Fyodor Dostoyevsky Fullscreen Crime and Punishment, Part Six, Epilogue (1866)

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The address has been stamped mechanically on your memory.

You turned this way mechanically and yet precisely according to the direction, though you are not aware of it.

When I told you then, I hardly hoped you understood me.

You give yourself away too much, Rodion Romanovitch.

And another thing, I'm convinced there are lots of people in Petersburg who talk to themselves as they walk.

This is a town of crazy people.

If only we had scientific men, doctors, lawyers and philosophers might make most valuable investigations in Petersburg each in his own line.

There are few places where there are so many gloomy, strong and queer influences on the soul of man as in Petersburg.

The mere influences of climate mean so much.

And it's the administrative centre of all Russia and its character must be reflected on the whole country.

But that is neither here nor there now. The point is that I have several times watched you.

You walk out of your house--holding your head high--twenty paces from home you let it sink, and fold your hands behind your back.

You look and evidently see nothing before nor beside you.

At last you begin moving your lips and talking to yourself, and sometimes you wave one hand and declaim, and at last stand still in the middle of the road.

That's not at all the thing.

Someone may be watching you besides me, and it won't do you any good.

It's nothing really to do with me and I can't cure you, but, of course, you understand me."

"Do you know that I am being followed?" asked Raskolnikov, looking inquisitively at him.

"No, I know nothing about it," said Svidrigailov, seeming surprised.

"Well, then, let us leave me alone," Raskolnikov muttered, frowning.

"Very good, let us leave you alone."

"You had better tell me, if you come here to drink, and directed me twice to come here to you, why did you hide, and try to get away just now when I looked at the window from the street?

I saw it."

"He-he!

And why was it you lay on your sofa with closed eyes and pretended to be asleep, though you were wide awake while I stood in your doorway?

I saw it."

"I may have had... reasons.

You know that yourself." "And I may have had my reasons, though you don't know them."

Raskolnikov dropped his right elbow on the table, leaned his chin in the fingers of his right hand, and stared intently at Svidrigailov.

For a full minute he scrutinised his face, which had impressed him before.

It was a strange face, like a mask; white and red, with bright red lips, with a flaxen beard, and still thick flaxen hair.

His eyes were somehow too blue and their expression somehow too heavy and fixed.

There was something awfully unpleasant in that handsome face, which looked so wonderfully young for his age.

Svidrigailov was smartly dressed in light summer clothes and was particularly dainty in his linen.

He wore a huge ring with a precious stone in it.

"Have I got to bother myself about you, too, now?" said Raskolnikov suddenly, coming with nervous impatience straight to the point. "Even though perhaps you are the most dangerous man if you care to injure me, I don't want to put myself out any more.

I will show you at once that I don't prize myself as you probably think I do.

I've come to tell you at once that if you keep to your former intentions with regard to my sister and if you think to derive any benefit in that direction from what has been discovered of late, I will kill you before you get me locked up.

You can reckon on my word. You know that I can keep it.

And in the second place if you want to tell me anything--for I keep fancying all this time that you have something to tell me--make haste and tell it, for time is precious and very likely it will soon be too late."

"Why in such haste?" asked Svidrigailov, looking at him curiously.

"Everyone has his plans," Raskolnikov answered gloomily and impatiently.

"You urged me yourself to frankness just now, and at the first question you refuse to answer," Svidrigailov observed with a smile.

"You keep fancying that I have aims of my own and so you look at me with suspicion.

Of course it's perfectly natural in your position.

But though I should like to be friends with you, I shan't trouble myself to convince you of the contrary.

The game isn't worth the candle and I wasn't intending to talk to you about anything special."

"What did you want me, for, then?

It was you who came hanging about me."

"Why, simply as an interesting subject for observation.