<h3>Part III - VII.</h3>
<p>“I had a small pocket pistol. I had procured it while still a boy, at
that droll age when the stories of duels and highwaymen begin to delight one,
and when one imagines oneself nobly standing fire at some future day, in a
duel.</p>
<p>“There were a couple of old bullets in the bag which contained the
pistol, and powder enough in an old flask for two or three charges.</p>
<p>“The pistol was a wretched thing, very crooked and wouldn’t carry
farther than fifteen paces at the most. However, it would send your skull
flying well enough if you pressed the muzzle of it against your temple.</p>
<p>“I determined to die at Pavlofsk at sunrise, in the park—so as to
make no commotion in the house.</p>
<p>“This ‘explanation’ will make the matter clear enough to the
police. Students of psychology, and anyone else who likes, may make what they
please of it. I should not like this paper, however, to be made public. I
request the prince to keep a copy himself, and to give a copy to Aglaya
Ivanovna Epanchin. This is my last will and testament. As for my skeleton, I
bequeath it to the Medical Academy for the benefit of science.</p>
<p>“I recognize no jurisdiction over myself, and I know that I am now beyond
the power of laws and judges.</p>
<p>“A little while ago a very amusing idea struck me. What if I were now to
commit some terrible crime—murder ten fellow-creatures, for instance, or
anything else that is thought most shocking and dreadful in this
world—what a dilemma my judges would be in, with a criminal who only has
a fortnight to live in any case, now that the rack and other forms of torture
are abolished! Why, I should die comfortably in their own hospital—in a
warm, clean room, with an attentive doctor—probably much more comfortably
than I should at home.</p>
<p>“I don’t understand why people in my position do not oftener
indulge in such ideas—if only for a joke! Perhaps they do! Who knows!
There are plenty of merry souls among us!</p>
<p>“But though I do not recognize any jurisdiction over myself, still I know
that I shall be judged, when I am nothing but a voiceless lump of clay;
therefore I do not wish to go before I have left a word of reply—the
reply of a free man—not one forced to justify himself—oh no! I have
no need to ask forgiveness of anyone. I wish to say a word merely because I
happen to desire it of my own free will.</p>
<p>“Here, in the first place, comes a strange thought!</p>
<p>“Who, in the name of what Law, would think of disputing my full personal
right over the fortnight of life left to me? What jurisdiction can be brought
to bear upon the case? Who would wish me, not only to be sentenced, but to
endure the sentence to the end? Surely there exists no man who would wish such
a thing—why should anyone desire it? For the sake of morality? Well, I
can understand that if I were to make an attempt upon my own life while in the
enjoyment of full health and vigour—my life which might have been
‘useful,’ etc., etc.—morality might reproach me, according to
the old routine, for disposing of my life without permission—or whatever
its tenet may be. But now, <i>now</i>, when my sentence is out and my days
numbered! How can morality have need of my last breaths, and why should I die
listening to the consolations offered by the prince, who, without doubt, would
not omit to demonstrate that death is actually a benefactor to me? (Christians
like him always end up with that—it is their pet theory.) And what do
they want with their ridiculous ‘Pavlofsk trees’? To sweeten my
last hours? Cannot they understand that the more I forget myself, the more I
let myself become attached to these last illusions of life and love, by means
of which they try to hide from me Meyer’s wall, and all that is so
plainly written on it—the more unhappy they make me? What is the use of
all your nature to me—all your parks and trees, your sunsets and
sunrises, your blue skies and your self-satisfied faces—when all this
wealth of beauty and happiness begins with the fact that it accounts
me—only me—one too many! What is the good of all this beauty and
glory to me, when every second, every moment, I cannot but be aware that this
little fly which buzzes around my head in the sun’s rays—even this
little fly is a sharer and participator in all the glory of the universe, and
knows its place and is happy in it;—while I—only I, am an outcast,
and have been blind to the fact hitherto, thanks to my simplicity! Oh! I know
well how the prince and others would like me, instead of indulging in all these
wicked words of my own, to sing, to the glory and triumph of morality, that
well-known verse of Gilbert’s:</p>
<p class="poem">
“‘O, puissent voir longtemps votre beauté sacrée<br/>
Tant d’amis, sourds à mes adieux!<br/>
Qu’ils meurent pleins de jours, que leur mort soit pleurée,<br/>
Qu’un ami leur ferme les yeux!’</p>
<p>“But believe me, believe me, my simple-hearted friends, that in this
highly moral verse, in this academical blessing to the world in general in the
French language, is hidden the intensest gall and bitterness; but so well
concealed is the venom, that I dare say the poet actually persuaded himself
that his words were full of the tears of pardon and peace, instead of the
bitterness of disappointment and malice, and so died in the delusion.</p>
<p>“Do you know there is a limit of ignominy, beyond which man’s
consciousness of shame cannot go, and after which begins satisfaction in shame?
