<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<p>Later on Raskolnikov happened to find out why the huckster and his wife
had invited Lizaveta. It was a very ordinary matter and there was nothing
exceptional about it. A family who had come to the town and been reduced
to poverty were selling their household goods and clothes, all women's
things. As the things would have fetched little in the market, they were
looking for a dealer. This was Lizaveta's business. She undertook such
jobs and was frequently employed, as she was very honest and always fixed
a fair price and stuck to it. She spoke as a rule little and, as we have
said already, she was very submissive and timid.</p>
<p>But Raskolnikov had become superstitious of late. The traces of
superstition remained in him long after, and were almost ineradicable. And
in all this he was always afterwards disposed to see something strange and
mysterious, as it were, the presence of some peculiar influences and
coincidences. In the previous winter a student he knew called Pokorev, who
had left for Harkov, had chanced in conversation to give him the address
of Alyona Ivanovna, the old pawnbroker, in case he might want to pawn
anything. For a long while he did not go to her, for he had lessons and
managed to get along somehow. Six weeks ago he had remembered the address;
he had two articles that could be pawned: his father's old silver watch
and a little gold ring with three red stones, a present from his sister at
parting. He decided to take the ring. When he found the old woman he had
felt an insurmountable repulsion for her at the first glance, though he
knew nothing special about her. He got two roubles from her and went into
a miserable little tavern on his way home. He asked for tea, sat down and
sank into deep thought. A strange idea was pecking at his brain like a
chicken in the egg, and very, very much absorbed him.</p>
<p>Almost beside him at the next table there was sitting a student, whom he
did not know and had never seen, and with him a young officer. They had
played a game of billiards and began drinking tea. All at once he heard
the student mention to the officer the pawnbroker Alyona Ivanovna and give
him her address. This of itself seemed strange to Raskolnikov; he had just
come from her and here at once he heard her name. Of course it was a
chance, but he could not shake off a very extraordinary impression, and
here someone seemed to be speaking expressly for him; the student began
telling his friend various details about Alyona Ivanovna.</p>
<p>"She is first-rate," he said. "You can always get money from her. She is
as rich as a Jew, she can give you five thousand roubles at a time and she
is not above taking a pledge for a rouble. Lots of our fellows have had
dealings with her. But she is an awful old harpy...."</p>
<p>And he began describing how spiteful and uncertain she was, how if you
were only a day late with your interest the pledge was lost; how she gave
a quarter of the value of an article and took five and even seven percent
a month on it and so on. The student chattered on, saying that she had a
sister Lizaveta, whom the wretched little creature was continually
beating, and kept in complete bondage like a small child, though Lizaveta
was at least six feet high.</p>
<p>"There's a phenomenon for you," cried the student and he laughed.</p>
<p>They began talking about Lizaveta. The student spoke about her with a
peculiar relish and was continually laughing and the officer listened with
great interest and asked him to send Lizaveta to do some mending for him.
Raskolnikov did not miss a word and learned everything about her. Lizaveta
was younger than the old woman and was her half-sister, being the child of
a different mother. She was thirty-five. She worked day and night for her
sister, and besides doing the cooking and the washing, she did sewing and
worked as a charwoman and gave her sister all she earned. She did not dare
to accept an order or job of any kind without her sister's permission. The
old woman had already made her will, and Lizaveta knew of it, and by this
will she would not get a farthing; nothing but the movables, chairs and so
on; all the money was left to a monastery in the province of N——,
that prayers might be said for her in perpetuity. Lizaveta was of lower
rank than her sister, unmarried and awfully uncouth in appearance,
remarkably tall with long feet that looked as if they were bent outwards.
She always wore battered goatskin shoes, and was clean in her person. What
the student expressed most surprise and amusement about was the fact that
Lizaveta was continually with child.</p>
<p>"But you say she is hideous?" observed the officer.</p>
<p>"Yes, she is so dark-skinned and looks like a soldier dressed up, but you
know she is not at all hideous. She has such a good-natured face and eyes.
