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<h2> CHAPTER VII </h2>
<p>The same day, about seven o'clock in the evening, Raskolnikov was on his
way to his mother's and sister's lodging—the lodging in Bakaleyev's
house which Razumihin had found for them. The stairs went up from the
street. Raskolnikov walked with lagging steps, as though still hesitating
whether to go or not. But nothing would have turned him back: his decision
was taken.</p>
<p>"Besides, it doesn't matter, they still know nothing," he thought, "and
they are used to thinking of me as eccentric."</p>
<p>He was appallingly dressed: his clothes torn and dirty, soaked with a
night's rain. His face was almost distorted from fatigue, exposure, the
inward conflict that had lasted for twenty-four hours. He had spent all
the previous night alone, God knows where. But anyway he had reached a
decision.</p>
<p>He knocked at the door which was opened by his mother. Dounia was not at
home. Even the servant happened to be out. At first Pulcheria Alexandrovna
was speechless with joy and surprise; then she took him by the hand and
drew him into the room.</p>
<p>"Here you are!" she began, faltering with joy. "Don't be angry with me,
Rodya, for welcoming you so foolishly with tears: I am laughing not
crying. Did you think I was crying? No, I am delighted, but I've got into
such a stupid habit of shedding tears. I've been like that ever since your
father's death. I cry for anything. Sit down, dear boy, you must be tired;
I see you are. Ah, how muddy you are."</p>
<p>"I was in the rain yesterday, mother...." Raskolnikov began.</p>
<p>"No, no," Pulcheria Alexandrovna hurriedly interrupted, "you thought I was
going to cross-question you in the womanish way I used to; don't be
anxious, I understand, I understand it all: now I've learned the ways here
and truly I see for myself that they are better. I've made up my mind once
for all: how could I understand your plans and expect you to give an
account of them? God knows what concerns and plans you may have, or what
ideas you are hatching; so it's not for me to keep nudging your elbow,
asking you what you are thinking about? But, my goodness! why am I running
to and fro as though I were crazy...? I am reading your article in the
magazine for the third time, Rodya. Dmitri Prokofitch brought it to me.
Directly I saw it I cried out to myself: 'There, foolish one,' I thought,
'that's what he is busy about; that's the solution of the mystery! Learned
people are always like that. He may have some new ideas in his head just
now; he is thinking them over and I worry him and upset him.' I read it,
my dear, and of course there was a great deal I did not understand; but
that's only natural—how should I?"</p>
<p>"Show me, mother."</p>
<p>Raskolnikov took the magazine and glanced at his article. Incongruous as
it was with his mood and his circumstances, he felt that strange and
bitter sweet sensation that every author experiences the first time he
sees himself in print; besides, he was only twenty-three. It lasted only a
moment. After reading a few lines he frowned and his heart throbbed with
anguish. He recalled all the inward conflict of the preceding months. He
flung the article on the table with disgust and anger.</p>
<p>"But, however foolish I may be, Rodya, I can see for myself that you will
very soon be one of the leading—if not the leading man—in the
world of Russian thought. And they dared to think you were mad! You don't
know, but they really thought that. Ah, the despicable creatures, how
could they understand genius! And Dounia, Dounia was all but believing it—what
do you say to that? Your father sent twice to magazines—the first
time poems (I've got the manuscript and will show you) and the second time
a whole novel (I begged him to let me copy it out) and how we prayed that
they should be taken—they weren't! I was breaking my heart, Rodya,
six or seven days ago over your food and your clothes and the way you are
living. But now I see again how foolish I was, for you can attain any
position you like by your intellect and talent. No doubt you don't care
about that for the present and you are occupied with much more important
matters...."</p>
<p>"Dounia's not at home, mother?"</p>
<p>"No, Rodya. I often don't see her; she leaves me alone. Dmitri Prokofitch
comes to see me, it's so good of him, and he always talks about you. He
loves you and respects you, my dear. I don't say that Dounia is very
wanting in consideration. I am not complaining. She has her ways and I
have mine; she seems to have got some secrets of late and I never have any
secrets from you two. Of course, I am sure that Dounia has far too much
sense, and besides she loves you and me... but I don't know what it will
all lead to. You've made me so happy by coming now, Rodya, but she has
missed you by going out; when she comes in I'll tell her: 'Your brother
came in while you were out. Where have you been all this time?' You
mustn't spoil me, Rodya, you know; come when you can, but if you can't, it
doesn't matter, I can wait. I shall know, anyway, that you are fond of me,
that will be enough for me. I shall read what you write, I shall hear
about you from everyone, and sometimes you'll come yourself to see me.
