"Pyotr Petrovitch,"
she
cried, "protect me...
you
at
least!
Make
this
foolish
woman
understand
that
she
can't
behave
like
this
to
a
lady
in
misfortune...
that
there
is
a
law
for
such
things.... I'll
go
to
the
governor-general himself....
She
shall
answer
for
it....
Remembering
my father's
hospitality
protect
these
orphans." "Allow me, madam....
Allow
me." Pyotr Petrovitch
waved
her
off. "Your
papa
as
you
are
well
aware
I had
not
the
honour
of
knowing" (someone laughed aloud) "and I
do
not
intend
to
take
part
in
your
everlasting
squabbles
with
Amalia Ivanovna.... I
have
come
here
to
speak
of
my
own
affairs...
and
I
want
to
have
a
word
with
your
stepdaughter, Sofya... Ivanovna, I
think
it
is?
Allow
me
to
pass." Pyotr Petrovitch, edging
by
her, went
to
the
opposite
corner
where
Sonia was. Katerina Ivanovna
remained
standing
where
she
was,
as
though
thunderstruck.
She
could
not
understand
how
Pyotr Petrovitch
could
deny
having
enjoyed
her
father's hospitality.
Though
she
had
invented
it
herself,
she
believed
in
it
firmly
by
this
time.
She
was
struck
too
by
the
businesslike,
dry
and
even
contemptuous
menacing tone
of
Pyotr Petrovitch.
All
the
clamour
gradually
died
away
at
his
entrance.
Not
only
was
this
"serious
business
man" strikingly
incongruous
with
the
rest
of
the
party,
but
it
was
evident, too,
that
he
had
come
upon
some
matter
of
consequence,
that
some
exceptional
cause
must
have
brought
him
and
that
therefore
something
was
going
to
happen. Raskolnikov, standing
beside
Sonia,
moved
aside
to
let
him
pass; Pyotr Petrovitch
did
not
seem
to
notice him. A
minute
later Lebeziatnikov, too,
appeared
in
the
doorway;
he
did
not
come
in,
but
stood still,
listening
with
marked
interest,
almost
wonder,
and
seemed
for
a time perplexed. "Excuse
me
for
possibly interrupting you,
but
it's a
matter
of
some
importance," Pyotr Petrovitch observed,
addressing
the
company
generally. "I
am
glad
indeed
to
find
other
persons
present. Amalia Ivanovna, I humbly
beg
you
as
mistress
of
the
house
to
pay
careful
attention
to
what
I
have
to
say
to
Sofya Ivanovna. Sofya Ivanovna,"
he
went on,
addressing
Sonia,
who
was
very
much
surprised
and
already
alarmed, "immediately
after
your
visit
I found
that
a hundred-rouble
note
was
missing
from
my table,
in
the
room
of
my
friend
Mr. Lebeziatnikov.
If
in
any
way
whatever
you
know
and
will
tell
us
where
it
is
now, I
assure
you
on
my
word
of
honour
and
call
all
present
to
witness
that
the
matter
shall
end
there.
In
the
opposite
case
I
shall
be
compelled
to
have
recourse
to
very
serious
measures
and
then...
you
must
blame
yourself." Complete silence
reigned
in
the
room.
Even
the
crying
children
were
still. Sonia stood
deadly
pale, staring
at
Luzhin
and
unable
to
say
a word.
She
seemed
not
to
understand.
Some
seconds passed. "Well,
how
is
it
to
be
then?"
asked
Luzhin,
looking
intently
at
her. "I don't know.... I
know
nothing
about
it," Sonia articulated
faintly
at
last. "I
have
taken nothing," Sonia whispered
in
terror, "you gave
me
ten
roubles,
here
it
is,
take
it." Sonia
pulled
her
handkerchief
out
of
her
pocket,
untied
a
corner
of
it,
took
out
the
ten-rouble
note
and
gave
it
to
Luzhin. "And
the
hundred
roubles
you
do
not
confess
to
taking?"
he
insisted
reproachfully,
not
taking
the
note. Sonia
looked
about
her.
