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- Федор Достоевский
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- Стр. 516/592
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However
,
when
he
did
master
the
fact
,
it
acted
upon
him
as
a
tonic
by
completely
distracting
his
attention
.
He
went
at
once
to
Nina
Alexandrovna
's
,
whither
the
general
had
been
carried
,
and
stayed
there
until
the
evening
.
He
could
do
no
good
,
but
there
are
people
whom
to
have
near
one
is
a
blessing
at
such
times
.
Colia
was
in
an
almost
hysterical
state
;
he
cried
continuously
,
but
was
running
about
all
day
,
all
the
same
;
fetching
doctors
,
of
whom
he
collected
three
;
going
to
the
chemist
's
,
and
so
on
.
The
general
was
brought
round
to
some
extent
,
but
the
doctors
declared
that
he
could
not
be
said
to
be
out
of
danger
.
Varia
and
Nina
Alexandrovna
never
left
the
sick
man
's
bedside
;
Gania
was
excited
and
distressed
,
but
would
not
go
upstairs
,
and
seemed
afraid
to
look
at
the
patient
.
He
wrung
his
hands
when
the
prince
spoke
to
him
,
and
said
that
"
such
a
misfortune
at
such
a
moment
"
was
terrible
.
The
prince
thought
he
knew
what
Gania
meant
by
"
such
a
moment
.
"
Hippolyte
was
not
in
the
house
.
Lebedeff
turned
up
late
in
the
afternoon
;
he
had
been
asleep
ever
since
his
interview
with
the
prince
in
the
morning
.
He
was
quite
sober
now
,
and
cried
with
real
sincerity
over
the
sick
general
--
mourning
for
him
as
though
he
were
his
own
brother
.
He
blamed
himself
aloud
,
but
did
not
explain
why
.
He
repeated
over
and
over
again
to
Nina
Alexandrovna
that
he
alone
was
to
blame
--
no
one
else
--
but
that
he
had
acted
out
of
"
pure
amiable
curiosity
,
"
and
that
"
the
deceased
,
"
as
he
insisted
upon
calling
the
still
living
general
,
had
been
the
greatest
of
geniuses
.
He
laid
much
stress
on
the
genius
of
the
sufferer
,
as
if
this
idea
must
be
one
of
immense
solace
in
the
present
crisis
.
Nina
Alexandrovna
--
seeing
his
sincerity
of
feeling
--
said
at
last
,
and
without
the
faintest
suspicion
of
reproach
in
her
voice
:
"
Come
,
come
--
do
n't
cry
!
God
will
forgive
you
!
"
Lebedeff
was
so
impressed
by
these
words
,
and
the
tone
in
which
they
were
spoken
,
that
he
could
not
leave
Nina
Alexandrovna
all
the
evening
--
in
fact
,
for
several
days
.
Till
the
general
's
death
,
indeed
,
he
spent
almost
all
his
time
at
his
side
.
Twice
during
the
day
a
messenger
came
to
Nina
Alexandrovna
from
the
Epanchins
to
inquire
after
the
invalid
.
When
--
late
in
the
evening
--
the
prince
made
his
appearance
in
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
's
drawing-room
,
he
found
it
full
of
guests
.
Mrs.
Epanchin
questioned
him
very
fully
about
the
general
as
soon
as
he
appeared
;
and
when
old
Princess
Bielokonski
wished
to
know
"
who
this
general
was
,
and
who
was
Nina
Alexandrovna
,
"
she
proceeded
to
explain
in
a
manner
which
pleased
the
prince
very
much
.