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rowing up nowadays, and go on playing they are cabmen and generals till they are forty!" "That's true, that's true," Olga Mihalovna assented. "Let me pass." "Now just consider: what is it leading to?" her uncle went on, barring her way. "How will this playing at being a general and a Conservative end? Already he has got into trouble! Yes, to stand his trial! I am very glad of it! That's what his noise and shouting has brought him to--to stand in the prisoner's dock. And it's not as though it were the Circuit Court or something: it's the Central Court! Nothing worse could be imagined, I think! And then he has quarrelled with every one! He is celebrating his name-day, and look, Vostryakov's not here, nor Yahontov, nor Vladimirov, nor Shevud, nor the Count. . . . There is no one, I imagine, more Conservative than Count Alexey Petrovitch, yet even he has not come. And he never will come again. He won't come, you will see!" "My God! but what has it to do with me?" asked Olga Mihalovna. "What has it to do with you? Why, you are his wife! You are clever, you have had a university education, and it was in your power to make him an honest worker!" "At the lectures I went to they did not teach us how to influence tiresome people. It seems as though I should have to apologize to all of you for having been at the University," said Olga Mihalovna sharply. "Listen, uncle. If people played the same scales over and over again the whole day long in your hearing, you wouldn't be able to sit still and listen, but would run away. I hear the same thing over again for days together all the year round. You must have pity on me at last." Her uncle pulled a very long face, then looked at her searchingly and twisted his lips into a mocking smile. "So that's how it is," he piped in a voice like an old woman's. "I beg your pardon!" he said, and made a ceremonious bow. "If you have fallen under his influence yourself, and have abandoned your convictions, you should have said so before. I beg your pardon!" "Yes, I have abandoned my convictions," she cried. "There; make the most of it!" "I beg your pardon!" Her uncle for the last time made her a ceremonious bow, a little on one side, and, shrinking into himself, made a scrape with his foot and walked back. "Idiot!" thought Olga Mihalovna. "I hope he will go home." She found the ladies and the young people among the raspberries in the kitchen garden. Some were eating raspbe
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