Well, of course humility is a great force in that sense, I admit
that—though not in the sense in which religion accounts humility to be
strength!</p>
<p>“Religion!—I admit eternal life—and perhaps I always did
admit it.</p>
<p>“Admitted that consciousness is called into existence by the will of a
Higher Power; admitted that this consciousness looks out upon the world and
says ‘I am;’ and admitted that the Higher Power wills that the
consciousness so called into existence, be suddenly extinguished (for
so—for some unexplained reason—it is and must be)—still there
comes the eternal question—why must I be humble through all this? Is it
not enough that I am devoured, without my being expected to bless the power
that devours me? Surely—surely I need not suppose that
Somebody—there—will be offended because I do not wish to live out
the fortnight allowed me? I don’t believe it.</p>
<p>“It is much simpler, and far more likely, to believe that my death is
needed—the death of an insignificant atom—in order to fulfil the
general harmony of the universe—in order to make even some plus or minus
in the sum of existence. Just as every day the death of numbers of beings is
necessary because without their annihilation the rest cannot live
on—(although we must admit that the idea is not a particularly grand one
in itself!)</p>
<p>“However—admit the fact! Admit that without such perpetual
devouring of one another the world cannot continue to exist, or could never
have been organized—I am ever ready to confess that I cannot understand
why this is so—but I’ll tell you what I <i>do</i> know, for
certain. If I have once been given to understand and realize that I
<i>am</i>—what does it matter to me that the world is organized on a
system full of errors and that otherwise it cannot be organized at all? Who
will or can judge me after this? Say what you like—the thing is
impossible and unjust!</p>
<p>“And meanwhile I have never been able, in spite of my great desire to do
so, to persuade myself that there is no future existence, and no Providence.</p>
<p>“The fact of the matter is that all this <i>does</i> exist, but that we
know absolutely nothing about the future life and its laws!</p>
<p>“But it is so difficult, and even impossible to understand, that surely I
am not to be blamed because I could not fathom the incomprehensible?</p>
<p>“Of course I know they say that one must be obedient, and of course, too,
the prince is one of those who say so: that one must be obedient without
questions, out of pure goodness of heart, and that for my worthy conduct in
this matter I shall meet with reward in another world. We degrade God when we
attribute our own ideas to Him, out of annoyance that we cannot fathom His
ways.</p>
<p>“Again, I repeat, I cannot be blamed because I am unable to understand
that which it is not given to mankind to fathom. Why am I to be judged because
I could not comprehend the Will and Laws of Providence? No, we had better drop
religion.</p>
<p>“And enough of this. By the time I have got so far in the reading of my
document the sun will be up and the huge force of his rays will be acting upon
the living world. So be it. I shall die gazing straight at the great Fountain
of life and power; I do not want this life!</p>
<p>“If I had had the power to prevent my own birth I should certainly never
have consented to accept existence under such ridiculous conditions. However, I
have the power to end my existence, although I do but give back days that are
already numbered. It is an insignificant gift, and my revolt is equally
insignificant.</p>
<p>“Final explanation: I die, not in the least because I am unable to
support these next three weeks. Oh no, I should find strength enough, and if I
wished it I could obtain consolation from the thought of the injury that is
done me. But I am not a French poet, and I do not desire such consolation. And
finally, nature has so limited my capacity for work or activity of any kind, in
allotting me but three weeks of time, that suicide is about the only thing left
that I can begin and end in the time of my own free will.</p>
<p>“Perhaps then I am anxious to take advantage of my last chance of doing
something for myself. A protest is sometimes no small thing.”</p>
<p>The explanation was finished; Hippolyte paused at last.</p>
<p>There is, in extreme cases, a final stage of cynical candour when a nervous
man, excited, and beside himself with emotion, will be afraid of nothing and
ready for any sort of scandal, nay, glad of it. The extraordinary, almost
unnatural, tension of the nerves which upheld Hippolyte up to this point, had
now arrived at this final stage. This poor feeble boy of
eighteen—exhausted by disease—looked for all the world as weak and
frail as a leaflet torn from its parent tree and trembling in the breeze; but
no sooner had his eye swept over his audience, for the first time during the
whole of the last hour, than the most contemptuous, the most haughty expression
of repugnance lighted up his face. He defied them all, as it were. But his
hearers were indignant, too; they rose to their feet with annoyance. Fatigue,
the wine consumed, the strain of listening so long, all added to the
disagreeable impression which the reading had made upon them.</p>
<p>Suddenly Hippolyte jumped up as though he had been shot.</p>
<p>“The sun is rising,” he cried, seeing the gilded tops of the trees,
and pointing to them as to a miracle. “See, it is rising now!”</p>
<p>“Well, what then? Did you suppose it wasn’t going to rise?”