What could be better? Here you've come now to comfort your mother, I see
that."</p>
<p>Here Pulcheria Alexandrovna began to cry.</p>
<p>"Here I am again! Don't mind my foolishness. My goodness, why am I sitting
here?" she cried, jumping up. "There is coffee and I don't offer you any.
Ah, that's the selfishness of old age. I'll get it at once!"</p>
<p>"Mother, don't trouble, I am going at once. I haven't come for that.
Please listen to me."</p>
<p>Pulcheria Alexandrovna went up to him timidly.</p>
<p>"Mother, whatever happens, whatever you hear about me, whatever you are
told about me, will you always love me as you do now?" he asked suddenly
from the fullness of his heart, as though not thinking of his words and
not weighing them.</p>
<p>"Rodya, Rodya, what is the matter? How can you ask me such a question?
Why, who will tell me anything about you? Besides, I shouldn't believe
anyone, I should refuse to listen."</p>
<p>"I've come to assure you that I've always loved you and I am glad that we
are alone, even glad Dounia is out," he went on with the same impulse. "I
have come to tell you that though you will be unhappy, you must believe
that your son loves you now more than himself, and that all you thought
about me, that I was cruel and didn't care about you, was all a mistake. I
shall never cease to love you.... Well, that's enough: I thought I must do
this and begin with this...."</p>
<p>Pulcheria Alexandrovna embraced him in silence, pressing him to her bosom
and weeping gently.</p>
<p>"I don't know what is wrong with you, Rodya," she said at last. "I've been
thinking all this time that we were simply boring you and now I see that
there is a great sorrow in store for you, and that's why you are
miserable. I've foreseen it a long time, Rodya. Forgive me for speaking
about it. I keep thinking about it and lie awake at nights. Your sister
lay talking in her sleep all last night, talking of nothing but you. I
caught something, but I couldn't make it out. I felt all the morning as
though I were going to be hanged, waiting for something, expecting
something, and now it has come! Rodya, Rodya, where are you going? You are
going away somewhere?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"That's what I thought! I can come with you, you know, if you need me. And
Dounia, too; she loves you, she loves you dearly—and Sofya
Semyonovna may come with us if you like. You see, I am glad to look upon
her as a daughter even... Dmitri Prokofitch will help us to go together.
But... where... are you going?"</p>
<p>"Good-bye, mother."</p>
<p>"What, to-day?" she cried, as though losing him for ever.</p>
<p>"I can't stay, I must go now...."</p>
<p>"And can't I come with you?"</p>
<p>"No, but kneel down and pray to God for me. Your prayer perhaps will reach
Him."</p>
<p>"Let me bless you and sign you with the cross. That's right, that's right.
Oh, God, what are we doing?"</p>
<p>Yes, he was glad, he was very glad that there was no one there, that he
was alone with his mother. For the first time after all those awful months
his heart was softened. He fell down before her, he kissed her feet and
both wept, embracing. And she was not surprised and did not question him
this time. For some days she had realised that something awful was
happening to her son and that now some terrible minute had come for him.</p>
<p>"Rodya, my darling, my first born," she said sobbing, "now you are just as
when you were little. You would run like this to me and hug me and kiss
me. When your father was living and we were poor, you comforted us simply
by being with us and when I buried your father, how often we wept together
at his grave and embraced, as now. And if I've been crying lately, it's
that my mother's heart had a foreboding of trouble. The first time I saw
you, that evening, you remember, as soon as we arrived here, I guessed
simply from your eyes. My heart sank at once, and to-day when I opened the
door and looked at you, I thought the fatal hour had come. Rodya, Rodya,
you are not going away to-day?"</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>"You'll come again?"</p>
<p>"Yes... I'll come."</p>
<p>"Rodya, don't be angry, I don't dare to question you. I know I mustn't.
Only say two words to me—is it far where you are going?"</p>
<p>"Very far."</p>
<p>"What is awaiting you there? Some post or career for you?"</p>
<p>"What God sends... only pray for me." Raskolnikov went to the door, but
she clutched him and gazed despairingly into his eyes. Her face worked
with terror.</p>
<p>"Enough, mother," said Raskolnikov, deeply regretting that he had come.</p>
<p>"Not for ever, it's not yet for ever? You'll come, you'll come to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"I will, I will, good-bye." He tore himself away at last.</p>
<p>It was a warm, fresh, bright evening; it had cleared up in the morning.
