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There
was
nothing
,
however
,
of
love-making
in
his
talk
.
His
ideas
were
all
of
the
most
serious
kind
;
some
were
even
mystical
and
profound
.
He
aired
his
own
views
on
various
matters
,
some
of
his
most
private
opinions
and
observations
,
many
of
which
would
have
seemed
rather
funny
,
so
his
hearers
agreed
afterwards
,
had
they
not
been
so
well
expressed
.
The
general
liked
serious
subjects
of
conversation
;
but
both
he
and
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
felt
that
they
were
having
a
little
too
much
of
a
good
thing
tonight
,
and
as
the
evening
advanced
,
they
both
grew
more
or
less
melancholy
;
but
towards
night
,
the
prince
fell
to
telling
funny
stories
,
and
was
always
the
first
to
burst
out
laughing
himself
,
which
he
invariably
did
so
joyously
and
simply
that
the
rest
laughed
just
as
much
at
him
as
at
his
stories
.
As
for
Aglaya
,
she
hardly
said
a
word
all
the
evening
;
but
she
listened
with
all
her
ears
to
Lef
Nicolaievitch
's
talk
,
and
scarcely
took
her
eyes
off
him
.
"
She
looked
at
him
,
and
stared
and
stared
,
and
hung
on
every
word
he
said
,
"
said
Lizabetha
afterwards
,
to
her
husband
,
"
and
yet
,
tell
her
that
she
loves
him
,
and
she
is
furious
!
"
"
What
's
to
be
done
?
It
's
fate
,
"
said
the
general
,
shrugging
his
shoulders
,
and
,
for
a
long
while
after
,
he
continued
to
repeat
:
"
It
's
fate
,
it
's
fate
!
"
We
may
add
that
to
a
business
man
like
General
Epanchin
the
present
position
of
affairs
was
most
unsatisfactory
.
He
hated
the
uncertainty
in
which
they
had
been
,
perforce
,
left
.
However
,
he
decided
to
say
no
more
about
it
,
and
merely
to
look
on
,
and
take
his
time
and
tune
from
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
.
The
happy
state
in
which
the
family
had
spent
the
evening
,
as
just
recorded
,
was
not
of
very
long
duration
.
Next
day
Aglaya
quarrelled
with
the
prince
again
,
and
so
she
continued
to
behave
for
the
next
few
days
.
For
whole
hours
at
a
time
she
ridiculed
and
chaffed
the
wretched
man
,
and
made
him
almost
a
laughing-stock
.
It
is
true
that
they
used
to
sit
in
the
little
summer-house
together
for
an
hour
or
two
at
a
time
,
very
often
,
but
it
was
observed
that
on
these
occasions
the
prince
would
read
the
paper
,
or
some
book
,
aloud
to
Aglaya
.
"
Do
you
know
,
"
Aglaya
said
to
him
once
,
interrupting
the
reading
,
"
I
've
remarked
that
you
are
dreadfully
badly
educated
.
You
never
know
anything
thoroughly
,
if
one
asks
you
;
neither
anyone
's
name
,
nor
dates
,
nor
about
treaties
and
so
on
.
It
's
a
great
pity
,
you
know
!
"