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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moment.
“Mamma has just told me all about the two hundred roubles,
Alexey Fyodorovitch, and your taking them to that poor officer…
and she told me all the awful story of how he had been insulted… and
you know, although mamma muddles things… she always rushes from
one thing to another… I cried when I heard. Well, did you give him
the money and how is that poor man getting on?”
“The fact is I didn’t give it to him, and it’s a long story,”
answered Alyosha, as though he, too, could think of nothing but his
regret at having failed, yet Lise saw perfectly well that he, too,
looked away, and that he, too, was trying to talk of other things.
Alyosha sat down to the table and began to tell his story, but
at the first words he lost his embarrassment and gained the whole of
Lise’s attention as well. He spoke with deep feeling, under the
influence of the strong impression he had just received, and he
succeeded in telling his story well and circumstantially. In old
days in Moscow he had been fond of coming to Lise and describing to
her what had just happened to him, what he had read, or what he
remembered of his childhood. Sometimes they had made day-dreams and
woven whole romances together-generally cheerful and amusing ones.
Now they both felt suddenly transported to the old days in Moscow, two
years before. Lise was extremely touched by his story. Alyosha
described Ilusha with warm feeling. When he finished describing how
the luckless man trampled on the money, Lise could not help clasping
her hands and crying out:
“So you didn’t give him the money! So you let him run away! Oh,
dear, you ought to have run after him!”
“No, Lise; it’s better I didn’t run after him,” said Alyosha,
getting up from his chair and walking thoughtfully across the room.
“How so? How is it better? Now they are without food and their
case is hopeless.”
“Not hopeless, for the two hundred roubles will still come to
them. He’ll take the money to-morrow. To-morrow he will be sure to
take it,” said Alyosha, pacing up and down, pondering. “You see,
Lise,” he went on, stopping suddenly before her, “I made one
blunder, but that, even that, is all for the best.”
“What blunder, and why is it for the best?”
“I’ll tell you. He is a man of weak and timorous character; he has
suffered so much and is very good-natured. I keep wondering why he
took offence so suddenly, for I assure you, up to the last minute,
he did not know that he was going to trample on the notes. And I think
now that there was a great deal to offend him… and it could not have
been otherwise in his position…. To begin with, he was sore at
having been so glad of the money in my presence and not having
concealed it from me. If he had been pleased, but not so much; if he
had not shown it; if he had begun affecting scruples and difficulties,
as other people do when they take money, he might still endure-to
take it. But he was too genuinely delighted, and that was
mortifying. Ah, Lise, he is a good and truthful man-that’s the
worst of the whole business. All the while he talked, his voice was so
weak, so broken, he talked so fast, so fast, he kept laughing such a
laugh, or perhaps he was crying-yes, I am sure he was crying, he
was so delighted-and he talked about his daughters-and about the
situation he could get in another town…. And when he had poured
out his heart, he felt ashamed at having shown me his inmost soul like
that. So he began to hate me at once. He is one of those awfully
sensitive poor people. What had made him feel most ashamed was that he
had given in too soon and accepted me as a friend, you see. At first
he almost flew at me and tried to intimidate me, but as soon as he saw
the money he had begun embracing me; he kept touching me with his
hands. This must have been how he came to feel it all so
humiliating, and then I made that blunder, a very important one. I
suddenly said to him that if he had not money enough to move to
another town, we would give it to him, and, indeed, I myself would
give him as much as he wanted out of my own money. That struck him all
at once. Why, he thought, did I put myself forward to help him? You
know, Lise, it’s awfully hard for a man who has been injured, when
other people look at him as though they were his benefactors….
I’ve heard that; Father Zossima told me so. I don’t know how to put
it, but I have often seen it myself. And I feel like that myself, too.
And the worst of it was that though he did not know, to the very
last minute, that he would trample on the notes, he had a kind of
presentiment of it, I am sure of that. That’s just what made him so
ecstatic, that he had that presentiment…. And though it’s so
dreadful, it’s all for the best. In fact, I believe nothing better
could have happened.”
“Why, why could nothing better have happened?” cried Lise, looking
with great surprise at Alyosha.
“Because if he had taken the money, in an hour after getting home,
he would be crying with mortification, that’s just what would have
happened. And most likely he would have come to me early to-morrow,
and perhaps have flung the notes at me and trampled upon them as he
did just now. But now he has gone home awfully proud and triumphant,
though he knows he has ‘ruined himself.’ So now nothing could be
easier than to make him accept the two hundred roubles by to-morrow,
for he has already vindicated his honour, tossed away the money, and
trampled it under foot…. He couldn’t know when he did it that I
should bring it to him again to-morrow, and yet he is in terrible need
of that money. Though he is proud of himself now, yet even to-day
he’ll be thinking what a help he has lost. He will think of it more
than ever at night, will dream of it, and by to-morrow morning he
may be ready to run to me to ask forgiveness. It’s just then that I’ll
appear. ‘Here, you are a proud man,’ I shall say: ‘you have shown
it; but now take the money and forgive us!’ And then he will take it!
