Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoevsky (e books for reading .TXT) đ
- Author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
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âYou had much better make her a present of something. I bet you never thought of that.â
âYou donât understand, as Iâve told you already! Of course, she is in such a position, but itâs another question. Quite another question! You simply despise her. Seeing a fact which you mistakenly consider deserving of contempt, you refuse to take a humane view of a fellow creature. You donât know what a character she is! I am only sorry that of late she has quite given up reading and borrowing books. I used to lend them to her. I am sorry, too, that with all the energy and resolution in protestingâ âwhich she has already shown onceâ âshe has little self-reliance, little, so to say, independence, so as to break free from certain prejudices and certain foolish ideas. Yet she thoroughly understands some questions, for instance about kissing of hands, that is, that itâs an insult to a woman for a man to kiss her hand, because itâs a sign of inequality. We had a debate about it and I described it to her. She listened attentively to an account of the workmenâs associations in France, too. Now I am explaining the question of coming into the room in the future society.â
âAnd whatâs that, pray?â
âWe had a debate lately on the question: Has a member of the community the right to enter another memberâs room, whether man or woman, at any timeâ ââ ⊠and we decided that he has!â
âIt might be at an inconvenient moment, he-he!â
Lebeziatnikov was really angry.
âYou are always thinking of something unpleasant,â he cried with aversion. âTfoo! How vexed I am that when I was expounding our system, I referred prematurely to the question of personal privacy! Itâs always a stumbling-block to people like you, they turn it into ridicule before they understand it. And how proud they are of it, too! Tfoo! Iâve often maintained that that question should not be approached by a novice till he has a firm faith in the system. And tell me, please, what do you find so shameful even in cesspools? I should be the first to be ready to clean out any cesspool you like. And itâs not a question of self-sacrifice, itâs simply work, honourable, useful work which is as good as any other and much better than the work of a Raphael and a Pushkin, because it is more useful.â
âAnd more honourable, more honourable, he-he-he!â
âWhat do you mean by âmore honourableâ? I donât understand such expressions to describe human activity. âMore honourable,â ânoblerââ âall those are old-fashioned prejudices which I reject. Everything which is of use to mankind is honourable. I only understand one word: useful! You can snigger as much as you like, but thatâs so!â
Pyotr Petrovitch laughed heartily. He had finished counting the money and was putting it away. But some of the notes he left on the table. The âcesspool questionâ had already been a subject of dispute between them. What was absurd was that it made Lebeziatnikov really angry, while it amused Luzhin and at that moment he particularly wanted to anger his young friend.
âItâs your ill-luck yesterday that makes you so ill-humoured and annoying,â blurted out Lebeziatnikov, who in spite of his âindependenceâ and his âprotestsâ did not venture to oppose Pyotr Petrovitch and still behaved to him with some of the respect habitual in earlier years.
âYouâd better tell me this,â Pyotr Petrovitch interrupted with haughty displeasure, âcan youâ ââ ⊠or rather are you really friendly enough with that young person to ask her to step in here for a minute? I think theyâve all come back from the cemeteryâ ââ ⊠I heard the sound of stepsâ ââ ⊠I want to see her, that young person.â
âWhat for?â Lebeziatnikov asked with surprise.
âOh, I want to. I am leaving here today or tomorrow and therefore I wanted to speak to her aboutâ ââ ⊠However, you may be present during the interview. Itâs better you should be, indeed. For thereâs no knowing what you might imagine.â
âI shanât imagine anything. I only asked and, if youâve anything to say to her, nothing is easier than to call her in. Iâll go directly and you may be sure I wonât be in your way.â
Five minutes later Lebeziatnikov came in with Sonia. She came in very much surprised and overcome with shyness as usual. She was always shy in such circumstances and was always afraid of new people, she had been as a child and was even more so now.â ââ ⊠Pyotr Petrovitch met her âpolitely and affably,â but with a certain shade of bantering familiarity which in his opinion was suitable for a man of his respectability and weight in dealing with a creature so young and so interesting as she. He hastened to âreassureâ her and made her sit down facing him at the table. Sonia sat down, looked about herâ âat Lebeziatnikov, at the notes lying on the table and then again at Pyotr Petrovitch and her eyes remained riveted on him. Lebeziatnikov was moving to the door. Pyotr Petrovitch signed to Sonia to remain seated and stopped Lebeziatnikov.
âIs Raskolnikov in there? Has he come?â he asked him in a whisper.
âRaskolnikov? Yes. Why? Yes, he is there. I saw him just come in.â ââ ⊠Why?â
âWell, I particularly beg you to remain here with us and not to leave me alone with thisâ ââ ⊠young woman. I only want a few words with her, but God knows what they may make of it. I shouldnât like Raskolnikov to repeat anything.â ââ ⊠You understand what I mean?â
âI understand!â Lebeziatnikov saw the point. âYes, you are right.â ââ ⊠Of course, I am convinced personally that you have no reason to be uneasy, butâ ââ ⊠still, you are right. Certainly Iâll stay.
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