登陆注册
19593600000268

第268章

"Why, that foreseeing such a calamity you deserted your own father, and would not protect us, for I might have been taken up any time for stealing that three thousand.""Damn you!" Ivan swore again."Stay, did you tell the prosecutor and the investigating lawyer about those knocks?""I told them everything just as it was."

Ivan wondered inwardly again.

"If I thought of anything then," he began again, "it was solely of some wickedness on your part.Dmitri might kill him, but that he would steal- I did not believe that then....But I was prepared for any wickedness from you.You told me yourself you could sham a fit.What did you say that for?""It was just through my simplicity, and I never have shammed a fit on purpose in my life.And I only said so then to boast to you.It was just foolishness.I liked you so much then, and was open-hearted with you.""My brother directly accuses you of the murder and theft.""What else is left for him to do?" said Smerdyakov, with a bitter grin."And who will believe him with all the proofs against him? Grigory Vassilyevitch saw the door open.What can he say after that? But never mind him! He is trembling to save himself."He slowly ceased speaking; then suddenly, as though on reflection, added:

"And look here again.He wants to throw it on me and make out that it is the work of my hands- I've heard that already.But as to my being clever at shamming a fit: should I have told you beforehand that I could sham one, if I really had had such a design against your father? If I had been planning such a murder could I have been such a fool as to give such evidence against myself beforehand? And to his son, too! Upon my word! Is that likely? As if that could be;such a thing has never happened.No one hears this talk of ours now, except Providence itself, and if you were to tell of it to the prosecutor and Nikolay Parfenovitch you might defend me completely by doing so, for who would be likely to be such a criminal, if he is so open-hearted beforehand? Anyone can see that.""Well," and Ivan got up to cut short the conversation, struck by Smerdyakov's last argument."I don't suspect you at all, and I think it's absurd, indeed, to suspect you.On the contrary, I am grateful to you for setting my mind at rest.Now I am going, but I'll come again.Meanwhile, good-bye.Get well.Is there anything you want?""I am very thankful for everything.Marfa Ignatyevna does not forget me, and provides me anything I want, according to her kindness.

Good people visit me every day."

"Good-bye.But I shan't say anything of your being able to sham a fit, and I don't advise you to, either," something made Ivan say suddenly.

"I quite understand.And if you don't speak of that, I shall say nothing of that conversation of ours at the gate."Then it happened that Ivan went out, and only when he had gone a dozen steps along the corridor, he suddenly felt that there was an insulting significance in Smerdyakov's last words.He was almost on the point of turning back, but it was only a passing impulse, and muttering, "Nonsense!" he went out of the hospital.

His chief feeling was one of relief at the fact that it was not Smerdyakov, but Mitya, who had committed the murder, though he might have been expected to feel the opposite.He did not want to analyse the reason for this feeling, and even felt a positive repugnance at prying into his sensations.He felt as though he wanted to make haste to forget something.In the following days he became convinced of Mitya's guilt, as he got to know all the weight of evidence against him.There was evidence of people of no importance, Fenya and her mother, for instance, but the effect of it was almost overpowering.As to Perhotin, the people at the tavern, and at Plotnikov's shop, as well as the witnesses at Mokroe, their evidence seemed conclusive.

It was the details that were so damning.The secret of the knocks impressed the lawyers almost as much as Grigory's evidence as to the open door.Grigory's wife, Marfa, in answer to Ivan's questions, declared that Smerdyakov had been lying all night the other side of the partition wall, "He was not three paces from our bed," and that although she was a sound sleeper she waked several times and heard him moaning, "He was moaning the whole time, moaning continually."Talking to Herzenstube, and giving it as his opinion that Smerdyakov was not mad, but only rather weak, Ivan only evoked from the old man a subtle smile.

"Do you know how he spends his time now?" he asked; "learning lists of French words by heart.He has an exercise-book under his pillow with the French words written out in Russian letters for him by someone, he he he!"Ivan ended by dismissing all doubts.He could not think of Dmitri without repulsion.Only one thing was strange, however.Alyosha persisted that Dmitri was not the murderer, and that "in all probability" Smerdyakov was.Ivan always felt that Alyosha's opinion meant a great deal to him, and so he was astonished at it now.Another thing that was strange was that Alyosha did not make any attempt to talk about Mitya with Ivan, that he never began on the subject and only answered his questions.This, too, struck Ivan particularly.

But he was very much preoccupied at that time with something quite apart from that.On his return from Moscow, he abandoned himself hopelessly to his mad and consuming passion for Katerina Ivanovna.

This is not the time to begin to speak of this new passion of Ivan's, which left its mark on all the rest of his life: this would furnish the subject for another novel, which I may perhaps never write.But I cannot omit to mention here that when Ivan, on leaving Katerina Ivanovna with Alyosha, as I've related already, told him, "I am not keen on her," it was an absolute lie: he loved her madly, though at times he hated her so that he might have murdered her.

