Friday, March 30, 2012
Not only about that, dear boy.
"Not only about that, dear boy. I should not have known what to
say to you: there was so much I should have had to be silent about.
Much that was absurd, indeed, and humiliating, because it was like
a mountebank performance--yes, a regular show at a fair. Come, how
could we have understood each other before, when I've only
understood myself to-day at five o'clock this afternoon, just two
hours before Makar Ivanovitch's death? You look at me with
unpleasant perplexity. Don't be uneasy: I will explain the facts,
but what I have just said is absolutely true; my whole life has
been lost in mazes and perplexity, and suddenly they are all solved
on such a day, at five o'clock this afternoon! It's quite
mortifying, isn't it? A little while ago I should really have felt
mortified."
I was listening indeed with painful wonder; that old expression of
Versilov's, which I should have liked not to meet that evening
after what had been said, was strongly marked. Suddenly I
exclaimed:
"My God! You've received something from her . . . at five o'clock
this afternoon?"
He looked at me intently, and was evidently struck at my
exclamation: and, perhaps, at my expression: "from her."
"You shall know all about it," he said, with a dreamy smile, "and,
of course, I shall not conceal from you anything you ought to know;
for that's what I brought you here for; but let us put that off for
a time. You see, my dear boy, I knew long ago that there are
children who brood from their earliest years over their family
through being humiliated by the unseemliness of their surroundings
and of their parents' lives. I noticed these brooding natures
while I was still at school, and I concluded then that it all came
from their being prematurely envious. Though I was myself a
brooding child, yet . . . excuse me, my dear, I'm wonderfully
absent-minded.
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