Strikingly so. And the proof of it is that lots of people are attracted by
her. She is such a soft, gentle creature, ready to put up with anything,
always willing, willing to do anything. And her smile is really very
sweet."</p>
<p>"You seem to find her attractive yourself," laughed the officer.</p>
<p>"From her queerness. No, I'll tell you what. I could kill that damned old
woman and make off with her money, I assure you, without the faintest
conscience-prick," the student added with warmth. The officer laughed
again while Raskolnikov shuddered. How strange it was!</p>
<p>"Listen, I want to ask you a serious question," the student said hotly. "I
was joking of course, but look here; on one side we have a stupid,
senseless, worthless, spiteful, ailing, horrid old woman, not simply
useless but doing actual mischief, who has not an idea what she is living
for herself, and who will die in a day or two in any case. You understand?
You understand?"</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, I understand," answered the officer, watching his excited
companion attentively.</p>
<p>"Well, listen then. On the other side, fresh young lives thrown away for
want of help and by thousands, on every side! A hundred thousand good
deeds could be done and helped, on that old woman's money which will be
buried in a monastery! Hundreds, thousands perhaps, might be set on the
right path; dozens of families saved from destitution, from ruin, from
vice, from the Lock hospitals—and all with her money. Kill her, take
her money and with the help of it devote oneself to the service of
humanity and the good of all. What do you think, would not one tiny crime
be wiped out by thousands of good deeds? For one life thousands would be
saved from corruption and decay. One death, and a hundred lives in
exchange—it's simple arithmetic! Besides, what value has the life of
that sickly, stupid, ill-natured old woman in the balance of existence! No
more than the life of a louse, of a black-beetle, less in fact because the
old woman is doing harm. She is wearing out the lives of others; the other
day she bit Lizaveta's finger out of spite; it almost had to be
amputated."</p>
<p>"Of course she does not deserve to live," remarked the officer, "but there
it is, it's nature."</p>
<p>"Oh, well, brother, but we have to correct and direct nature, and, but for
that, we should drown in an ocean of prejudice. But for that, there would
never have been a single great man. They talk of duty, conscience—I
don't want to say anything against duty and conscience;—but the
point is, what do we mean by them? Stay, I have another question to ask
you. Listen!"</p>
<p>"No, you stay, I'll ask you a question. Listen!"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"You are talking and speechifying away, but tell me, would you kill the
old woman <i>yourself</i>?"</p>
<p>"Of course not! I was only arguing the justice of it.... It's nothing to
do with me...."</p>
<p>"But I think, if you would not do it yourself, there's no justice about
it.... Let us have another game."</p>
<p>Raskolnikov was violently agitated. Of course, it was all ordinary
youthful talk and thought, such as he had often heard before in different
forms and on different themes. But why had he happened to hear such a
discussion and such ideas at the very moment when his own brain was just
conceiving... <i>the very same ideas</i>? And why, just at the moment when
he had brought away the embryo of his idea from the old woman had he
dropped at once upon a conversation about her? This coincidence always
seemed strange to him. This trivial talk in a tavern had an immense
influence on him in his later action; as though there had really been in
it something preordained, some guiding hint....</p>
<hr />
<p>On returning from the Hay Market he flung himself on the sofa and sat for
a whole hour without stirring. Meanwhile it got dark; he had no candle
and, indeed, it did not occur to him to light up. He could never recollect
whether he had been thinking about anything at that time. At last he was
conscious of his former fever and shivering, and he realised with relief
that he could lie down on the sofa. Soon heavy, leaden sleep came over
him, as it were crushing him.</p>
<p>He slept an extraordinarily long time and without dreaming. Nastasya,
coming into his room at ten o'clock the next morning, had difficulty in
rousing him. She brought him in tea and bread. The tea was again the
second brew and again in her own tea-pot.</p>
<p>"My goodness, how he sleeps!" she cried indignantly. "And he is always
asleep."</p>