Alyosha was carried away with joy as he uttered his last words,
“And then he will take it!” Lise clapped her hands.
“Ah, that’s true! I understand that perfectly now. Ah, Alyosha,
how do you know all this? So young and yet he knows what’s in the
heart…. I should never have worked it out.”
“The great thing now is to persuade him that he is on an equal
footing with us, in spite of his taking money from us,” Alyosha went
on in his excitement, “and not only on an equal, but even on a
higher footing.”
“‘On a higher footing’ is charming, Alexey Fyodorovitch; but go
on, go on!”
“You mean there isn’t such an expression as ‘on a higher footing’;
but that doesn’t matter because- “
“Oh, no, of course it doesn’t matter. Forgive me, Alyosha,
dear…. You know, I scarcely respected you till now-that is I
respected you but on an equal footing; but now I shall begin to
respect you on a higher footing. Don’t be angry, dear, at my
joking,” she put in at once, with strong feeling. “I am absurd and
small, but you, you! Listen, Alexey Fyodorovitch. Isn’t there in all
our analysis-I mean your analysis… no, better call it ours-aren’t we showing contempt for him, for that poor man-in analysing
his soul like this, as it were, from above, eh? In deciding so
certainly that he will take the money?”
“No, Lise, it’s not contempt,” Alyosha answered, as though he
had prepared himself for the question. “I was thinking of that on
the way here. How can it be contempt when we are all like him, when we
are all just the same as he is? For you know we are just the same,
no better. If we are better, we should have been just the same in
his place…. I don’t know about you, Lise, but I consider that I have
a sordid soul in many ways, and his soul is not sordid; on the
contrary, full of fine feeling…. No, Lise, I have no contempt for
him. Do you know, Lise, my elder told me once to care for most
people exactly as one would for children, and for some of them as
one would for the sick in hospitals.”
“Ah, Alexey Fyodorovitch. dear, let us care for people as we would
for the sick!”
“Let us, Lise; I am ready. Though I am not altogether ready in
myself. I am sometimes very impatient and at other times I don’t see
things. It’s different with you.”
“Ah, I don’t believe it! Alexey Fyodorovitch, how happy I am!”
“I am so glad you say so, Lise.”
“Alexey Fyodorovitch, you are wonderfully good, but you are
sometimes sort of formal…. And yet you are not a bit formal
really. Go to the door, open it gently, and see whether mamma is
listening,” said Lise, in a nervous, hurried whisper.
Alyosha went, opened the door, and reported that no one was
listening.
“Come here, Alexey Fyodorovitch,” Lise went on, flushing redder
and redder. “Give me your hand-that’s right. I have to make a great
confession. I didn’t write to you yesterday in joke, but in
earnest,” and she hid her eyes with her hand. It was evident that
she was greatly ashamed of the confession.
Suddenly she snatched his hand and impulsively kissed it three
times.
“Ah, Lise, what a good thing!” cried Alyosha joyfully. “You
know, I was perfectly sure you were in earnest.”
“Sure? Upon my word! She put aside his hand, but did not leave
go of it, blushing hotly, and laughing a little happy laugh. “I kiss
his hand and he says, ‘What a good thing!’”
But her reproach was undeserved. Alyosha, too, was greatly
overcome.
“I should like to please you always, Lise, but don’t know how to
do it.” he muttered, blushing too.
“Alyosha, dear, you are cold and rude. Do you see? He has chosen
me as his wife and is quite settled about it. He is sure I was in
earnest. What a thing to say! Why, that’s impertinence-that’s what it
is.”
“Why, was it wrong of me to feel sure?” Alyosha asked, laughing
suddenly.
“Ah, Alyosha, on the contrary, it was delightfully right,” cried
Lise, looking tenderly and happily at him.
Alyosha stood still, holding her hand in his. Suddenly he
stooped down and kissed her on her lips.
“Oh, what are you doing?” cried Lise. Alyosha was terribly
abashed.
“Oh, forgive me if I shouldn’t…. Perhaps I’m awfully
stupid…. You said I was cold, so I kissed you…. But I see it was
stupid.”
Lise laughed, and hid her face in her hands. “And in that
dress!” she ejaculated in the midst of her mirth. But she suddenly
ceased laughing and became serious, almost stern.
“Alyosha, we must put off kissing. We are not ready for that
yet, and we shall have a long time
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