Page 1309 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 1309

him.’
              They all stood still by the big stone. Alyosha looked and
           the whole picture of what Snegiryov had described to him
           that day, how Ilusha, weeping and hugging his father, had
            cried, ‘Father, father, how he insulted you,’ rose at once be-
           fore his imagination. A sudden impulse seemed to come
           into  his  soul.  With  a  serious  and  earnest  expression  he
            looked from one to another of the bright, pleasant faces of
           Ilusha’s schoolfellows, and suddenly said to them:
              ‘Boys, I should like to say one word to you, here at this
           place.’
              The boys stood round him and at once bent attentive and
            expectant eyes upon him.
              ‘Boys, we shall soon part. I shall be for some time with
           my two brothers, of whom one is going to Siberia and the
            other is lying at death’s door. But soon I shall leave this
           town, perhaps for a long time, so we shall part. Let us make
            a compact here, at Ilusha’s stone, that we will never forget
           Ilusha and one another.
              And whatever happens to us later in life, if we don’t meet
           for twenty years afterwards, let us always remember how
           we buried the poor boy at whom we once threw stones, do
           you remember, by the bridge? and afterwards we all grew so
           fond of him. He was a fine boy, a kindhearted, brave boy, he
           felt for his father’s honour and resented the cruel insult to
           him and stood up for him. And so in the first place, we will
           remember him, boys, all our lives. And even if we are oc-
            cupied with most important things, if we attain to honour
            or fall into great misfortune — still let us remember how

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