind and caressing voice to explain how essential and efficacious the powders were, and consequently how incumbent it was on every invalid to take them. Nellie was raising her head, but suddenly, with an apparently quite accidental movement of her arm, she jerked the spoon, and all the medicine was spilt