All
were
looking
at
her
with
such
awful, stern, ironical,
hostile
eyes.
She
looked
at
Raskolnikov...
he
stood against
the
wall,
with
his
arms
crossed,
looking
at
her
with
glowing
eyes. "Good God!"
broke
from
Sonia. "Amalia Ivanovna,
we
shall
have
to
send
word
to
the
police
and
therefore
I humbly
beg
you
meanwhile
to
send
for
the
house
porter," Luzhin said softly
and
even
kindly. "You
knew
it?" Luzhin
caught
her
up, "then I
suppose
you
had
some
reason
before
this
for
thinking
so. I
beg
you,
worthy
Amalia Ivanovna,
to
remember
your
words
which
have
been
uttered
before
witnesses."
There
was
a buzz
of
loud
conversation
on
all
sides.
All
were
in
movement. "What!" cried Katerina Ivanovna, suddenly
realising
the
position,
and
she
rushed
at
Luzhin. "What!
You
accuse
her
of
stealing? Sonia? Ah,
the
wretches,
the
wretches!"
And
running
to
Sonia
she
flung
her
wasted
arms
round
her
and
held
her
as
in
a vise. "Sonia!
how
dared
you
take
ten
roubles
from
him?
Foolish
girl!
Give
it
to
me!
Give
me
the
ten
roubles
at
once—here!"
And
snatching
the
note
from
Sonia, Katerina Ivanovna
crumpled
it
up
and
flung
it
straight
into
Luzhin's face.
It
hit
him
in
the
eye
and
fell
on
the
ground. Amalia Ivanovna hastened
to
pick
it
up. Pyotr Petrovitch lost
his
temper. "Hold
that
mad
woman!"
he
shouted.
At
that
moment
several
other
persons, besides Lebeziatnikov,
appeared
in
the
doorway,
among
them
the
two
ladies. "What! Mad?
Am
I mad? Idiot!"
shrieked
Katerina Ivanovna. "You
are
an
idiot
yourself, pettifogging lawyer, base man! Sonia, Sonia
take
his
money! Sonia a thief! Why, she'd
give
away
her
last
penny!"
and
Katerina Ivanovna
broke
into
hysterical
laughter. "Did
you
ever
see
such
an
idiot?"
she
turned
from
side
to
side. "And
you
too?"
she
suddenly
saw
the
landlady, "and
you
too,
sausage
eater,
you
declare
that
she
is
a thief,
you
trashy
Prussian
hen's
leg
in
a crinoline!
She
hasn't been
out
of
this
room:
she
came straight
from
you,
you
wretch,
and
sat
down
beside
me, everyone
saw
her.
She
sat here,
by
Rodion Romanovitch.
Search
her!
Since
she's
not
left
the
room,
the
money
would
have
to
be
on
her!
Search
her,
search
her!
But
if
you
don't find it,
then
excuse
me, my
dear
fellow, you'll
answer
for
it! I'll
go
to
our
Sovereign,
to
our
Sovereign,
to
our
gracious
Tsar
himself,
and
throw
myself
at
his
feet, to-day,
this
minute! I
am
alone
in
the
world!
They
would
let
me
in!
Do
you
think
they
wouldn't? You're wrong, I
will
get
in! I
will
get
in!
You
reckoned
on
her
meekness!
You
relied
upon
that!
But
I
am
not
so
submissive,
let
me
tell
you! You've gone
too
far
yourself.
Search
her,
search
her!"
And
Katerina Ivanovna
in
a frenzy shook Luzhin
and
dragged
him
towards
Sonia. "I
am
ready, I'll
be
responsible...
but
calm
yourself, madam,
calm
yourself. I
see
that
you
are
not
so
submissive!... Well, well,
but
as
to
that..." Luzhin muttered, "that
ought
to
be
before
the
police...
though
indeed
there
are
witnesses
enough
as
it
is.... I
am
ready....
But
in
any
case
it's
difficult
for
a man...
on
account
of
her
sex....
But
with
the
help
of
Amalia Ivanovna... though,
of
course, it's
not
the
way
to
do
things....
