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- Федор Достоевский
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- Стр. 173/592
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Two
days
after
the
strange
conclusion
to
Nastasia
Philipovna
's
birthday
party
,
with
the
record
of
which
we
concluded
the
first
part
of
this
story
,
Prince
Muishkin
hurriedly
left
St.
Petersburg
for
Moscow
,
in
order
to
see
after
some
business
connected
with
the
receipt
of
his
unexpected
fortune
.
It
was
said
that
there
were
other
reasons
for
his
hurried
departure
;
but
as
to
this
,
and
as
to
his
movements
in
Moscow
,
and
as
to
his
prolonged
absence
from
St.
Petersburg
,
we
are
able
to
give
very
little
information
.
The
prince
was
away
for
six
months
,
and
even
those
who
were
most
interested
in
his
destiny
were
able
to
pick
up
very
little
news
about
him
all
that
while
.
True
,
certain
rumours
did
reach
his
friends
,
but
these
were
both
strange
and
rare
,
and
each
one
contradicted
the
last
.
Of
course
the
Epanchin
family
was
much
interested
in
his
movements
,
though
he
had
not
had
time
to
bid
them
farewell
before
his
departure
.
The
general
,
however
,
had
had
an
opportunity
of
seeing
him
once
or
twice
since
the
eventful
evening
,
and
had
spoken
very
seriously
with
him
;
but
though
he
had
seen
the
prince
,
as
I
say
,
he
told
his
family
nothing
about
the
circumstance
.
In
fact
,
for
a
month
or
so
after
his
departure
it
was
considered
not
the
thing
to
mention
the
prince
's
name
in
the
Epanchin
household
.
Only
Mrs.
Epanchin
,
at
the
commencement
of
this
period
,
had
announced
that
she
had
been
"
cruelly
mistaken
in
the
prince
!
"
and
a
day
or
two
after
,
she
had
added
,
evidently
alluding
to
him
,
but
not
mentioning
his
name
,
that
it
was
an
unalterable
characteristic
of
hers
to
be
mistaken
in
people
.
Then
once
more
,
ten
days
later
,
after
some
passage
of
arms
with
one
of
her
daughters
,
she
had
remarked
sententiously
.
"
We
have
had
enough
of
mistakes
.
I
shall
be
more
careful
in
future
!
"
However
,
it
was
impossible
to
avoid
remarking
that
there
was
some
sense
of
oppression
in
the
household
--
something
unspoken
,
but
felt
;
something
strained
.
All
the
members
of
the
family
wore
frowning
looks
.
The
general
was
unusually
busy
;
his
family
hardly
ever
saw
him
.
As
to
the
girls
,
nothing
was
said
openly
,
at
all
events
;
and
probably
very
little
in
private
.
They
were
proud
damsels
,
and
were
not
always
perfectly
confidential
even
among
themselves
.
But
they
understood
each
other
thoroughly
at
the
first
word
on
all
occasions
;
very
often
at
the
first
glance
,
so
that
there
was
no
need
of
much
talking
as
a
rule
.
One
fact
,
at
least
,
would
have
been
perfectly
plain
to
an
outsider
,
had
any
such
person
been
on
the
spot
;
and
that
was
,
that
the
prince
had
made
a
very
considerable
impression
upon
the
family
,
in
spite
of
the
fact
that
he
had
but
once
been
inside
the
house
,
and
then
only
for
a
short
time
.
Of
course
,
if
analyzed
,
this
impression
might
have
proved
to
be
nothing
more
than
a
feeling
of
curiosity
;
but
be
it
what
it
might
,
there
it
undoubtedly
was
.
Little
by
little
,
the
rumours
spread
about
town
became
lost
in
a
maze
of
uncertainty
.
It
was
said
that
some
foolish
young
prince
,
name
unknown
,
had
suddenly
come
into
possession
of
a
gigantic
fortune
,
and
had
married
a
French
ballet
dancer
.
This
was
contradicted
,
and
the
rumour
circulated
that
it
was
a
young
merchant
who
had
come
into
the
enormous
fortune
and
married
the
great
ballet
dancer
,
and
that
at
the
wedding
the
drunken
young
fool
had
burned
seventy
thousand
roubles
at
a
candle
out
of
pure
bravado
.
However
,
all
these
rumours
soon
died
down
,
to
which
circumstance
certain
facts
largely
contributed
.
For
instance
,
the
whole
of
the
Rogojin
troop
had
departed
,
with
him
at
their
head
,
for
Moscow
.
This
was
exactly
a
week
after
a
dreadful
orgy
at
the
Ekaterinhof
gardens
,
where
Nastasia
Philipovna
had
been
present
.
It
became
known
that
after
this
orgy
Nastasia
Philipovna
had
entirely
disappeared
,
and
that
she
had
since
been
traced
to
Moscow
;
so
that
the
exodus
of
the
Rogojin
band
was
found
consistent
with
this
report
.
There
were
rumours
current
as
to
Gania
,
too
;
but
circumstances
soon
contradicted
these
.
He
had
fallen
seriously
ill
,
and
his
illness
precluded
his
appearance
in
society
,
and
even
at
business
,
for
over
a
month
.
As
soon
as
he
had
recovered
,
however
,
he
threw
up
his
situation
in
the
public
company
under
General
Epanchin
's
direction
,
for
some
unknown
reason
,
and
the
post
was
given
to
another
.
He
never
went
near
the
Epanchins
'
house
at
all
,
and
was
exceedingly
irritable
and
depressed
.