<p>He got up with an effort. His head ached, he stood up, took a turn in his
garret and sank back on the sofa again.</p>
<p>"Going to sleep again," cried Nastasya. "Are you ill, eh?"</p>
<p>He made no reply.</p>
<p>"Do you want some tea?"</p>
<p>"Afterwards," he said with an effort, closing his eyes again and turning
to the wall.</p>
<p>Nastasya stood over him.</p>
<p>"Perhaps he really is ill," she said, turned and went out. She came in
again at two o'clock with soup. He was lying as before. The tea stood
untouched. Nastasya felt positively offended and began wrathfully rousing
him.</p>
<p>"Why are you lying like a log?" she shouted, looking at him with
repulsion.</p>
<p>He got up, and sat down again, but said nothing and stared at the floor.</p>
<p>"Are you ill or not?" asked Nastasya and again received no answer. "You'd
better go out and get a breath of air," she said after a pause. "Will you
eat it or not?"</p>
<p>"Afterwards," he said weakly. "You can go."</p>
<p>And he motioned her out.</p>
<p>She remained a little longer, looked at him with compassion and went out.</p>
<p>A few minutes afterwards, he raised his eyes and looked for a long while
at the tea and the soup. Then he took the bread, took up a spoon and began
to eat.</p>
<p>He ate a little, three or four spoonfuls, without appetite, as it were
mechanically. His head ached less. After his meal he stretched himself on
the sofa again, but now he could not sleep; he lay without stirring, with
his face in the pillow. He was haunted by day-dreams and such strange
day-dreams; in one, that kept recurring, he fancied that he was in Africa,
in Egypt, in some sort of oasis. The caravan was resting, the camels were
peacefully lying down; the palms stood all around in a complete circle;
all the party were at dinner. But he was drinking water from a spring
which flowed gurgling close by. And it was so cool, it was wonderful,
wonderful, blue, cold water running among the parti-coloured stones and
over the clean sand which glistened here and there like gold.... Suddenly
he heard a clock strike. He started, roused himself, raised his head,
looked out of the window, and seeing how late it was, suddenly jumped up
wide awake as though someone had pulled him off the sofa. He crept on
tiptoe to the door, stealthily opened it and began listening on the
staircase. His heart beat terribly. But all was quiet on the stairs as if
everyone was asleep.... It seemed to him strange and monstrous that he
could have slept in such forgetfulness from the previous day and had done
nothing, had prepared nothing yet.... And meanwhile perhaps it had struck
six. And his drowsiness and stupefaction were followed by an
extraordinary, feverish, as it were distracted haste. But the preparations
to be made were few. He concentrated all his energies on thinking of
everything and forgetting nothing; and his heart kept beating and thumping
so that he could hardly breathe. First he had to make a noose and sew it
into his overcoat—a work of a moment. He rummaged under his pillow
and picked out amongst the linen stuffed away under it, a worn out, old
unwashed shirt. From its rags he tore a long strip, a couple of inches
wide and about sixteen inches long. He folded this strip in two, took off
his wide, strong summer overcoat of some stout cotton material (his only
outer garment) and began sewing the two ends of the rag on the inside,
under the left armhole. His hands shook as he sewed, but he did it
successfully so that nothing showed outside when he put the coat on again.
The needle and thread he had got ready long before and they lay on his
table in a piece of paper. As for the noose, it was a very ingenious
device of his own; the noose was intended for the axe. It was impossible
for him to carry the axe through the street in his hands. And if hidden
under his coat he would still have had to support it with his hand, which
would have been noticeable. Now he had only to put the head of the axe in
the noose, and it would hang quietly under his arm on the inside. Putting
his hand in his coat pocket, he could hold the end of the handle all the
way, so that it did not swing; and as the coat was very full, a regular
sack in fact, it could not be seen from outside that he was holding
something with the hand that was in the pocket. This noose, too, he had
designed a fortnight before.</p>
<p>When he had finished with this, he thrust his hand into a little opening
between his sofa and the floor, fumbled in the left corner and drew out
the <i>pledge</i>, which he had got ready long before and hidden there.