How
is
it
to
be
done?" "As
you
will!
Let
anyone
who
likes
search
her!" cried Katerina Ivanovna. "Sonia,
turn
out
your
pockets! See! Look, monster,
the
pocket
is
empty,
here
was
her
handkerchief!
Here
is
the
other
pocket, look! D'you see, d'you see?"
And
Katerina Ivanovna turned—or
rather
snatched—both
pockets
inside
out.
But
from
the
right
pocket
a
piece
of
paper flew
out
and
describing
a
parabola
in
the
air
fell
at
Luzhin's feet. Everyone
saw
it,
several
cried out. Pyotr Petrovitch
stooped
down, picked
up
the
paper
in
two
fingers, lifted
it
where
all
could
see
it
and
opened
it.
It
was
a hundred-rouble
note
folded
in
eight. Pyotr Petrovitch
held
up
the
note
showing
it
to
everyone. "Thief!
Out
of
my lodging. Police, police!" yelled Amalia Ivanovna. "They
must
to
Siberia
be
sent! Away!"
Exclamations
arose
on
all
sides. Raskolnikov
was
silent,
keeping
his
eyes
fixed
on
Sonia,
except
for
an
occasional
rapid
glance
at
Luzhin. Sonia stood still,
as
though
unconscious.
She
was
hardly
able
to
feel surprise. Suddenly
the
colour
rushed
to
her
cheeks;
she
uttered
a
cry
and
hid
her
face
in
her
hands. "No,
it
wasn't I! I didn't
take
it! I
know
nothing
about
it,"
she
cried
with
a heartrending wail,
and
she
ran
to
Katerina Ivanovna,
who
clasped
her
tightly
in
her
arms,
as
though
she
would
shelter
her
from
all
the
world. "Sonia! Sonia! I don't
believe
it!
You
see, I don't
believe
it!"
she
cried
in
the
face
of
the
obvious
fact,
swaying
her
to
and
fro
in
her
arms
like
a baby,
kissing
her
face continually,
then
snatching
at
her
hands
and
kissing
them, too, "you
took
it!
How
stupid
these
people
are!
Oh
dear!
You
are
fools, fools,"
she
cried,
addressing
the
whole
room, "you don't know,
you
don't
know
what
a
heart
she
has,
what
a
girl
she
is!
She
take
it, she? She'd
sell
her
last
rag, she'd
go
barefoot
to
help
you
if
you
needed
it, that's
what
she
is!
She
has
the
yellow
passport
because
my children
were
starving,
she
sold
herself
for
us! Ah, husband, husband!
Do
you
see?
Do
you
see?
What
a
memorial
dinner
for
you! Merciful heavens!
Defend
her,
why
are
you
all
standing still? Rodion Romanovitch,
why
don't
you
stand
up
for
her?
Do
you
believe
it, too?
You
are
not
worth
her
little
finger,
all
of
you
together!
Good
God!
Defend
her
now,
at
least!" "Madam, madam,
this
incident
does
not
reflect
upon
you!"
he
cried impressively, "no
one
would
take
upon
himself
to
accuse
you
of
being
an
instigator
or
even
an
accomplice
in
it, especially
as
you
have
proved
her
guilt
by
turning
out
her
pockets,
showing
that
you
had
no
previous
idea
of
it. I
am
most
ready,
most
ready
to
show
compassion,
if
poverty,
so
to
speak,
drove
Sofya Semyonovna
to
it,
but
why
did
you
refuse
to
confess, mademoiselle?
Were
you
afraid
of
the
disgrace?
The
first
step?
You
lost
your
head, perhaps?
One
can
quite
understand
it....
But
how
could
you
have
lowered
yourself
to
such
an
action? Gentlemen,"
he
addressed
the
whole
company, "gentlemen! Compassionate and,
so
to
say,
commiserating
these
people, I
am
ready
to
overlook
it
even
now
in
spite
of
the
personal
insult
lavished
upon
me!
