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"
Do
n't
be
a
simpleton
.
You
behave
just
as
though
you
were
n't
a
man
at
all
.
Come
on
!
I
shall
see
,
now
,
with
my
own
eyes
.
I
shall
see
all
.
"
"
Well
,
let
me
get
my
hat
,
at
least
.
"
"
Here
's
your
miserable
hat
.
He
could
n't
even
choose
a
respectable
shape
for
his
hat
!
Come
on
!
She
did
that
because
I
took
your
part
and
said
you
ought
to
have
come
--
little
vixen
!
--
else
she
would
never
have
sent
you
that
silly
note
.
It
's
a
most
improper
note
,
I
call
it
;
most
improper
for
such
an
intelligent
,
well-brought-up
girl
to
write
.
H
'm
!
I
dare
say
she
was
annoyed
that
you
did
n't
come
;
but
she
ought
to
have
known
that
one
ca
n't
write
like
that
to
an
idiot
like
you
,
for
you
'd
be
sure
to
take
it
literally
.
"
Mrs.
Epanchin
was
dragging
the
prince
along
with
her
all
the
time
,
and
never
let
go
of
his
hand
for
an
instant
.
"
What
are
you
listening
for
?
"
she
added
,
seeing
that
she
had
committed
herself
a
little
.
"
She
wants
a
clown
like
you
--
she
has
n't
seen
one
for
some
time
--
to
play
with
.
That
's
why
she
is
anxious
for
you
to
come
to
the
house
.
And
right
glad
I
am
that
she
'll
make
a
thorough
good
fool
of
you
.
You
deserve
it
;
and
she
can
do
it
--
oh
!
she
can
,
indeed
!
--
as
well
as
most
people
.
"
Отключить рекламу
The
Epanchin
family
,
or
at
least
the
more
serious
members
of
it
,
were
sometimes
grieved
because
they
seemed
so
unlike
the
rest
of
the
world
.
They
were
not
quite
certain
,
but
had
at
times
a
strong
suspicion
that
things
did
not
happen
to
them
as
they
did
to
other
people
.
Others
led
a
quiet
,
uneventful
life
,
while
they
were
subject
to
continual
upheavals
.
Others
kept
on
the
rails
without
difficulty
;
they
ran
off
at
the
slightest
obstacle
.
Other
houses
were
governed
by
a
timid
routine
;
theirs
was
somehow
different
.
Perhaps
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
was
alone
in
making
these
fretful
observations
;
the
girls
,
though
not
wanting
in
intelligence
,
were
still
young
;
the
general
was
intelligent
,
too
,
but
narrow
,
and
in
any
difficulty
he
was
content
to
say
,
"
H
'm
!
"
and
leave
the
matter
to
his
wife
.
Consequently
,
on
her
fell
the
responsibility
.
It
was
not
that
they
distinguished
themselves
as
a
family
by
any
particular
originality
,
or
that
their
excursions
off
the
track
led
to
any
breach
of
the
proprieties
.
Oh
no
.
There
was
nothing
premeditated
,
there
was
not
even
any
conscious
purpose
in
it
all
,
and
yet
,
in
spite
of
everything
,
the
family
,
although
highly
respected
,
was
not
quite
what
every
highly
respected
family
ought
to
be
.
For
a
long
time
now
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
had
had
it
in
her
mind
that
all
the
trouble
was
owing
to
her
"
unfortunate
character
,
"
and
this
added
to
her
distress
.
She
blamed
her
own
stupid
unconventional
"
eccentricity
.
"
Always
restless
,
always
on
the
go
,
she
constantly
seemed
to
lose
her
way
,
and
to
get
into
trouble
over
the
simplest
and
more
ordinary
affairs
of
life
.
We
said
at
the
beginning
of
our
story
,
that
the
Epanchins
were
liked
and
esteemed
by
their
neighbours
.
In
spite
of
his
humble
origin
,
Ivan
Fedorovitch
himself
was
received
everywhere
with
respect
.
He
deserved
this
,
partly
on
account
of
his
wealth
and
position
,
partly
because
,
though
limited
,
he
was
really
a
very
good
fellow
.
But
a
certain
limitation
of
mind
seems
to
be
an
indispensable
asset
,
if
not
to
all
public
personages
,
at
least
to
all
serious
financiers
.
Added
to
this
,
his
manner
was
modest
and
unassuming
;
he
knew
when
to
be
silent
,
yet
never
allowed
himself
to
be
trampled
upon
.
Also
--
and
this
was
more
important
than
all
--
he
had
the
advantage
of
being
under
exalted
patronage
.
As
to
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
,
she
,
as
the
reader
knows
,
belonged
to
an
aristocratic
family
.
True
,
Russians
think
more
of
influential
friends
than
of
birth
,
but
she
had
both
.
She
was
esteemed
and
even
loved
by
people
of
consequence
in
society
,
whose
example
in
receiving
her
was
therefore
followed
by
others
.
It
seems
hardly
necessary
to
remark
that
her
family
worries
and
anxieties
had
little
or
no
foundation
,
or
that
her
imagination
increased
them
to
an
absurd
degree
;
but
if
you
have
a
wart
on
your
forehead
or
nose
,
you
imagine
that
all
the
world
is
looking
at
it
,
and
that
people
would
make
fun
of
you
because
of
it
,
even
if
you
had
discovered
America
!
Doubtless
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
was
considered
"
eccentric
"
in
society
,
but
she
was
none
the
less
esteemed
:
the
pity
was
that
she
was
ceasing
to
believe
in
that
esteem
.
Отключить рекламу
When
she
thought
of
her
daughters
,
she
said
to
herself
sorrowfully
that
she
was
a
hindrance
rather
than
a
help
to
their
future
,
that
her
character
and
temper
were
absurd
,
ridiculous
,
insupportable
.
Naturally
,
she
put
the
blame
on
her
surroundings
,
and
from
morning
to
night
was
quarrelling
with
her
husband
and
children
,
whom
she
really
loved
to
the
point
of
self-sacrifice
,
even
,
one
might
say
,
of
passion
.
She
was
,
above
all
distressed
by
the
idea
that
her
daughters
might
grow
up
"
eccentric
,
"
like
herself
;
she
believed
that
no
other
society
girls
were
like
them
.
"
They
are
growing
into
Nihilists
!
"
she
repeated
over
and
over
again
.
For
years
she
had
tormented
herself
with
this
idea
,
and
with
the
question
:
"
Why
do
n't
they
get
married
?
"
"
It
is
to
annoy
their
mother
;
that
is
their
one
aim
in
life
;
it
can
be
nothing
else
.
The
fact
is
it
is
all
of
a
piece
with
these
modern
ideas
,
that
wretched
woman
's
question
!
Six
months
ago
Aglaya
took
a
fancy
to
cut
off
her
magnificent
hair
.
Why
,
even
I
,
when
I
was
young
,
had
nothing
like
it
!
The
scissors
were
in
her
hand
,
and
I
had
to
go
down
on
my
knees
and
implore
her
...