This pledge was, however, only a smoothly planed piece of wood the size
and thickness of a silver cigarette case. He picked up this piece of wood
in one of his wanderings in a courtyard where there was some sort of a
workshop. Afterwards he had added to the wood a thin smooth piece of iron,
which he had also picked up at the same time in the street. Putting the
iron which was a little the smaller on the piece of wood, he fastened them
very firmly, crossing and re-crossing the thread round them; then wrapped
them carefully and daintily in clean white paper and tied up the parcel so
that it would be very difficult to untie it. This was in order to divert
the attention of the old woman for a time, while she was trying to undo
the knot, and so to gain a moment. The iron strip was added to give
weight, so that the woman might not guess the first minute that the
"thing" was made of wood. All this had been stored by him beforehand under
the sofa. He had only just got the pledge out when he heard someone
suddenly about in the yard.</p>
<p>"It struck six long ago."</p>
<p>"Long ago! My God!"</p>
<p>He rushed to the door, listened, caught up his hat and began to descend
his thirteen steps cautiously, noiselessly, like a cat. He had still the
most important thing to do—to steal the axe from the kitchen. That
the deed must be done with an axe he had decided long ago. He had also a
pocket pruning-knife, but he could not rely on the knife and still less on
his own strength, and so resolved finally on the axe. We may note in
passing, one peculiarity in regard to all the final resolutions taken by
him in the matter; they had one strange characteristic: the more final
they were, the more hideous and the more absurd they at once became in his
eyes. In spite of all his agonising inward struggle, he never for a single
instant all that time could believe in the carrying out of his plans.</p>
<p>And, indeed, if it had ever happened that everything to the least point
could have been considered and finally settled, and no uncertainty of any
kind had remained, he would, it seems, have renounced it all as something
absurd, monstrous and impossible. But a whole mass of unsettled points and
uncertainties remained. As for getting the axe, that trifling business
cost him no anxiety, for nothing could be easier. Nastasya was continually
out of the house, especially in the evenings; she would run in to the
neighbours or to a shop, and always left the door ajar. It was the one
thing the landlady was always scolding her about. And so, when the time
came, he would only have to go quietly into the kitchen and to take the
axe, and an hour later (when everything was over) go in and put it back
again. But these were doubtful points. Supposing he returned an hour later
to put it back, and Nastasya had come back and was on the spot. He would
of course have to go by and wait till she went out again. But supposing
she were in the meantime to miss the axe, look for it, make an outcry—that
would mean suspicion or at least grounds for suspicion.</p>
<p>But those were all trifles which he had not even begun to consider, and
indeed he had no time. He was thinking of the chief point, and put off
trifling details, until <i>he could believe in it all</i>. But that seemed
utterly unattainable. So it seemed to himself at least. He could not
imagine, for instance, that he would sometime leave off thinking, get up
and simply go there.... Even his late experiment (i.e. his visit with the
object of a final survey of the place) was simply an attempt at an
experiment, far from being the real thing, as though one should say "come,
let us go and try it—why dream about it!"—and at once he had
broken down and had run away cursing, in a frenzy with himself. Meanwhile
it would seem, as regards the moral question, that his analysis was
complete; his casuistry had become keen as a razor, and he could not find
rational objections in himself. But in the last resort he simply ceased to
believe in himself, and doggedly, slavishly sought arguments in all
directions, fumbling for them, as though someone were forcing and drawing
him to it.</p>
<p>At first—long before indeed—he had been much occupied with one
question; why almost all crimes are so badly concealed and so easily