And
may
this
disgrace
be
a
lesson
to
you
for
the
future,"
he
said,
addressing
Sonia, "and I
will
carry
the
matter
no
further. Enough!" Pyotr Petrovitch
stole
a glance
at
Raskolnikov.
Their
eyes
met,
and
the
fire
in
Raskolnikov's
seemed
ready
to
reduce
him
to
ashes. Meanwhile Katerina Ivanovna apparently
heard
nothing.
She
was
kissing
and
hugging
Sonia
like
a madwoman.
The
children, too,
were
embracing
Sonia
on
all
sides,
and
Polenka—though
she
did
not
fully
understand
what
was
wrong—was
drowned
in
tears
and
shaking
with
sobs,
as
she
hid
her
pretty
little
face,
swollen
with
weeping,
on
Sonia's shoulder. "How vile!" a
loud
voice cried suddenly
in
the
doorway. Pyotr Petrovitch
looked
round quickly. "What vileness!" Lebeziatnikov repeated, staring
him
straight
in
the
face. Pyotr Petrovitch gave a positive start—all noticed
it
and
recalled
it
afterwards. Lebeziatnikov strode
into
the
room. "And
you
dared
to
call
me
as
witness?"
he
said, going
up
to
Pyotr Petrovitch. "What
do
you
mean?
What
are
you
talking about?"
muttered
Luzhin. "I
mean
that
you...
are
a slanderer, that's
what
my
words
mean!" Lebeziatnikov said hotly,
looking
sternly
at
him
with
his
short-sighted eyes.
He
was
extremely angry. Raskolnikov gazed
intently
at
him,
as
though
seizing
and
weighing
each
word.
Again
there
was
a silence. Pyotr Petrovitch
indeed
seemed
almost
dumbfounded
for
the
first
moment. "If
you
mean
that
for
me,..."
he
began, stammering. "But what's
the
matter
with
you?
Are
you
out
of
your
mind?" "I'm
in
my mind,
but
you
are
a scoundrel! Ah,
how
vile! I
have
heard
everything. I kept
waiting
on
purpose
to
understand
it,
for
I
must
own
even
now
it
is
not
quite
logical....
What
you
have
done
it
all
for
I can't understand." "Why,
what
have
I
done
then?
Give
over
talking
in
your
nonsensical riddles!
Or
maybe
you
are
drunk!" "You
may
be
a drunkard, perhaps,
vile
man,
but
I
am
not! I
never
touch
vodka,
for
it's against my convictions.
Would
you
believe
it, he,
he
himself,
with
his
own
hands
gave Sofya Semyonovna
that
hundred-rouble note—I
saw
it, I
was
a witness, I'll
take
my oath!
He
did
it, he!" repeated Lebeziatnikov,
addressing
all. "Are
you
crazy, milksop?"
squealed
Luzhin. "She
is
herself
before
you—she
herself
here
declared
just
now
before
everyone
that
I gave
her
only
ten
roubles.
How
could
I
have
given
it
to
her?" "I
saw
it, I
saw
it," Lebeziatnikov repeated, "and
though
it
is
against my principles, I
am
ready
this
very
minute
to
take
any
oath
you
like
before
the
court,
for
I
saw
how
you
slipped
it
in
her
pocket.
Only
like
a fool I
thought
you
did
it
out
of
kindness!
When
you
were
saying
good-bye
to
her
at
the
door,
while
you
held
her
hand
in
one
hand,
with
the
other,
the
left,
you
slipped
the
note
into
her
pocket. I
saw
it, I
saw
it!" Luzhin
turned
pale. "What lies!"
he
cried impudently, "why,
how
could
you, standing
by
the
window,
see
the
note?
You
fancied
it
with
your
short-sighted eyes.
You
are
raving!" "No, I didn't fancy it.
And
though
I
was
standing
some
way
off, I
saw
it
all.
And
though
it
certainly
would
be
hard
to
distinguish
a
note
from
the
window—that's true—I
knew
for
certain
that
it
was
a hundred-rouble note, because,
when
you
were
going
to
give
Sofya Semyonovna
ten
roubles,
you
took
up
from
the
table a hundred-rouble
note
(I
saw
it
because
I
was
standing
near
then,
and
an
idea
struck
me
at
once,
so
that
I
did
not
forget
you
had
it
in
your
hand).
