Since you live here what do you think of it, would it be successful?"
"Ech, Marie, people don't read books here, and there are none here at all.
And are they likely to begin binding them!"
"Who are they?"
"The local readers and inhabitants generally, Marie."
"Well, then, speak more clearly. They indeed, and one doesn't know who they are.
You don't know grammar!"
"It's in the spirit of the language," Shatov muttered.
"Oh, get along with your spirit, you bore me.
Why shouldn't the local inhabitant or reader have his books bound?"
"Because reading books and having them bound are two different stages of development, and there's a vast gulf between them.
To begin with, a man gradually gets used to reading, in the course of ages of course, but takes no care of his books and throws them about, not thinking them worth attention.
But binding implies respect for books, and implies that not only he has grown fond of reading, but that he looks upon it as something of value.
That period has not been reached anywhere in Russia yet.
In Europe books have been bound for a long while."
"Though that's pedantic, anyway, it's not stupid, and reminds me of the time three years ago; you used to be rather clever sometimes three years ago."
She said this as disdainfully as her other capricious remarks.
"Marie, Marie," said Shatov, turning to her, much moved, "oh, Marie!
If you only knew how much has happened in those three years!
I heard afterwards that you despised me for changing my convictions.
But what are the men I've broken with?
The enemies of all true life, out-of-date Liberals who are afraid of their own independence, the flunkeys of thought, the enemies of individuality and freedom, the decrepit advocates of deadness and rottenness!
All they have to offer is senility, a glorious mediocrity of the most bourgeois kind, contemptible shallowness, a jealous equality, equality without individual dignity, equality as it's understood by flunkeys or by the French in '93. And the worst of it is there are swarms of scoundrels among them, swarms of scoundrels!"
"Yes, there are a lot of scoundrels," she brought out abruptly with painful effort.
She lay stretched out, motionless, as though afraid to move, with her head thrown back on the pillow, rather on one side, staring at the ceiling with exhausted but glowing eyes.
Her face was pale, her lips were dry and hot.
"You recognise it, Marie, you recognise it," cried Shatov.
She tried to shake her head, and suddenly the same spasm came over her again.
Again she hid her face in the pillow, and again for a full minute she squeezed Shatov's hand till it hurt. He had run up, beside himself with alarm.
"Marie, Marie!
But it may be very serious, Marie!"
"Be quiet... I won't have it, I won't have it," she screamed almost furiously, turning her face upwards again. "Don't dare to look at me with your sympathy!
Walk about the room, say something, talk...."
Shatov began muttering something again, like one distraught.
"What do you do here?" she asked, interrupting him with contemptuous impatience.
"I work in a merchant's office.
I could get a fair amount of money even here if I cared to, Marie."
"So much the better for you...."
"Oh, don't suppose I meant anything, Marie. I said it without thinking."
"And what do you do besides?
What are you preaching?
You can't exist without preaching, that's your character!"
"I am preaching God, Marie."
"In whom you don't believe yourself.
I never could see the idea of that."
"Let's leave that, Marie; we'll talk of that later."
"What sort of person was this Marya Timofyevna here?"
"We'll talk of that later too, Marie."
"Don't dare to say such things to me!
Is it true that her death may have been caused by... the wickedness... of these people?"