asked Ferdishenko.</p>
<p>“It’s going to be atrociously hot again all day,” said Gania,
with an air of annoyance, taking his hat. “A month of this... Are you
coming home, Ptitsin?” Hippolyte listened to this in amazement, almost
amounting to stupefaction. Suddenly he became deadly pale and shuddered.</p>
<p>“You manage your composure too awkwardly. I see you wish to insult
me,” he cried to Gania. “You—you are a cur!” He looked
at Gania with an expression of malice.</p>
<p>“What on earth is the matter with the boy? What phenomenal
feeble-mindedness!” exclaimed Ferdishenko.</p>
<p>“Oh, he’s simply a fool,” said Gania.</p>
<p>Hippolyte braced himself up a little.</p>
<p>“I understand, gentlemen,” he began, trembling as before, and
stumbling over every word, “that I have deserved your resentment,
and—and am sorry that I should have troubled you with this raving
nonsense” (pointing to his article), “or rather, I am sorry that I
have not troubled you enough.” He smiled feebly. “Have I troubled
you, Evgenie Pavlovitch?” He suddenly turned on Evgenie with this
question. “Tell me now, have I troubled you or not?”</p>
<p>“Well, it was a little drawn out, perhaps; but—”</p>
<p>“Come, speak out! Don’t lie, for once in your life—speak
out!” continued Hippolyte, quivering with agitation.</p>
<p>“Oh, my good sir, I assure you it’s entirely the same to me. Please
leave me in peace,” said Evgenie, angrily, turning his back on him.</p>
<p>“Good-night, prince,” said Ptitsin, approaching his host.</p>
<p>“What are you thinking of? Don’t go, he’ll blow his brains
out in a minute!” cried Vera Lebedeff, rushing up to Hippolyte and
catching hold of his hands in a torment of alarm. “What are you thinking
of? He said he would blow his brains out at sunrise.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he won’t shoot himself!” cried several voices,
sarcastically.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, you’d better look out,” cried Colia, also seizing
Hippolyte by the hand. “Just look at him! Prince, what are you thinking
of?” Vera and Colia, and Keller, and Burdovsky were all crowding round
Hippolyte now and holding him down.</p>
<p>“He has the right—the right—” murmured Burdovsky.
“Excuse me, prince, but what are your arrangements?” asked
Lebedeff, tipsy and exasperated, going up to Muishkin.</p>
<p>“What do you mean by ‘arrangements’?”</p>
<p>“No, no, excuse me! I’m master of this house, though I do not wish
to lack respect towards you. You are master of the house too, in a way; but I
can’t allow this sort of thing—”</p>
<p>“He won’t shoot himself; the boy is only playing the fool,”
said General Ivolgin, suddenly and unexpectedly, with indignation.</p>
<p>“I know he won’t, I know he won’t, general; but
I—I’m master here!”</p>
<p>“Listen, Mr. Terentieff,” said Ptitsin, who had bidden the prince
good-night, and was now holding out his hand to Hippolyte; “I think you
remark in that manuscript of yours, that you bequeath your skeleton to the
Academy. Are you referring to your own skeleton—I mean, your very
bones?”</p>
<p>“Yes, my bones, I—”</p>
<p>“Quite so, I see; because, you know, little mistakes have occurred now
and then. There was a case—”</p>
<p>“Why do you tease him?” cried the prince, suddenly.</p>
<p>“You’ve moved him to tears,” added Ferdishenko. But Hippolyte
was by no means weeping. He was about to move from his place, when his four
guards rushed at him and seized him once more. There was a laugh at this.</p>
<p>“He led up to this on purpose. He took the trouble of writing all that so
that people should come and grab him by the arm,” observed Rogojin.