You
folded
it
and
kept
it
in
your
hand
all
the
time. I didn't
think
of
it
again
until,
when
you
were
getting
up,
you
changed
it
from
your
right
hand
to
your
left
and
nearly
dropped
it! I noticed
it
because
the
same
idea
struck
me
again,
that
you
meant
to
do
her
a
kindness
without
my seeing.
You
can
fancy
how
I
watched
you
and
I
saw
how
you
succeeded
in
slipping
it
into
her
pocket. I
saw
it, I
saw
it, I'll
take
my oath." Lebeziatnikov
was
almost
breathless.
Exclamations
arose
on
all
hands
chiefly
expressive
of
wonder,
but
some
were
menacing
in
tone.
They
all
crowded round Pyotr Petrovitch. Katerina Ivanovna flew
to
Lebeziatnikov. "I
was
mistaken
in
you!
Protect
her!
You
are
the
only
one
to
take
her
part!
She
is
an
orphan.
God
has sent you!" Katerina Ivanovna,
hardly
knowing
what
she
was
doing, sank
on
her
knees
before
him. "A
pack
of
nonsense!" yelled Luzhin,
roused
to
fury, "it's
all
nonsense
you've been talking! 'An
idea
struck you,
you
didn't think,
you
noticed'—what
does
it
amount to?
So
I gave
it
to
her
on
the
sly
on
purpose?
What
for?
With
what
object?
What
have
I
to
do
with
this...?" "What for? That's
what
I can't understand,
but
that
what
I
am
telling
you
is
the
fact, that's certain!
So
far
from
my being mistaken,
you
infamous
criminal man, I
remember
how,
on
account
of
it, a
question
occurred
to
me
at
once,
just
when
I
was
thanking
you
and
pressing
your
hand.
What
made
you
put
it
secretly
in
her
pocket?
Why
you
did
it
secretly, I mean?
Could
it
be
simply
to
conceal
it
from
me, knowing
that
my convictions
are
opposed
to
yours
and
that
I
do
not
approve
of
private
benevolence,
which
effects
no
radical cure? Well, I decided
that
you
really
were
ashamed
of
giving
such
a
large
sum
before
me. Perhaps, too, I thought,
he
wants
to
give
her
a surprise,
when
she
finds a
whole
hundred-rouble
note
in
her
pocket. (For I know,
some
benevolent
people
are
very
fond
of
decking
out
their
charitable
actions
in
that
way.)
Then
the
idea
struck me, too,
that
you
wanted
to
test her,
to
see
whether,
when
she
found it,
she
would
come
to
thank
you. Then, too,
that
you
wanted
to
avoid
thanks
and
that,
as
the
saying
is,
your
right
hand
should
not
know...
something
of
that
sort,
in
fact. I
thought
of
so
many
possibilities
that
I
put
off
considering
it,
but
still
thought
it
indelicate
to
show
you
that
I
knew
your
secret.
But
another
idea
struck
me
again
that
Sofya Semyonovna
might
easily
lose
the
money
before
she
noticed it,
that
was
why
I decided
to
come
in
here
to
call
her
out
of
the
room
and
to
tell
her
that
you
put
a
hundred
roubles
in
her
pocket.
But
on
my
way
I went
first
to
Madame
Kobilatnikov's
to
take
them
the
'General
Treatise
on
the
Positive Method'
and
especially
to
recommend
Piderit's
article
(and
also
Wagner's);
then
I
come
on
here
and
what
a
state
of
things
I find!
Now
could
I,
could
I,
have
all
these
ideas
and
reflections
if
I had
not
seen
you
put
the
hundred-rouble
note
in
her
pocket?"
When
Lebeziatnikov finished
his
long-winded
harangue
with
the
logical
deduction
at
the
end,
he
was
quite
tired,
and
the
perspiration
streamed
from
his
face.
