The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (easy to read books for adults list .txt) 📕
"Those innocent eyes slit my soul up like a razor," he used to say afterwards, with his loathsome snigger. In a man so depraved this might, of course, mean no more than sensual attraction. As he had received no dowry with his wife, and had, so to speak, taken her "from the halter," he did not stand on ceremony with her. Making her feel that she had "wronged" him, he took advantage of her phenomenal meekness and submissiveness to trample on the elemen
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made him feel stronger.
Dmitri was not at home. The people of the house, an old
cabinet-maker, his son, and his old wife, looked with positive
suspicion at Alyosha. “He hasn’t slept here for the last three nights.
Maybe he has gone away,” the old man said in answer to Alyosha’s
persistent inquiries. Alyosha saw that he was answering in
accordance with instructions. When he asked whether he were not at
Grushenka’s or in hiding at Foma’s (Alyosha spoke so freely on
purpose), all three looked at him in alarm. “They are fond of him,
they are doing their best for him,” thought Alyosha. “That’s good.”
At last he found the house in Lake Street. It was a decrepit
little house, sunk on one side, with three windows looking into the
street, and with a muddy yard, in the middle of which stood a solitary
cow. He crossed the yard and found the door opening into the
passage. On the left of the passage lived the old woman of the house
with her old daughter. Both seemed to be deaf. In answer to his
repeated inquiry for the captain, one of them at last understood
that he was asking for their lodgers, and pointed to a door across the
passage. The captain’s lodging turned out to be a simple cottage room.
Alyosha had his hand on the iron latch to open the door, when he was
struck by the strange hush within. Yet he knew from Katerina
Ivanovna’s words that the man had a family. “Either they are all
asleep or perhaps they have heard me coming and are waiting for me
to open the door. I’d better knock first,” and he knocked. An answer
came, but not at once, after an interval of perhaps ten seconds.
“Who’s there?” shouted someone in a loud and very angry voice.
Then Alyosha opened the door and crossed the threshold. He found
himself in a regular peasant’s room. Though it was large, it was
cumbered up with domestic belongings of all sorts, and there were
several people in it. On the left was a large Russian stove. From
the stove to the window on the left was a string running across the
room, and on it there were rags hanging. There was a bedstead
against the wall on each side, right and left, covered with knitted
quilts. On the one on the left was a pyramid of four print-covered
pillows, each smaller than the one beneath. On the other there was
only one very small pillow. The opposite corner was screened off by
a curtain or a sheet hung on a string. Behind this curtain could be
seen a bed made up on a bench and a chair. The rough square table of
plain wood had been moved into the middle window. The three windows,
which consisted each of four tiny greenish mildewy panes, gave
little light, and were close shut, so that the room was not very light
and rather stuffy. On the table was a frying pan with the remains of
some fried eggs, a half-eaten piece of bread, and a small bottle
with a few drops of vodka.
A woman of genteel appearance, wearing a cotton gown, was
sitting on a chair by the bed on the left. Her face was thin and
yellow, and her sunken cheeks betrayed at the first glance that she
was ill. But what struck Alyosha most was the expression in the poor
woman’s eyes-a look of surprised inquiry and yet of haughty pride.
And while he was talking to her husband, her big brown eyes moved from
one speaker to the other with the same haughty and questioning
expression. Beside her at the window stood a young girl, rather plain,
with scanty reddish hair, poorly but very neatly dressed. She looked
disdainfully at Alyosha as he came in. Beside the other bed was
sitting another female figure. She was a very sad sight, a young
girl of about twenty, but hunchback and crippled “with withered legs,”
as Alyosha was told afterwards. Her crutches stood in the corner close
by. The strikingly beautiful and gentle eyes of this poor girl
looked with mild serenity at Alyosha. A man of forty-five was
sitting at the table, finishing the fried eggs. He was spare, small,
and weakly built. He had reddish hair and a scanty light-coloured
beard, very much like a wisp of tow (this comparison and the phrase “a
wisp of tow” flashed at once into Alyosha’s mind for some reason, he
remembered it afterwards). It was obviously this gentleman who had
shouted to him, as there was no other man in the room. But when
Alyosha went in, he leapt up from the bench on which he was sitting,
and, hastily wiping his mouth with a ragged napkin, darted up to
Alyosha.
“It’s a monk come to beg for the monastery. A nice place to come
to!” the girl standing in the left corner said aloud. The man spun
round instantly towards her and answered her in an excited and
breaking voice:
“No, Varvara, you are wrong. Allow me to ask,” he turned again
to Alyosha, “what has brought you to our retreat?”
Alyosha looked attentively at him. It was the first time he had
seen him. There was something angular, flurried and irritable about
him. Though he had obviously just been drinking, he was not drunk.
