-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Федор Достоевский
-
- Идиот
-
- Стр. 177/592
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Aglaya
herself
perhaps
was
of
a
different
opinion
.
All
this
happened
just
before
the
second
appearance
of
our
hero
upon
the
scene
.
By
this
time
,
to
judge
from
appearances
,
poor
Prince
Muishkin
had
been
quite
forgotten
in
St.
Petersburg
.
If
he
had
appeared
suddenly
among
his
acquaintances
,
he
would
have
been
received
as
one
from
the
skies
;
but
we
must
just
glance
at
one
more
fact
before
we
conclude
this
preface
.
Colia
Ivolgin
,
for
some
time
after
the
prince
's
departure
,
continued
his
old
life
.
That
is
,
he
went
to
school
,
looked
after
his
father
,
helped
Varia
in
the
house
,
and
ran
her
errands
,
and
went
frequently
to
see
his
friend
,
Hippolyte
.
The
lodgers
had
disappeared
very
quickly
--
Ferdishenko
soon
after
the
events
at
Nastasia
Philipovna
's
,
while
the
prince
went
to
Moscow
,
as
we
know
.
Gania
and
his
mother
went
to
live
with
Varia
and
Ptitsin
immediately
after
the
latter
's
wedding
,
while
the
general
was
housed
in
a
debtor
's
prison
by
reason
of
certain
IOU
's
given
to
the
captain
's
widow
under
the
impression
that
they
would
never
be
formally
used
against
him
.
This
unkind
action
much
surprised
poor
Ardalion
Alexandrovitch
,
the
victim
,
as
he
called
himself
,
of
an
"
unbounded
trust
in
the
nobility
of
the
human
heart
.
"
When
he
signed
those
notes
of
hand
he
never
dreamt
that
they
would
be
a
source
of
future
trouble
.
The
event
showed
that
he
was
mistaken
.
"
Trust
in
anyone
after
this
!
Have
the
least
confidence
in
man
or
woman
!
"
he
cried
in
bitter
tones
,
as
he
sat
with
his
new
friends
in
prison
,
and
recounted
to
them
his
favourite
stories
of
the
siege
of
Kars
,
and
the
resuscitated
soldier
.
On
the
whole
,
he
accommodated
himself
very
well
to
his
new
position
.
Ptitsin
and
Varia
declared
that
he
was
in
the
right
place
,
and
Gania
was
of
the
same
opinion
.
The
only
person
who
deplored
his
fate
was
poor
Nina
Alexandrovna
,
who
wept
bitter
tears
over
him
,
to
the
great
surprise
of
her
household
,
and
,
though
always
in
feeble
health
,
made
a
point
of
going
to
see
him
as
often
as
possible
.
Since
the
general
's
"
mishap
,
"
as
Colia
called
it
,
and
the
marriage
of
his
sister
,
the
boy
had
quietly
possessed
himself
of
far
more
freedom
.
His
relations
saw
little
of
him
,
for
he
rarely
slept
at
home
.
He
made
many
new
friends
;
and
was
moreover
,
a
frequent
visitor
at
the
debtor
's
prison
,
to
which
he
invariably
accompanied
his
mother
.
Varia
,
who
used
to
be
always
correcting
him
,
never
spoke
to
him
now
on
the
subject
of
his
frequent
absences
,
and
the
whole
household
was
surprised
to
see
Gania
,
in
spite
of
his
depression
,
on
quite
friendly
terms
with
his
brother
.
This
was
something
new
,
for
Gania
had
been
wont
to
look
upon
Colia
as
a
kind
of
errand-boy
,
treating
him
with
contempt
,
threatening
to
"
pull
his
ears
,
"
and
in
general
driving
him
almost
wild
with
irritation
.
It
seemed
now
that
Gania
really
needed
his
brother
,
and
the
latter
,
for
his
part
,
felt
as
if
he
could
forgive
Gania
much
since
he
had
returned
the
hundred
thousand
roubles
offered
to
him
by
Nastasia
Philipovna
.
Three
months
after
the
departure
of
the
prince
,
the
Ivolgin
family
discovered
that
Colia
had
made
acquaintance
with
the
Epanchins
,
and
was
on
very
friendly
terms
with
the
daughters
.
Varia
heard
of
it
first
,
though
Colia
had
not
asked
her
to
introduce
him
.
Little
by
little
the
family
grew
quite
fond
of
him
.
Madame
Epanchin
at
first
looked
on
him
with
disdain
,
and
received
him
coldly
,
but
in
a
short
time
he
grew
to
please
her
,
because
,
as
she
said
,
he
"
was
candid
and
no
flatterer
"
--
a
very
true
description
.
From
the
first
he
put
himself
on
an
equality
with
his
new
friends
,
and
though
he
sometimes
read
newspapers
and
books
to
the
mistress
of
the
house
,
it
was
simply
because
he
liked
to
be
useful
.
One
day
,
however
,
he
and
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
quarrelled
seriously
about
the
"
woman
question
,
"
in
the
course
of
a
lively
discussion
on
that
burning
subject
.
He
told
her
that
she
was
a
tyrant
,
and
that
he
would
never
set
foot
in
her
house
again
.
It
may
seem
incredible
,
but
a
day
or
two
after
,
Madame
Epanchin
sent
a
servant
with
a
note
begging
him
to
return
,
and
Colia
,
without
standing
on
his
dignity
,
did
so
at
once
.