He
could
not, alas,
even
express
himself
correctly
in
Russian,
though
he
knew
no
other
language,
so
that
he
was
quite
exhausted,
almost
emaciated
after
this
heroic
exploit.
But
his
speech
produced a powerful effect.
He
had spoken
with
such
vehemence,
with
such
conviction
that
everyone
obviously
believed
him. Pyotr Petrovitch felt
that
things
were
going badly
with
him. "What
is
it
to
do
with
me
if
silly
ideas
did
occur
to
you?"
he
shouted, "that's
no
evidence.
You
may
have
dreamt it, that's all!
And
I
tell
you,
you
are
lying, sir.
You
are
lying
and
slandering
from
some
spite against me, simply
from
pique,
because
I
did
not
agree
with
your
free-thinking, godless,
social
propositions!"
But
this
retort
did
not
benefit Pyotr Petrovitch.
Murmurs
of
disapproval
were
heard
on
all
sides. "Ah, that's
your
line now,
is
it!" cried Lebeziatnikov, "that's nonsense!
Call
the
police
and
I'll
take
my oath! There's
only
one
thing
I can't understand:
what
made
him
risk
such
a
contemptible
action. Oh, pitiful,
despicable
man!" "I
can
explain
why
he
risked
such
an
action,
and
if
necessary, I, too,
will
swear
to
it," Raskolnikov said
at
last
in
a
firm
voice,
and
he
stepped
forward.
He
appeared
to
be
firm
and
composed. Everyone felt clearly,
from
the
very
look
of
him
that
he
really
knew
about
it
and
that
the
mystery
would
be
solved. "Now I
can
explain
it
all
to
myself," said Raskolnikov,
addressing
Lebeziatnikov. "From
the
very
beginning
of
the
business, I suspected
that
there
was
some
scoundrelly
intrigue
at
the
bottom
of
it. I began
to
suspect
it
from
some
special
circumstances known
to
me
only,
which
I
will
explain
at
once
to
everyone:
they
account
for
everything.
Your
valuable evidence has finally
made
everything clear
to
me. I
beg
all,
all
to
listen.
This
gentleman (he pointed
to
Luzhin)
was
recently
engaged
to
be
married
to
a
young
lady—my sister, Avdotya Romanovna Raskolnikov.
But
coming
to
Petersburg
he
quarrelled
with
me,
the
day
before
yesterday,
at
our
first
meeting
and
I
drove
him
out
of
my room—I
have
two
witnesses
to
prove
it.
He
is
a
very
spiteful man....
The
day
before
yesterday
I
did
not
know
that
he
was
staying here,
in
your
room,
and
that
consequently
on
the
very
day
we
quarrelled—the
day
before
yesterday—he
saw
me
give
Katerina Ivanovna
some
money
for
the
funeral,
as
a
friend
of
the
late
Mr. Marmeladov.
He
at
once
wrote a
note
to
my mother
and
informed
her
that
I had
given
away
all
my money,
not
to
Katerina Ivanovna
but
to
Sofya Semyonovna,
and
referred
in
a
most
contemptible
way
to
the...
character
of
Sofya Semyonovna,
that
is, hinted
at
the
character
of
my
attitude
to
Sofya Semyonovna.
All
this
you
understand
was
with
the
object
of
dividing
me
from
my mother
and
sister,
by
insinuating
that
I
was
squandering
on
unworthy
objects
the
money
which
they
had sent
me
and
which
was
all
they
had.
Yesterday
evening,
before
my mother
and
sister
and
in
his
presence, I
declared
that
I had
given
the
money
to
Katerina Ivanovna
for
the
funeral
and
not
to
Sofya Semyonovna
and
that
I had
no
acquaintance
with
Sofya Semyonovna
and
had
never
seen
her
before, indeed.
At
the
same
time I added
that
he, Pyotr Petrovitch Luzhin,
with
all
his
virtues,
was
not
worth
Sofya Semyonovna's
little
finger,
though
he
spoke
so
ill
of
her.