“Good-night, prince. What a time we’ve sat here, my very bones
ache!”</p>
<p>“If you really intended to shoot yourself, Terentieff,” said
Evgenie Pavlovitch, laughing, “if I were you, after all these
compliments, I should just not shoot myself in order to vex them all.”</p>
<p>“They are very anxious to see me blow my brains out,” said
Hippolyte, bitterly.</p>
<p>“Yes, they’ll be awfully annoyed if they don’t see it.”</p>
<p>“Then you think they won’t see it?”</p>
<p>“I am not trying to egg you on. On the contrary, I think it very likely
that you may shoot yourself; but the principal thing is to keep cool,”
said Evgenie with a drawl, and with great condescension.</p>
<p>“I only now perceive what a terrible mistake I made in reading this
article to them,” said Hippolyte, suddenly, addressing Evgenie, and
looking at him with an expression of trust and confidence, as though he were
applying to a friend for counsel.</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s a droll situation; I really don’t know what advice
to give you,” replied Evgenie, laughing. Hippolyte gazed steadfastly at
him, but said nothing. To look at him one might have supposed that he was
unconscious at intervals.</p>
<p>“Excuse me,” said Lebedeff, “but did you observe the young
gentleman’s style? ‘I’ll go and blow my brains out in the
park,’ says he, ‘so as not to disturb anyone.’ He thinks he
won’t disturb anybody if he goes three yards away, into the park, and
blows his brains out there.”</p>
<p>“Gentlemen—” began the prince.</p>
<p>“No, no, excuse me, most revered prince,” Lebedeff interrupted,
excitedly. “Since you must have observed yourself that this is no joke,
and since at least half your guests must also have concluded that after all
that has been said this youth <i>must</i> blow his brains out for
honour’s sake—I—as master of this house, and before these
witnesses, now call upon you to take steps.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but what am I to do, Lebedeff? What steps am I to take? I am
ready.”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you. In the first place he must immediately deliver up
the pistol which he boasted of, with all its appurtenances. If he does this I
shall consent to his being allowed to spend the night in this
house—considering his feeble state of health, and of course conditionally
upon his being under proper supervision. But tomorrow he must go elsewhere.
Excuse me, prince! Should he refuse to deliver up his weapon, then I shall
instantly seize one of his arms and General Ivolgin the other, and we shall
hold him until the police arrive and take the matter into their own hands. Mr.
Ferdishenko will kindly fetch them.”</p>
<p>At this there was a dreadful noise; Lebedeff danced about in his excitement;
Ferdishenko prepared to go for the police; Gania frantically insisted that it
was all nonsense, “for nobody was going to shoot themselves.”
Evgenie Pavlovitch said nothing.</p>
<p>“Prince,” whispered Hippolyte, suddenly, his eyes all ablaze,
“you don’t suppose that I did not foresee all this hatred?”
He looked at the prince as though he expected him to reply, for a moment.
“Enough!” he added at length, and addressing the whole company, he
cried: “It’s all my fault, gentlemen! Lebedeff, here’s the
key,” (he took out a small bunch of keys); “this one, the last but
one—Colia will show you—Colia, where’s Colia?” he
cried, looking straight at Colia and not seeing him. “Yes, he’ll
show you; he packed the bag with me this morning. Take him up, Colia; my bag is
upstairs in the prince’s study, under the table. Here’s the key,
and in the little case you’ll find my pistol and the powder, and all.