Raskolnikov went to his lodgings; he made haste. He wanted to finish all
before sunset. He did not want to meet anyone till then. Going up the
stairs he noticed that Nastasya rushed from the samovar to watch him
intently. "Can anyone have come to see me?" he wondered. He had a
disgusted vision of Porfiry. But opening his door he saw Dounia. She was
sitting alone, plunged in deep thought, and looked as though she had been
waiting a long time. He stopped short in the doorway. She rose from the
sofa in dismay and stood up facing him. Her eyes, fixed upon him, betrayed
horror and infinite grief. And from those eyes alone he saw at once that
she knew.</p>
<p>"Am I to come in or go away?" he asked uncertainly.</p>
<p>"I've been all day with Sofya Semyonovna. We were both waiting for you. We
thought that you would be sure to come there."</p>
<p>Raskolnikov went into the room and sank exhausted on a chair.</p>
<p>"I feel weak, Dounia, I am very tired; and I should have liked at this
moment to be able to control myself."</p>
<p>He glanced at her mistrustfully.</p>
<p>"Where were you all night?"</p>
<p>"I don't remember clearly. You see, sister, I wanted to make up my mind
once for all, and several times I walked by the Neva, I remember that I
wanted to end it all there, but... I couldn't make up my mind," he
whispered, looking at her mistrustfully again.</p>
<p>"Thank God! That was just what we were afraid of, Sofya Semyonovna and I.
Then you still have faith in life? Thank God, thank God!"</p>
<p>Raskolnikov smiled bitterly.</p>
<p>"I haven't faith, but I have just been weeping in mother's arms; I haven't
faith, but I have just asked her to pray for me. I don't know how it is,
Dounia, I don't understand it."</p>
<p>"Have you been at mother's? Have you told her?" cried Dounia,
horror-stricken. "Surely you haven't done that?"</p>
<p>"No, I didn't tell her... in words; but she understood a great deal. She
heard you talking in your sleep. I am sure she half understands it
already. Perhaps I did wrong in going to see her. I don't know why I did
go. I am a contemptible person, Dounia."</p>
<p>"A contemptible person, but ready to face suffering! You are, aren't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I am going. At once. Yes, to escape the disgrace I thought of
drowning myself, Dounia, but as I looked into the water, I thought that if
I had considered myself strong till now I'd better not be afraid of
disgrace," he said, hurrying on. "It's pride, Dounia."</p>
<p>"Pride, Rodya."</p>
<p>There was a gleam of fire in his lustreless eyes; he seemed to be glad to
think that he was still proud.</p>
<p>"You don't think, sister, that I was simply afraid of the water?" he
asked, looking into her face with a sinister smile.</p>
<p>"Oh, Rodya, hush!" cried Dounia bitterly. Silence lasted for two minutes.
He sat with his eyes fixed on the floor; Dounia stood at the other end of
the table and looked at him with anguish. Suddenly he got up.</p>
<p>"It's late, it's time to go! I am going at once to give myself up. But I
don't know why I am going to give myself up."</p>
<p>Big tears fell down her cheeks.</p>
<p>"You are crying, sister, but can you hold out your hand to me?"</p>
<p>"You doubted it?"</p>
<p>She threw her arms round him.</p>
<p>"Aren't you half expiating your crime by facing the suffering?" she cried,
holding him close and kissing him.</p>
<p>"Crime? What crime?" he cried in sudden fury. "That I killed a vile
noxious insect, an old pawnbroker woman, of use to no one!... Killing her
was atonement for forty sins. She was sucking the life out of poor people.
Was that a crime? I am not thinking of it and I am not thinking of
expiating it, and why are you all rubbing it in on all sides? 'A crime! a
crime!' Only now I see clearly the imbecility of my cowardice, now that I
have decided to face this superfluous disgrace. It's simply because I am
contemptible and have nothing in me that I have decided to, perhaps too
for my advantage, as that... Porfiry... suggested!"</p>
<p>"Brother, brother, what are you saying? Why, you have shed blood?" cried
Dounia in despair.</p>
<p>"Which all men shed," he put in almost frantically, "which flows and has
always flowed in streams, which is spilt like champagne, and for which men
are crowned in the Capitol and are called afterwards benefactors of
mankind. Look into it more carefully and understand it! I too wanted to do
good to men and would have done hundreds, thousands of good deeds to make
up for that one piece of stupidity, not stupidity even, simply clumsiness,
for the idea was by no means so stupid as it seems now that it has
failed.... (Everything seems stupid when it fails.) By that stupidity I
only wanted to put myself into an independent position, to take the first
step, to obtain means, and then everything would have been smoothed over
by benefits immeasurable in comparison.... But I... I couldn't carry out
even the first step, because I am contemptible, that's what's the matter!