To
his
question—would I
let
Sofya Semyonovna
sit
down
beside
my sister, I
answered
that
I had
already
done
so
that
day.
Irritated
that
my mother
and
sister
were
unwilling
to
quarrel
with
me
at
his
insinuations,
he
gradually began being unpardonably
rude
to
them. A
final
rupture
took
place
and
he
was
turned
out
of
the
house.
All
this
happened
yesterday
evening.
Now
I
beg
your
special
attention: consider:
if
he
had
now
succeeded
in
proving
that
Sofya Semyonovna
was
a thief,
he
would
have
shown
to
my mother
and
sister
that
he
was
almost
right
in
his
suspicions,
that
he
had
reason
to
be
angry
at
my
putting
my
sister
on
a
level
with
Sofya Semyonovna, that,
in
attacking
me,
he
was
protecting
and
preserving
the
honour
of
my sister,
his
betrothed.
In
fact
he
might
even,
through
all
this,
have
been
able
to
estrange
me
from
my family,
and
no
doubt
he
hoped
to
be
restored
to
favour
with
them;
to
say
nothing
of
revenging
himself
on
me
personally,
for
he
has grounds
for
supposing
that
the
honour
and
happiness
of
Sofya Semyonovna
are
very
precious
to
me.
That
was
what
he
was
working for! That's
how
I
understand
it. That's
the
whole
reason
for
it
and
there
can
be
no
other!"
It
was
like
this,
or
somewhat
like
this,
that
Raskolnikov
wound
up
his
speech
which
was
followed
very
attentively,
though
often
interrupted
by
exclamations
from
his
audience.
But
in
spite
of
interruptions
he
spoke
clearly, calmly, exactly, firmly.
His
decisive
voice,
his
tone
of
conviction
and
his
stern face
made
a
great
impression
on
everyone. "Yes, yes, that's it," Lebeziatnikov
assented
gleefully, "that
must
be
it,
for
he
asked
me,
as
soon
as
Sofya Semyonovna came
into
our
room,
whether
you
were
here,
whether
I had
seen
you
among
Katerina Ivanovna's guests.
He
called
me
aside
to
the
window
and
asked
me
in
secret.
It
was
essential
for
him
that
you
should
be
here! That's it, that's it!" Raskolnikov
was
attempting
to
speak
again,
but
they
did
not
let
him. Everyone
was
crowding
round Luzhin
with
threats
and
shouts
of
abuse.
But
Pyotr Petrovitch
was
not
intimidated.
Seeing
that
his
accusation
of
Sonia had completely failed,
he
had
recourse
to
insolence: "Allow me, gentlemen,
allow
me! Don't squeeze,
let
me
pass!"
he
said,
making
his
way
through
the
crowd. "And
no
threats,
if
you
please! I
assure
you
it
will
be
useless,
you
will
gain
nothing
by
it.
On
the
contrary, you'll
have
to
answer, gentlemen,
for
violently
obstructing
the
course
of
justice.
The
thief
has been
more
than
unmasked,
and
I
shall
prosecute.
Our
judges
are
not
so
blind and...
not
so
drunk,
and
will
not
believe
the
testimony
of
two
notorious
infidels, agitators,
and
atheists,
who
accuse
me
from
motives
of
personal
revenge
which
they
are
foolish
enough
to
admit.... Yes,
allow
me
to
pass!" "Don't
let
me
find a
trace
of
you
in
my room!
Kindly
leave
at
once,
and
everything
is
at
an
end
between
us!
When
I
think
of
the
trouble
I've been taking,
the
way
I've been expounding...
all
this
fortnight!" "I
told
you
myself
to-day
that
I
was
going,
when
you
tried
to
keep
me;
now
I
will
simply
add
that
you
are
a fool. I
advise
you
to
see
a doctor
for
your
brains
and
your
short
sight.
Let
me
pass, gentlemen!"
He
forced
his
way
through.
But
the
commissariat
clerk
was
unwilling
to
let
him
off
so
easily:
he
picked
up
a glass
from
the
table,
brandished
it
in
the
air
and
flung
it
at
Pyotr Petrovitch;
but
the
glass flew straight
at
Amalia Ivanovna.