Colia packed it himself, Mr. Lebedeff; he’ll show you; but it’s on
condition that tomorrow morning, when I leave for Petersburg, you will give me
back my pistol, do you hear? I do this for the prince’s sake, not
yours.”</p>
<p>“Capital, that’s much better!” cried Lebedeff, and seizing
the key he made off in haste.</p>
<p>Colia stopped a moment as though he wished to say something; but Lebedeff
dragged him away.</p>
<p>Hippolyte looked around at the laughing guests. The prince observed that his
teeth were chattering as though in a violent attack of ague.</p>
<p>“What brutes they all are!” he whispered to the prince. Whenever he
addressed him he lowered his voice.</p>
<p>“Let them alone, you’re too weak now—”</p>
<p>“Yes, directly; I’ll go away directly. I’ll—”</p>
<p>Suddenly he embraced Muishkin.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you think I am mad, eh?” he asked him, laughing very
strangely.</p>
<p>“No, but you—”</p>
<p>“Directly, directly! Stand still a moment, I wish to look in your eyes;
don’t speak—stand so—let me look at you! I am bidding
farewell to mankind.”</p>
<p>He stood so for ten seconds, gazing at the prince, motionless, deadly pale, his
temples wet with perspiration; he held the prince’s hand in a strange
grip, as though afraid to let him go.</p>
<p>“Hippolyte, Hippolyte, what is the matter with you?” cried
Muishkin.</p>
<p>“Directly! There, that’s enough. I’ll lie down directly. I
must drink to the sun’s health. I wish to—I insist upon it! Let
go!”</p>
<p>He seized a glass from the table, broke away from the prince, and in a moment
had reached the terrace steps.</p>
<p>The prince made after him, but it so happened that at this moment Evgenie
Pavlovitch stretched out his hand to say good-night. The next instant there was
a general outcry, and then followed a few moments of indescribable excitement.</p>
<p>Reaching the steps, Hippolyte had paused, holding the glass in his left hand
while he put his right hand into his coat pocket.</p>
<p>Keller insisted afterwards that he had held his right hand in his pocket all
the while, when he was speaking to the prince, and that he had held the
latter’s shoulder with his left hand only. This circumstance, Keller
affirmed, had led him to feel some suspicion from the first. However this may
be, Keller ran after Hippolyte, but he was too late.</p>
<p>He caught sight of something flashing in Hippolyte’s right hand, and saw
that it was a pistol. He rushed at him, but at that very instant Hippolyte
raised the pistol to his temple and pulled the trigger. There followed a sharp
metallic click, but no report.</p>
<p>When Keller seized the would-be suicide, the latter fell forward into his arms,
probably actually believing that he was shot. Keller had hold of the pistol
now. Hippolyte was immediately placed in a chair, while the whole company
thronged around excitedly, talking and asking each other questions. Every one
of them had heard the snap of the trigger, and yet they saw a live and
apparently unharmed man before them.</p>
<p>Hippolyte himself sat quite unconscious of what was going on, and gazed around
with a senseless expression.</p>
<p>Lebedeff and Colia came rushing up at this moment.</p>
<p>“What is it?” someone asked, breathlessly—“A
misfire?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps it wasn’t loaded,” said several voices.</p>
<p>“It’s loaded all right,” said Keller, examining the pistol,
“but—”</p>
<p>“What! did it miss fire?”</p>
<p>“There was no cap in it,” Keller announced.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to describe the pitiable scene that now followed. The
first sensation of alarm soon gave place to amusement; some burst out laughing
loud and heartily, and seemed to find a malicious satisfaction in the joke.
Poor Hippolyte sobbed hysterically; he wrung his hands; he approached everyone
in turn—even Ferdishenko—and took them by both hands, and swore
solemnly that he had forgotten—absolutely
forgotten—“accidentally, and not on purpose,”—to put a
cap in—that he “had ten of them, at least, in his pocket.” He
pulled them out and showed them to everyone; he protested that he had not liked
to put one in beforehand for fear of an accidental explosion in his pocket.
