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What
did
he
think
of
all
this
time
,
then
?
What
did
he
wish
for
?
There
is
no
doubt
that
he
was
a
perfectly
free
agent
all
through
,
and
that
as
far
as
Nastasia
was
concerned
,
there
was
no
force
of
any
kind
brought
to
bear
on
him
.
Nastasia
wished
for
a
speedy
marriage
,
true
!
--
but
the
prince
agreed
at
once
to
her
proposals
;
he
agreed
,
in
fact
,
so
casually
that
anyone
might
suppose
he
was
but
acceding
to
the
most
simple
and
ordinary
suggestion
.
There
are
many
strange
circumstances
such
as
this
before
us
;
but
in
our
opinion
they
do
but
deepen
the
mystery
,
and
do
not
in
the
smallest
degree
help
us
to
understand
the
case
.
However
,
let
us
take
one
more
example
.
Thus
,
we
know
for
a
fact
that
during
the
whole
of
this
fortnight
the
prince
spent
all
his
days
and
evenings
with
Nastasia
;
he
walked
with
her
,
drove
with
her
;
he
began
to
be
restless
whenever
he
passed
an
hour
without
seeing
her
--
in
fact
,
to
all
appearances
,
he
sincerely
loved
her
.
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He
would
listen
to
her
for
hours
at
a
time
with
a
quiet
smile
on
his
face
,
scarcely
saying
a
word
himself
.
And
yet
we
know
,
equally
certainly
,
that
during
this
period
he
several
times
set
off
,
suddenly
,
to
the
Epanchins
'
,
not
concealing
the
fact
from
Nastasia
Philipovna
,
and
driving
the
latter
to
absolute
despair
.
We
know
also
that
he
was
not
received
at
the
Epanchins
'
so
long
as
they
remained
at
Pavlofsk
,
and
that
he
was
not
allowed
an
interview
with
Aglaya
;
--
but
next
day
he
would
set
off
once
more
on
the
same
errand
,
apparently
quite
oblivious
of
the
fact
of
yesterday
's
visit
having
been
a
failure
,
--
and
,
of
course
,
meeting
with
another
refusal
.
We
know
,
too
,
that
exactly
an
hour
after
Aglaya
had
fled
from
Nastasia
Philipovna
's
house
on
that
fateful
evening
,
the
prince
was
at
the
Epanchins
'
,
--
and
that
his
appearance
there
had
been
the
cause
of
the
greatest
consternation
and
dismay
;
for
Aglaya
had
not
been
home
,
and
the
family
only
discovered
then
,
for
the
first
time
,
that
the
two
of
them
had
been
to
Nastasia
's
house
together
.
It
was
said
that
Elizabetha
Prokofievna
and
her
daughters
had
there
and
then
denounced
the
prince
in
the
strongest
terms
,
and
had
refused
any
further
acquaintance
and
friendship
with
him
;
their
rage
and
denunciations
being
redoubled
when
Varia
Ardalionovna
suddenly
arrived
and
stated
that
Aglaya
had
been
at
her
house
in
a
terrible
state
of
mind
for
the
last
hour
,
and
that
she
refused
to
come
home
.
This
last
item
of
news
,
which
disturbed
Lizabetha
Prokofievna
more
than
anything
else
,
was
perfectly
true
.
On
leaving
Nastasia
's
,
Aglaya
had
felt
that
she
would
rather
die
than
face
her
people
,
and
had
therefore
gone
straight
to
Nina
Alexandrovna
's
.
On
receiving
the
news
,
Lizabetha
and
her
daughters
and
the
general
all
rushed
off
to
Aglaya
,
followed
by
Prince
Lef
Nicolaievitch
--
undeterred
by
his
recent
dismissal
;
but
through
Varia
he
was
refused
a
sight
of
Aglaya
here
also
.
The
end
of
the
episode
was
that
when
Aglaya
saw
her
mother
and
sisters
crying
over
her
and
not
uttering
a
word
of
reproach
,
she
had
flung
herself
into
their
arms
and
gone
straight
home
with
them
.
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It
was
said
that
Gania
managed
to
make
a
fool
of
himself
even
on
this
occasion
;
for
,
finding
himself
alone
with
Aglaya
for
a
minute
or
two
when
Varia
had
gone
to
the
Epanchins
'
,
he
had
thought
it
a
fitting
opportunity
to
make
a
declaration
of
his
love
,
and
on
hearing
this
Aglaya
,
in
spite
of
her
state
of
mind
at
the
time
,
had
suddenly
burst
out
laughing
,
and
had
put
a
strange
question
to
him
.
She
asked
him
whether
he
would
consent
to
hold
his
finger
to
a
lighted
candle
in
proof
of
his
devotion
!
Gania
--
it
was
said
--
looked
so
comically
bewildered
that
Aglaya
had
almost
laughed
herself
into
hysterics
,
and
had
rushed
out
of
the
room
and
upstairs
,
--
where
her
parents
had
found
her
.
Hippolyte
told
the
prince
this
last
story
,
sending
for
him
on
purpose
.
When
Muishkin
heard
about
the
candle
and
Gania
's
finger
he
had
laughed
so
that
he
had
quite
astonished
Hippolyte
,
--
and
then
shuddered
and
burst
into
tears
.
The
prince
's
condition
during
those
days
was
strange
and
perturbed
.
Hippolyte
plainly
declared
that
he
thought
he
was
out
of
his
mind
;
--
this
,
however
,
was
hardly
to
be
relied
upon
.