同类推荐
  • The Mutiny of the Elsinore

    The Mutiny of the Elsinore

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 乐府指迷

    乐府指迷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 养小录

    养小录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 木兰奇女传

    木兰奇女传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 绛囊撮要

    绛囊撮要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 销售回款博弈术

    销售回款博弈术

    本书从回款的整个过程入手,告诉你如何轻松地追回应收账款,同时还与对方保持良好的业务关系。这套方法包括:如何打催款电话;如何撰写催款信;如何破解各种赖账借口;催款人如何克服讨债时的心理障碍;如何以过人的沟通技巧,攻破债务人的心理防线。此外,作者还教您如何软硬兼施,从法律与心理两个方面双管齐下,让债务人不敢或不会再拖延你的账款。不用文攻武吓,不用死打烂缠,收款自有章法可循和技巧可言。
  • 青少年应该知道的两栖动物

    青少年应该知道的两栖动物

    本书从两栖动物的起源入手,详细阐述和介绍了有关两栖动物的概念、种类、特征、生理习性、繁殖分布、历史演变以及两栖动物中的趣闻怪谈。
  • 万千宠爱

    万千宠爱

    苏瑶最讨厌三种男人:自私自利,傲慢无礼和缺少责任心。乔梓琰挑挑眉,三个他占全了。乔梓琰最讨厌三种女人:漂亮,聪明和有心计。苏瑶扯唇轻笑,她向来把这些当做赞美。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 凰惊天下:倾世小妖妃

    凰惊天下:倾世小妖妃

    异世为妖,是为废?天下尽欺?慕容凰眉目一冷,生而为王的宿命,在骨血里觉醒!挡我路者,灭之!伤我人者,杀之!纵使为妖,也必是尔等遥不可及的璀璨星辰!六界纷乱,他邪魅入骨,覆手天下,却独对她猛追不舍,强压在床,“你是嫁我呢,还是嫁我呢?”慕容凰霸气扬眉,“给你两条路,一,滚,二,死!”某妖孽痞笑倾城,强势霸宠,“第三条,娘子乖乖,嫁与本王,不滚不死,附带天下随你虐,如何?”那年那月开的桃花,她红裙黑发,“我的梦想很简单,与你有个家-”
  • 幻想游记

    幻想游记

    在“穆兰魔眼”之夜出生的蓝族少年明,本应承受月神穆兰的百年恩典,却反而拥有一个灾难重重痴呆傻冒的童年,直至他遇上了那只诡异的“黑格尔花斑蚊”,直至他村中亡扒皮家的人参果树开始魔变,明的人生从此天翻地覆、匪夷所思。人参果树是整篇传说的明线,引导着明所领导的“非人团队”一行不断的在盖塔大陆上探索,而暗线和真正的主线则是隐藏在埃拉西亚、亚特兰迪斯、大唐帝国和暗黑帝国背后难以抗拒的命运阴影。身上流淌着神秘蓝族末裔之血的明究竟能否打破命运的枷锁,请看盖塔大地着名史学家臭牛的异界中文译本《幻想游记》。——
  • 若有人兮

    若有人兮

    人活着有各种存在方式,但作者所认可而有意义的只有一种,即康德所谓之的,在这个世界上一切都可以单纯地用作手段,而惟有人不能,不能作为手段,人只能作为一个“自在的、自为的、终极的目的”。否则,他或她便是一种非存在的存在,便是悲剧。遗憾的是,书中的主人公无论是孙志福还是史淑芬,他们都不懂得康德所说的那种存在。在其痛度一生,不觉老之将至的时候,却仍不知道自己痛在哪儿,悲剧源自哪里。他们只意识到自己处在无以变更或摆脱的人际关系中,决定论的历史关系中,所以说这“关系”即是他们的“存在”!
  • 傲世狂妃:废柴嫡女倾天下

    傲世狂妃:废柴嫡女倾天下

    苏醉是二十一世纪第一杀手,闺蜜背叛后来到了云天大陆,还混的风生水起,灵宠多的说不清,什么奇珍异宝在她面前不过是一堆破铜烂铁。当初扬言要甩她的太子现在对她穷追不舍;邻国皇上对她痴心一片;以前经常欺负她的渣妹现在被她打的跪地求饶。不过某人就不乐意了!“阿醉,以后不准给我在外面招蜂引蝶!”苏醉看着不远处成群结队的女人说道:“还是先管管你自己吧!”
  • 超神学院之护彦者

    超神学院之护彦者

    我们为心中守护而战,我们永远不会言弃,因为我们知道那位天使还等着我们去守护呢!此书不是小说,可能会要人失望,这本书是对彦的爱之篇,无论这本书怎样,我都会继续更的。
  • 梦遇弑血总裁

    梦遇弑血总裁

    上世的仙此生的情,在叶芝因冷喻峰自缢后一切正常的轨道都发生了变化,本会是玉帝的冷喻峰看重权利的他却为了个女人放弃了他毕生的所愿,可是那个女人却从来不知自己在他心里是多么的重要。重生后的他们一位是日本叶落集团的千金,一位是弑血集团的头目。他们故事有太多的插曲,不知上世的悔,能否有弥补的机会。
  • 爱情来临别想跑

    爱情来临别想跑

    一个在农村里生活着的苗竽,偶然间碰到了来这里“微服私访”世界有名的大boss,不巧,是没有丢了性命,成天在那么大一个公司里“享受着”无数的折磨,成天面对这么一个美男上司,想想也是谁都把持不住的啊!!!