That he had thought he would have lots of time to put it in
afterwards—when required—and, that, in the heat of the moment, he
had forgotten all about it. He threw himself upon the prince, then on Evgenie
Pavlovitch. He entreated Keller to give him back the pistol, and he’d
soon show them all that “his honour—his honour,”—but he
was “dishonoured, now, for ever!”</p>
<p>He fell senseless at last—and was carried into the prince’s study.</p>
<p>Lebedeff, now quite sobered down, sent for a doctor; and he and his daughter,
with Burdovsky and General Ivolgin, remained by the sick man’s couch.</p>
<p>When he was carried away unconscious, Keller stood in the middle of the room,
and made the following declaration to the company in general, in a loud tone of
voice, with emphasis upon each word.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, if any one of you casts any doubt again, before me, upon
Hippolyte’s good faith, or hints that the cap was forgotten
intentionally, or suggests that this unhappy boy was acting a part before us, I
beg to announce that the person so speaking shall account to me for his
words.”</p>
<p>No one replied.</p>
<p>The company departed very quickly, in a mass. Ptitsin, Gania, and Rogojin went
away together.</p>
<p>The prince was much astonished that Evgenie Pavlovitch changed his mind, and
took his departure without the conversation he had requested.</p>
<p>“Why, you wished to have a talk with me when the others left?” he
said.</p>
<p>“Quite so,” said Evgenie, sitting down suddenly beside him,
“but I have changed my mind for the time being. I confess, I am too
disturbed, and so, I think, are you; and the matter as to which I wished to
consult you is too serious to tackle with one’s mind even a little
disturbed; too serious both for myself and for you. You see, prince, for once
in my life I wish to perform an absolutely honest action, that is, an action
with no ulterior motive; and I think I am hardly in a condition to talk of it
just at this moment, and—and—well, we’ll discuss it another
time. Perhaps the matter may gain in clearness if we wait for two or three
days—just the two or three days which I must spend in Petersburg.”</p>
<p>Here he rose again from his chair, so that it seemed strange that he should
have thought it worth while to sit down at all.</p>
<p>The prince thought, too, that he looked vexed and annoyed, and not nearly so
friendly towards himself as he had been earlier in the night.</p>
<p>“I suppose you will go to the sufferer’s bedside now?” he
added.</p>
<p>“Yes, I am afraid...” began the prince.</p>
<p>“Oh, you needn’t fear! He’ll live another six weeks all
right. Very likely he will recover altogether; but I strongly advise you to
pack him off tomorrow.”</p>
<p>“I think I may have offended him by saying nothing just now. I am afraid
he may suspect that I doubted his good faith,—about shooting himself, you
know. What do you think, Evgenie Pavlovitch?”</p>
<p>“Not a bit of it! You are much too good to him; you shouldn’t care
a hang about what he thinks. I have heard of such things before, but never came
across, till tonight, a man who would actually shoot himself in order to gain a
vulgar notoriety, or blow out his brains for spite, if he finds that people
don’t care to pat him on the back for his sanguinary intentions. But what
astonishes me more than anything is the fellow’s candid confession of
weakness. You’d better get rid of him tomorrow, in any case.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he will make another attempt?”</p>
<p>“Oh no, not he, not now! But you have to be very careful with this sort
of gentleman. Crime is too often the last resource of these petty nonentities.
This young fellow is quite capable of cutting the throats of ten people, simply
for a lark, as he told us in his ‘explanation.’ I assure you those
confounded words of his will not let me sleep.”</p>
<p>“I think you disturb yourself too much.”</p>
<p>“What an extraordinary person you are, prince! Do you mean to say that
you doubt the fact that he is capable of murdering ten men?”</p>
<p>“I daren’t say, one way or the other; all this is very
strange—but—”</p>
<p>“Well, as you like, just as you like,” said Evgenie Pavlovitch,
irritably. “Only you are such a plucky fellow, take care you don’t
get included among the ten victims!”</p>
<p>“Oh, he is much more likely not to kill anyone at all,” said the
prince, gazing thoughtfully at Evgenie. The latter laughed disagreeably.</p>
<p>“Well, <i>au revoir!</i> Did you observe that he ‘willed’ a
copy of his confession to Aglaya Ivanovna?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I did; I am thinking of it.”</p>
<p>“In connection with ‘the ten,’ eh?” laughed Evgenie, as
he left the room.</p>
<p>An hour later, towards four o’clock, the prince went into the park. He
had endeavoured to fall asleep, but could not, owing to the painful beating of
his heart.</p>
<p>He had left things quiet and peaceful; the invalid was fast asleep, and the
doctor, who had been called in, had stated that there was no special danger.