detected, and why almost all criminals leave such obvious traces? He had
come gradually to many different and curious conclusions, and in his
opinion the chief reason lay not so much in the material impossibility of
concealing the crime, as in the criminal himself. Almost every criminal is
subject to a failure of will and reasoning power by a childish and
phenomenal heedlessness, at the very instant when prudence and caution are
most essential. It was his conviction that this eclipse of reason and
failure of will power attacked a man like a disease, developed gradually
and reached its highest point just before the perpetration of the crime,
continued with equal violence at the moment of the crime and for longer or
shorter time after, according to the individual case, and then passed off
like any other disease. The question whether the disease gives rise to the
crime, or whether the crime from its own peculiar nature is always
accompanied by something of the nature of disease, he did not yet feel
able to decide.</p>
<p>When he reached these conclusions, he decided that in his own case there
could not be such a morbid reaction, that his reason and will would remain
unimpaired at the time of carrying out his design, for the simple reason
that his design was "not a crime...." We will omit all the process by
means of which he arrived at this last conclusion; we have run too far
ahead already.... We may add only that the practical, purely material
difficulties of the affair occupied a secondary position in his mind. "One
has but to keep all one's will-power and reason to deal with them, and
they will all be overcome at the time when once one has familiarised
oneself with the minutest details of the business...." But this
preparation had never been begun. His final decisions were what he came to
trust least, and when the hour struck, it all came to pass quite
differently, as it were accidentally and unexpectedly.</p>
<p>One trifling circumstance upset his calculations, before he had even left
the staircase. When he reached the landlady's kitchen, the door of which
was open as usual, he glanced cautiously in to see whether, in Nastasya's
absence, the landlady herself was there, or if not, whether the door to
her own room was closed, so that she might not peep out when he went in
for the axe. But what was his amazement when he suddenly saw that Nastasya
was not only at home in the kitchen, but was occupied there, taking linen
out of a basket and hanging it on a line. Seeing him, she left off hanging
the clothes, turned to him and stared at him all the time he was passing.
He turned away his eyes, and walked past as though he noticed nothing. But
it was the end of everything; he had not the axe! He was overwhelmed.</p>
<p>"What made me think," he reflected, as he went under the gateway, "what
made me think that she would be sure not to be at home at that moment!
Why, why, why did I assume this so certainly?"</p>
<p>He was crushed and even humiliated. He could have laughed at himself in
his anger.... A dull animal rage boiled within him.</p>
<p>He stood hesitating in the gateway. To go into the street, to go a walk
for appearance' sake was revolting; to go back to his room, even more
revolting. "And what a chance I have lost for ever!" he muttered, standing
aimlessly in the gateway, just opposite the porter's little dark room,
which was also open. Suddenly he started. From the porter's room, two
paces away from him, something shining under the bench to the right caught
his eye.... He looked about him—nobody. He approached the room on
tiptoe, went down two steps into it and in a faint voice called the
porter. "Yes, not at home! Somewhere near though, in the yard, for the
door is wide open." He dashed to the axe (it was an axe) and pulled it out
from under the bench, where it lay between two chunks of wood; at once,
before going out, he made it fast in the noose, he thrust both hands into
his pockets and went out of the room; no one had noticed him! "When reason
fails, the devil helps!" he thought with a strange grin. This chance
raised his spirits extraordinarily.</p>
<p>He walked along quietly and sedately, without hurry, to avoid awakening
suspicion. He scarcely looked at the passers-by, tried to escape looking
at their faces at all, and to be as little noticeable as possible.
