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done up like a peasant woman,β β€Šβ β€¦ Come along,β β€Šβ β€¦ Please make haste!”

Blowing his nose in a dirty, crumpled-up handkerchief and pulling down his grey reefer jacket, Ivan Matveyitch goes through the hall and the drawing room to the study. There a place and paper and even cigarettes had been put ready for him long ago.

β€œSit down, sit down,” the man of learning urges him on, rubbing his hands impatiently. β€œYou are an unsufferable person.β β€Šβ β€¦ You know the work has to be finished by a certain time, and then you are so late. One is forced to scold you. Come, write,β β€Šβ β€¦ Where did we stop?”

Ivan Matveyitch smooths his bristling cropped hair and takes up his pen. The man of learning walks up and down the room, concentrates himself, and begins to dictate:

β€œThe fact isβ β€Šβ β€¦ commaβ β€Šβ β€¦ that so to speak fundamental formsβ β€Šβ β€¦ have you written it?β β€Šβ β€¦ forms are conditioned entirely by the essential nature of those principlesβ β€Šβ β€¦ commaβ β€Šβ β€¦ which find in them their expression and can only be embodied in them.β β€Šβ β€¦ New line,β β€Šβ β€¦ There’s a stop there, of course.β β€Šβ β€¦ More independence is foundβ β€Šβ β€¦ is foundβ β€Šβ β€¦ by the forms which have not so much a politicalβ β€Šβ β€¦ commaβ β€Šβ β€¦ as a social characterβ β€Šβ β€¦β€

β€œThe high school boys have a different uniform nowβ β€Šβ β€¦ a grey one,” said Ivan Matveyitch, β€œwhen I was at school it was better: they used to wear regular uniforms.”

β€œOh dear, write please!” says the man of learning wrathfully. β€œCharacterβ β€Šβ β€¦ have you written it? Speaking of the forms relating to the organizationβ β€Šβ β€¦ of administrative functions, and not to the regulation of the life of the peopleβ β€Šβ β€¦ commaβ β€Šβ β€¦ it cannot be said that they are marked by the nationalism of their formsβ β€Šβ β€¦ the last three words in inverted commas.β β€Šβ β€¦ Aie, aieβ β€Šβ β€¦ tut, tutβ β€Šβ β€¦ so what did you want to say about the high school?”

β€œThat they used to wear a different uniform in my time.”

β€œAha!β β€Šβ β€¦ indeed,β β€Šβ β€¦ Is it long since you left the high school?”

β€œBut I told you that yesterday. It is three years since I left school.β β€Šβ β€¦ I left in the fourth class.”

β€œAnd why did you give up high school?” asks the man of learning, looking at Ivan Matveyitch’s writing.

β€œOh, through family circumstances.”

β€œMust I speak to you again, Ivan Matveyitch? When will you get over your habit of dragging out the lines? There ought not to be less than forty letters in a line.”

β€œWhat, do you suppose I do it on purpose?” says Ivan Matveyitch, offended. β€œThere are more than forty letters in some of the other lines.β β€Šβ β€¦ You count them. And if you think I don’t put enough in the line, you can take something off my pay.”

β€œOh dear, that’s not the point. You have no delicacy, really.β β€Šβ β€¦ At the least thing you drag in money. The great thing is to be exact, Ivan Matveyitch, to be exact is the great thing. You ought to train yourself to be exact.”

The maidservant brings in a tray with two glasses of tea on it, and a basket of rusks.β β€Šβ β€¦ Ivan Matveyitch takes his glass awkwardly with both hands, and at once begins drinking it. The tea is too hot. To avoid burning his mouth Ivan Matveyitch tries to take a tiny sip. He eats one rusk, then a second, then a third, and, looking sideways, with embarrassment, at the man of learning, timidly stretches after a fourth.β β€Šβ β€¦ The noise he makes in swallowing, the relish with which he smacks his lips, and the expression of hungry greed in his raised eyebrows irritate the man of learning.

β€œMake haste and finish, time is precious.”

β€œYou dictate, I can drink and write at the same time.β β€Šβ β€¦ I must confess I was hungry.”

β€œI should think so after your walk!”

β€œYes, and what wretched weather! In our parts there is a scent of spring by now.β β€Šβ β€¦ There are puddles everywhere; the snow is melting.”

β€œYou are a southerner, I suppose?”

β€œFrom the Don region.β β€Šβ β€¦ It’s quite spring with us by March. Here it is frosty, everyone’s in a fur coat,β β€Šβ β€¦ but there you can see the grassβ β€Šβ β€¦ it’s dry everywhere, and one can even catch tarantulas.”

β€œAnd what do you catch tarantulas for?”

β€œOh!β β€Šβ β€¦ to pass the timeβ β€Šβ β€¦β€ says Ivan Matveyitch, and he sighs. β€œIt’s fun catching them. You fix a bit of pitch on a thread, let it down into their hole and begin hitting the tarantula on the back with the pitch, and the brute gets cross, catches hold of the pitch with his claws, and gets stuck.β β€Šβ β€¦ And what we used to do with them! We used to put a basinful of them together and drop a bihorka in with them.”

β€œWhat is a bihorka?”

β€œThat’s another spider, very much the same as a tarantula. In a fight one of them can kill a hundred tarantulas.”

β€œH’m!β β€Šβ β€¦ But we must write,β β€Šβ β€¦ Where did we stop?”

The man of learning dictates another twenty lines, then sits plunged in meditation.

Ivan Matveyitch, waiting while the other cogitates, sits and, craning his neck, puts the collar of his shirt to rights. His tie will not set properly, the stud has come out, and the collar keeps coming apart.

β€œH’m!β β€Šβ β€¦β€ says the man of learning. β€œWell, haven’t you found a job yet, Ivan Matveyitch?”

β€œNo. And how is one to find one? I am thinking, you know, of volunteering for the army. But my father advises my going into a chemist’s.”

β€œH’m!β β€Šβ β€¦ But it would be better for you to go into the university. The examination is difficult, but with patience and hard work you could get through. Study, read more.β β€Šβ β€¦ Do you read much?”

β€œNot much, I must ownβ β€Šβ β€¦β€ says Ivan Matveyitch, lighting a cigarette.

β€œHave you read Turgenev?”

β€œN-no.β β€Šβ β€¦β€

β€œAnd Gogol?”

β€œGogol. H’m!β β€Šβ β€¦ Gogol.β β€Šβ β€¦ No, I haven’t read him!”

β€œIvan Matveyitch! Aren’t you ashamed? Aie! aie! You are such a nice fellow, so much that is original in youβ β€Šβ β€¦ you haven’t even read Gogol! You must read him! I will give you his works! It’s essential to read him! We shall quarrel if you don’t!”

Again a silence follows. The man of learning meditates, half reclining on a soft lounge, and Ivan Matveyitch, leaving his collar in peace, concentrates his whole attention

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