Lebedeff, Colia, and Burdovsky were lying down in the sick-room, ready to take
it in turns to watch. There was nothing to fear, therefore, at home.</p>
<p>But the prince’s mental perturbation increased every moment. He wandered
about the park, looking absently around him, and paused in astonishment when he
suddenly found himself in the empty space with the rows of chairs round it,
near the Vauxhall. The look of the place struck him as dreadful now: so he
turned round and went by the path which he had followed with the Epanchins on
the way to the band, until he reached the green bench which Aglaya had pointed
out for their rendezvous. He sat down on it and suddenly burst into a loud fit
of laughter, immediately followed by a feeling of irritation. His disturbance
of mind continued; he felt that he must go away somewhere, anywhere.</p>
<p>Above his head some little bird sang out, of a sudden; he began to peer about
for it among the leaves. Suddenly the bird darted out of the tree and away, and
instantly he thought of the “fly buzzing about in the sun’s
rays” that Hippolyte had talked of; how that it knew its place and was a
participator in the universal life, while he alone was an
“outcast.” This picture had impressed him at the time, and he
meditated upon it now. An old, forgotten memory awoke in his brain, and
suddenly burst into clearness and light. It was a recollection of Switzerland,
during the first year of his cure, the very first months. At that time he had
been pretty nearly an idiot still; he could not speak properly, and had
difficulty in understanding when others spoke to him. He climbed the
mountain-side, one sunny morning, and wandered long and aimlessly with a
certain thought in his brain, which would not become clear. Above him was the
blazing sky, below, the lake; all around was the horizon, clear and infinite.
He looked out upon this, long and anxiously. He remembered how he had stretched
out his arms towards the beautiful, boundless blue of the horizon, and wept,
and wept. What had so tormented him was the idea that he was a stranger to all
this, that he was outside this glorious festival.</p>
<p>What was this universe? What was this grand, eternal pageant to which he had
yearned from his childhood up, and in which he could never take part? Every
morning the same magnificent sun; every morning the same rainbow in the
waterfall; every evening the same glow on the snow-mountains.</p>
<p>Every little fly that buzzed in the sun’s rays was a singer in the
universal chorus, “knew its place, and was happy in it.” Every
blade of grass grew and was happy. Everything knew its path and loved it, went
forth with a song and returned with a song; only he knew nothing, understood
nothing, neither men nor words, nor any of nature’s voices; he was a
stranger and an outcast.</p>
<p>Oh, he could not then speak these words, or express all he felt! He had been
tormented dumbly; but now it appeared to him that he must have said these very
words—even then—and that Hippolyte must have taken his picture of
the little fly from his tears and words of that time.</p>
<p>He was sure of it, and his heart beat excitedly at the thought, he knew not
why.</p>
<p>He fell asleep on the bench; but his mental disquiet continued through his
slumbers.</p>
<p>Just before he dozed off, the idea of Hippolyte murdering ten men flitted
through his brain, and he smiled at the absurdity of such a thought.</p>
<p>Around him all was quiet; only the flutter and whisper of the leaves broke the
silence, but broke it only to cause it to appear yet more deep and still.</p>
<p>He dreamed many dreams as he sat there, and all were full of disquiet, so that
he shuddered every moment.</p>
<p>At length a woman seemed to approach him. He knew her, oh! he knew her only too
well. He could always name her and recognize her anywhere; but, strange, she
seemed to have quite a different face from hers, as he had known it, and he
felt a tormenting desire to be able to say she was not the same woman. In the
face before him there was such dreadful remorse and horror that he thought she
must be a criminal, that she must have just committed some awful crime.</p>
<p>Tears were trembling on her white cheek. She beckoned him, but placed her
finger on her lip as though to warn him that he must follow her very quietly.
His heart froze within him. He wouldn’t, he <i>couldn’t</i> confess
her to be a criminal, and yet he felt that something dreadful would happen the
next moment, something which would blast his whole life.</p>
<p>She seemed to wish to show him something, not far off, in the park.</p>
<p>He rose from his seat in order to follow her, when a bright, clear peal of
laughter rang out by his side. He felt somebody’s hand suddenly in his
own, seized it, pressed it hard, and awoke. Before him stood Aglaya, laughing
aloud.</p>
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