Suddenly he thought of his hat. "Good heavens! I had the money the day
before yesterday and did not get a cap to wear instead!" A curse rose from
the bottom of his soul.</p>
<p>Glancing out of the corner of his eye into a shop, he saw by a clock on
the wall that it was ten minutes past seven. He had to make haste and at
the same time to go someway round, so as to approach the house from the
other side....</p>
<p>When he had happened to imagine all this beforehand, he had sometimes
thought that he would be very much afraid. But he was not very much afraid
now, was not afraid at all, indeed. His mind was even occupied by
irrelevant matters, but by nothing for long. As he passed the Yusupov
garden, he was deeply absorbed in considering the building of great
fountains, and of their refreshing effect on the atmosphere in all the
squares. By degrees he passed to the conviction that if the summer garden
were extended to the field of Mars, and perhaps joined to the garden of
the Mihailovsky Palace, it would be a splendid thing and a great benefit
to the town. Then he was interested by the question why in all great towns
men are not simply driven by necessity, but in some peculiar way inclined
to live in those parts of the town where there are no gardens nor
fountains; where there is most dirt and smell and all sorts of nastiness.
Then his own walks through the Hay Market came back to his mind, and for a
moment he waked up to reality. "What nonsense!" he thought, "better think
of nothing at all!"</p>
<p>"So probably men led to execution clutch mentally at every object that
meets them on the way," flashed through his mind, but simply flashed, like
lightning; he made haste to dismiss this thought.... And by now he was
near; here was the house, here was the gate. Suddenly a clock somewhere
struck once. "What! can it be half-past seven? Impossible, it must be
fast!"</p>
<p>Luckily for him, everything went well again at the gates. At that very
moment, as though expressly for his benefit, a huge waggon of hay had just
driven in at the gate, completely screening him as he passed under the
gateway, and the waggon had scarcely had time to drive through into the
yard, before he had slipped in a flash to the right. On the other side of
the waggon he could hear shouting and quarrelling; but no one noticed him
and no one met him. Many windows looking into that huge quadrangular yard
were open at that moment, but he did not raise his head—he had not
the strength to. The staircase leading to the old woman's room was close
by, just on the right of the gateway. He was already on the stairs....</p>
<p>Drawing a breath, pressing his hand against his throbbing heart, and once
more feeling for the axe and setting it straight, he began softly and
cautiously ascending the stairs, listening every minute. But the stairs,
too, were quite deserted; all the doors were shut; he met no one. One flat
indeed on the first floor was wide open and painters were at work in it,
but they did not glance at him. He stood still, thought a minute and went
on. "Of course it would be better if they had not been here, but... it's
two storeys above them."</p>
<p>And there was the fourth storey, here was the door, here was the flat
opposite, the empty one. The flat underneath the old woman's was
apparently empty also; the visiting card nailed on the door had been torn
off—they had gone away!... He was out of breath. For one instant the
thought floated through his mind "Shall I go back?" But he made no answer
and began listening at the old woman's door, a dead silence. Then he
listened again on the staircase, listened long and intently... then looked
about him for the last time, pulled himself together, drew himself up, and
once more tried the axe in the noose. "Am I very pale?" he wondered. "Am I
not evidently agitated? She is mistrustful.... Had I better wait a little
longer... till my heart leaves off thumping?"</p>
<p>But his heart did not leave off. On the contrary, as though to spite him,
it throbbed more and more violently. He could stand it no longer, he
slowly put out his hand to the bell and rang. Half a minute later he rang
again, more loudly.</p>
<p>No answer. To go on ringing was useless and out of place. The old woman
was, of course, at home, but she was suspicious and alone. He had some
knowledge of her habits... and once more he put his ear to the door.
Either his senses were peculiarly keen (which it is difficult to suppose),
or the sound was really very distinct. Anyway, he suddenly heard something
like the cautious touch of a hand on the lock and the rustle of a skirt at
the very door. Someone was standing stealthily close to the lock and just
as he was doing on the outside was secretly listening within, and seemed
to have her ear to the door.... He moved a little on purpose and muttered
something aloud that he might not have the appearance of hiding, then rang
a third time, but quietly, soberly, and without impatience, Recalling it
afterwards, that moment stood out in his mind vividly, distinctly, for
ever; he could not make out how he had had such cunning, for his mind was
as it were clouded at moments and he was almost unconscious of his
body.... An instant later he heard the latch unfastened.</p>
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