She
screamed,
and
the
clerk, overbalancing,
fell
heavily
under
the
table. Pyotr Petrovitch
made
his
way
to
his
room
and
half
an
hour
later had left
the
house. Sonia,
timid
by
nature, had felt
before
that
day
that
she
could
be
ill-treated
more
easily
than
anyone,
and
that
she
could
be
wronged
with
impunity.
Yet
till
that
moment
she
had fancied
that
she
might
escape
misfortune
by
care, gentleness
and
submissiveness
before
everyone.
Her
disappointment
was
too
great.
She
could,
of
course,
bear
with
patience
and
almost
without
murmur
anything,
even
this.
But
for
the
first
minute
she
felt
it
too
bitter.
In
spite
of
her
triumph
and
her
justification—when
her
first
terror
and
stupefaction
had
passed
and
she
could
understand
it
all
clearly—the feeling
of
her
helplessness
and
of
the
wrong
done
to
her
made
her
heart
throb
with
anguish
and
she
was
overcome
with
hysterical
weeping.
At
last,
unable
to
bear
any
more,
she
rushed
out
of
the
room
and
ran
home,
almost
immediately
after
Luzhin's departure.
When
amidst
loud
laughter
the
glass flew
at
Amalia Ivanovna,
it
was
more
than
the
landlady
could
endure.
With
a
shriek
she
rushed
like
a
fury
at
Katerina Ivanovna,
considering
her
to
blame
for
everything. "Out
of
my lodgings!
At
once!
Quick
march!"
And
with
these
words
she
began snatching
up
everything
she
could
lay
her
hands
on
that
belonged
to
Katerina Ivanovna,
and
throwing
it
on
the
floor. Katerina Ivanovna, pale,
almost
fainting,
and
gasping
for
breath, jumped
up
from
the
bed
where
she
had sunk
in
exhaustion
and
darted
at
Amalia Ivanovna.
But
the
battle
was
too
unequal:
the
landlady
waved
her
away
like
a feather. "What!
As
though
that
godless
calumny
was
not
enough—this
vile
creature
attacks
me! What!
On
the
day
of
my husband's funeral I
am
turned
out
of
my lodging!
After
eating
my bread
and
salt
she
turns
me
into
the
street,
with
my orphans!
Where
am
I
to
go?" wailed
the
poor
woman,
sobbing
and
gasping. "Good God!"
she
cried
with
flashing eyes, "is
there
no
justice
upon
earth?
Whom
should
you
protect
if
not
us
orphans?
We
shall
see!
There
is
law
and
justice
on
earth,
there
is, I
will
find it!
Wait
a bit, godless creature! Polenka, stay
with
the
children, I'll
come
back.
Wait
for
me,
if
you
have
to
wait
in
the
street.
We
will
see
whether
there
is
justice
on
earth!"
And
throwing
over
her
head
that
green
shawl
which
Marmeladov had
mentioned
to
Raskolnikov, Katerina Ivanovna squeezed
her
way
through
the
disorderly
and
drunken
crowd
of
lodgers
who
still
filled
the
room, and, wailing
and
tearful,
she
ran
into
the
street—with a
vague
intention
of
going
at
once
somewhere
to
find justice. Polenka
with
the
two
little
ones
in
her
arms
crouched, terrified,
on
the
trunk
in
the
corner
of
the
room,
where
she
waited
trembling
for
her
mother
to
come
back. Amalia Ivanovna
raged
about
the
room, shrieking,
lamenting
and
throwing everything
she
came
across
on
the
floor.
The
lodgers talked incoherently,
some
commented
to
the
best
of
their
ability
on
what
had happened,
others
quarrelled
and
swore
at
one
another,
while
others
struck
up
a song.... "Now it's time
for
me
to
go,"
thought
Raskolnikov. "Well, Sofya Semyonovna,
we
shall
see
what
you'll
say
now!"
And
he
set
off
in
the
direction
of
Sonia's lodgings.