Page 224 - the-brothers-karamazov
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better than your head.’
         ‘My heart better than my head, is it? Oh Lord! And that
       from you. Ivan, do you love Alyosha?’
         ‘You must love him’ (Fyodor Pavlovitch was by this time
       very drunk). ‘Listen, Alyosha, I was rude to your elder this
       morning.  But  I  was  excited.  But  there’s  wit  in  that  elder,
       don’t you think, Ivan?’
         ‘Very likely.’
         ‘There is, there is. Il y a du Piron la-dedans.* He’s a Jesuit,
       a Russian one, that is. As he’s an honourable person there’s
       a hidden indignation boiling within him at having to pre-
       tend and affect holiness.’
         * There’s something of Piron inside of him.
         ‘But, of course, he believes in God.’
         ‘Not a bit of it. Didn’t you know? Why, he tells everyone
       so, himself. That is, not everyone, but all the clever people
       who come to him. He said straight out to Governor Schultz
       not long ago: ‘Credo, but I don’t know in what.’’
         ‘Really?’
         ‘He really did. But I respect him. There’s something of
       Mephistopheles  about  him,  or  rather  of  ‘The  hero  of  our
       time’... Arbenin, or what’s his name?... You see, he’s a sen-
       sualist.  He’s  such  a  sensualist  that  I  should  be  afraid  for
       my daughter or my wife if she went to confess to him. You
       know, when he begins telling stories... The year before last
       he invited us to tea, tea with liqueur (the ladies send him
       liqueur), and began telling us about old times till we nearly
       split our sides.... Especially how he once cured a paralysed
       woman. ‘If my legs were not bad I know a dance I could
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