And yet I won't look at it as you do. If I had succeeded I should have
been crowned with glory, but now I'm trapped."</p>
<p>"But that's not so, not so! Brother, what are you saying?"</p>
<p>"Ah, it's not picturesque, not �sthetically attractive! I fail to
understand why bombarding people by regular siege is more honourable. The
fear of appearances is the first symptom of impotence. I've never, never
recognised this more clearly than now, and I am further than ever from
seeing that what I did was a crime. I've never, never been stronger and
more convinced than now."</p>
<p>The colour had rushed into his pale exhausted face, but as he uttered his
last explanation, he happened to meet Dounia's eyes and he saw such
anguish in them that he could not help being checked. He felt that he had,
anyway, made these two poor women miserable, that he was, anyway, the
cause...</p>
<p>"Dounia darling, if I am guilty forgive me (though I cannot be forgiven if
I am guilty). Good-bye! We won't dispute. It's time, high time to go.
Don't follow me, I beseech you, I have somewhere else to go.... But you go
at once and sit with mother. I entreat you to! It's my last request of
you. Don't leave her at all; I left her in a state of anxiety, that she is
not fit to bear; she will die or go out of her mind. Be with her!
Razumihin will be with you. I've been talking to him.... Don't cry about
me: I'll try to be honest and manly all my life, even if I am a murderer.
Perhaps I shall some day make a name. I won't disgrace you, you will see;
I'll still show.... Now good-bye for the present," he concluded hurriedly,
noticing again a strange expression in Dounia's eyes at his last words and
promises. "Why are you crying? Don't cry, don't cry: we are not parting
for ever! Ah, yes! Wait a minute, I'd forgotten!"</p>
<p>He went to the table, took up a thick dusty book, opened it and took from
between the pages a little water-colour portrait on ivory. It was the
portrait of his landlady's daughter, who had died of fever, that strange
girl who had wanted to be a nun. For a minute he gazed at the delicate
expressive face of his betrothed, kissed the portrait and gave it to
Dounia.</p>
<p>"I used to talk a great deal about it to her, only to her," he said
thoughtfully. "To her heart I confided much of what has since been so
hideously realised. Don't be uneasy," he returned to Dounia, "she was as
much opposed to it as you, and I am glad that she is gone. The great point
is that everything now is going to be different, is going to be broken in
two," he cried, suddenly returning to his dejection. "Everything,
everything, and am I prepared for it? Do I want it myself? They say it is
necessary for me to suffer! What's the object of these senseless
sufferings? shall I know any better what they are for, when I am crushed
by hardships and idiocy, and weak as an old man after twenty years' penal
servitude? And what shall I have to live for then? Why am I consenting to
that life now? Oh, I knew I was contemptible when I stood looking at the
Neva at daybreak to-day!"</p>
<p>At last they both went out. It was hard for Dounia, but she loved him. She
walked away, but after going fifty paces she turned round to look at him
again. He was still in sight. At the corner he too turned and for the last
time their eyes met; but noticing that she was looking at him, he motioned
her away with impatience and even vexation, and turned the corner
abruptly.</p>
<p>"I am wicked, I see that," he thought to himself, feeling ashamed a moment
later of his angry gesture to Dounia. "But why are they so fond of me if I
don't deserve it? Oh, if only I were alone and no one loved me and I too
had never loved anyone! <i>Nothing of all this would have happened.</i>
But I wonder shall I in those fifteen or twenty years grow so meek that I
shall humble myself before people and whimper at every word that I am a
criminal? Yes, that's it, that's it, that's what they are sending me there
for, that's what they want. Look at them running to and fro about the
streets, every one of them a scoundrel and a criminal at heart and, worse
still, an idiot. But try to get me off and they'd be wild with righteous
indignation. Oh, how I hate them all!"</p>
<p>He fell to musing by what process it could come to pass, that he could be
humbled before all of them, indiscriminately—humbled by conviction.
And yet why not? It must be so. Would not twenty years of continual
bondage crush him utterly? Water wears out a stone. And why, why should he
live after that? Why should he go now when he knew that it would be so? It
was the hundredth time perhaps that he had asked himself that question
since the previous evening, but still he went.</p>
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