There was extraordinary impudence in his expression, and yet,
strange to say, at the same time there was fear. He looked like a
man who had long been kept in subjection and had submitted to it,
and now had suddenly turned and was trying to assert himself. Or,
better still, like a man who wants dreadfully to hit you but is
horribly afraid you will hit him. In his words and in the intonation
of his shrill voice there was a sort of crazy humour, at times
spiteful and at times cringing, and continually shifting from one tone
to another. The question about “our retreat” he had asked, as it were,
quivering all over, rolling his eyes, and skipping up so close to
Alyosha that he instinctively drew back a step. He was dressed in a
very shabby dark cotton coat, patched and spotted. He wore checked
trousers of an extremely light colour, long out of fashion, and of
very thin material. They were so crumpled and so short that he
looked as though he had grown out of them like a boy.
“I am Alexey Karamazov,” Alyosha began in reply.
“I quite understand that, sir,” the gentleman snapped out at
once to assure him that he knew who he was already. “I am Captain
Snegiryov, sir, but I am still desirous to know precisely what has led
you- “
“Oh, I’ve come for nothing special. I wanted to have a word with
you-if only you allow me.”
“In that case, here is a chair, sir; kindly be seated. That’s what
they used to say in the old comedies, ‘kindly be seated,’” and with
a rapid gesture he seized an empty chair (it was a rough wooden chair,
not upholstered) and set it for him almost in the middle of the
room; then, taking another similar chair for himself, he sat down
facing Alyosha, so close to him that their knees almost touched.
“Nikolay Ilyitch Snegiryov, sir, formerly a captain in the Russian
infantry, put to shame for his vices, but still a captain. Though I
might not be one now for the way I talk; for the last half of my
life I’ve learnt to say ‘sir.’ It’s a word you use when you’ve come
down in the world.”
“That’s very true,” smiled Alyosha. “But is it used
involuntarily or on purpose?”
“As God’s above, it’s involuntary, and I usen’t to use it! I
didn’t use the word ‘sir’ all my life, but as soon as I sank into
low water I began to say ‘sir.’ It’s the work of a higher power. I see
you are interested in contemporary questions, but how can I have
excited your curiosity, living as I do in surroundings impossible
for the exercise of hospitality?”
“I’ve come-about that business.”
“About what business?” the captain interrupted impatiently.
“About your meeting with my brother Dmitri Fyodorovitch,”
Alyosha blurted out awkwardly.
“What meeting, sir? You don’t mean that meeting? About my ‘wisp of
tow,’ then?” He moved closer so that his knees positively knocked
against Alyosha. His lips were strangely compressed like a thread.
“What wisp of tow?” muttered Alyosha.
“He is come to complain of me, father!” cried a voice familiar
to Alyosha-the voice of the schoolboy-from behind the curtain. “I
bit his finger just now.” The curtain was pulled, and Alyosha saw
his assailant lying on a little bed made up on the bench and the chair
in the corner under the ikons. The boy lay covered by his coat and
an old wadded quilt. He was evidently unwell, and, judging by his
glittering eyes, he was in a fever. He looked at Alyosha without fear,
as though he felt he was at home and could not be touched.
“What! Did he bite your finger?” The captain jumped up from his
chair. “Was it your finger he bit?”
“Yes. He was throwing stones with other schoolboys. There were six
of them against him alone. I went up to him, and he threw a stone
at me and then another at my head. I asked him what I had done to him.
And then he rushed at me and bit my finger badly, I don’t know why.”
“I’ll thrash him, sir, at once-this minute!” The captain jumped
up from his seat.
“But I am not complaining at all, I am simply telling you…. I
don’t want him to be thrashed. Besides, he seems to be ill.”
“And do you suppose I’d thrash him? That I’d take my Ilusha and
thrash him before you for your satisfaction? Would you like it done at
once, sir?” said the captain, suddenly turning to Alyosha, as though
he were going to attack him. “I am sorry about your finger, sir; but
instead of thrashing Ilusha, would you like me to chop off my four
fingers with this knife here before your eyes to satisfy your just
wrath? I should think four fingers would be enough to satisfy your
thirst for vengeance. You won’t ask for the fifth one too?” He stopped
short with a catch in his throat. Every feature in his face was
twitching and working; he looked extremely defiant. He was in a sort
of frenzy.
“I think I understand it all now,” said Alyosha gently and
sorrowfully, still keeping his seat. “So your boy is a good boy, he
loves his father, and he attacked me as the brother of your
assailant…. Now I understand it,” he repeated thoughtfully. “But
my brother Dmitri Fyodorovitch regrets his action, I know that, and if
only it is possible for him to come to you, or better still, to meet
you in that same place, he will ask your forgiveness before
everyone-if you wish it.”
“After pulling out my beard, you mean, he will ask my forgiveness?
And he thinks that will be a satisfactory finish, doesn’t he?”
“Oh, no! On the contrary, he will do anything you like and in
any way you like.”
“So if I were to ask his highness to go down on his knees before
me in that very tavern- ‘The Metropolis’ it’s called-or in the
marketplace, he would do it?”
“Yes, he would even go down on his knees.”
“You’ve pierced me to the heart, sir. Touched me to tears and
pierced me to the heart! I am only too sensible of your brother’s
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