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- Стр. 161/592
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"
It
's
good
business
,
"
said
Ptitsin
,
at
last
,
folding
the
letter
and
handing
it
back
to
the
prince
.
"
You
will
receive
,
without
the
slightest
trouble
,
by
the
last
will
and
testament
of
your
aunt
,
a
very
large
sum
of
money
indeed
.
"
"
Impossible
!
"
cried
the
general
,
starting
up
as
if
he
had
been
shot
.
Ptitsin
explained
,
for
the
benefit
of
the
company
,
that
the
prince
's
aunt
had
died
five
months
since
.
He
had
never
known
her
,
but
she
was
his
mother
's
own
sister
,
the
daughter
of
a
Moscow
merchant
,
one
Paparchin
,
who
had
died
a
bankrupt
.
But
the
elder
brother
of
this
same
Paparchin
,
had
been
an
eminent
and
very
rich
merchant
.
A
year
since
it
had
so
happened
that
his
only
two
sons
had
both
died
within
the
same
month
.
This
sad
event
had
so
affected
the
old
man
that
he
,
too
,
had
died
very
shortly
after
.
He
was
a
widower
,
and
had
no
relations
left
,
excepting
the
prince
's
aunt
,
a
poor
woman
living
on
charity
,
who
was
herself
at
the
point
of
death
from
dropsy
;
but
who
had
time
,
before
she
died
,
to
set
Salaskin
to
work
to
find
her
nephew
,
and
to
make
her
will
bequeathing
her
newly-acquired
fortune
to
him
.
It
appeared
that
neither
the
prince
,
nor
the
doctor
with
whom
he
lived
in
Switzerland
,
had
thought
of
waiting
for
further
communications
;
but
the
prince
had
started
straight
away
with
Salaskin
's
letter
in
his
pocket
.
"
One
thing
I
may
tell
you
,
for
certain
,
"
concluded
Ptitsin
,
addressing
the
prince
,
"
that
there
is
no
question
about
the
authenticity
of
this
matter
.
Anything
that
Salaskin
writes
you
as
regards
your
unquestionable
right
to
this
inheritance
,
you
may
look
upon
as
so
much
money
in
your
pocket
.
I
congratulate
you
,
prince
;
you
may
receive
a
million
and
a
half
of
roubles
,
perhaps
more
;
I
do
n't
know
.
All
I
do
know
is
that
Paparchin
was
a
very
rich
merchant
indeed
.
"
"
Hurrah
!
"
cried
Lebedeff
,
in
a
drunken
voice
.
"
Hurrah
for
the
last
of
the
Muishkins
!
"
"
My
goodness
me
!
and
I
gave
him
twenty-five
roubles
this
morning
as
though
he
were
a
beggar
,
"
blurted
out
the
general
,
half
senseless
with
amazement
.
"
Well
,
I
congratulate
you
,
I
congratulate
you
!
"
And
the
general
rose
from
his
seat
and
solemnly
embraced
the
prince
.
All
came
forward
with
congratulations
;
even
those
of
Rogojin
's
party
who
had
retreated
into
the
next
room
,
now
crept
softly
back
to
look
on
.
For
the
moment
even
Nastasia
Philipovna
was
forgotten
.
But
gradually
the
consciousness
crept
back
into
the
minds
of
each
one
present
that
the
prince
had
just
made
her
an
offer
of
marriage
.
The
situation
had
,
therefore
,
become
three
times
as
fantastic
as
before
.
Totski
sat
and
shrugged
his
shoulders
,
bewildered
.
He
was
the
only
guest
left
sitting
at
this
time
;
the
others
had
thronged
round
the
table
in
disorder
,
and
were
all
talking
at
once
.