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P. 273

letter, and that she was to go home and expect him.’ And
           ‘Would you believe it?’ exclaimed Madame Hohlakov enthu-
            siastically, ‘the prophecy has been fulfilled literally indeed,
            and more than that.’ Scarcely had the old woman reached
           home when they gave her a letter from Siberia which had
            been awaiting her. But that was not all; in the letter writ-
           ten on the road from Ekaterinenburg, Vassya informed his
           mother that he was returning to Russia with an official, and
           that three weeks after her receiving the letter he hoped ‘to
            embrace his mother.’
              Madame Hohlakov warmly entreated Alyosha to report
           this new ‘miracle of prediction’ to the Superior and all the
            brotherhood. ‘All, all, ought to know of it’ she concluded.
           The letter had been written in haste, the excitement of the
           writer was apparent in every line of it. But Alyosha had no
           need to tell the monks, for all knew of it already. Rakitin
           had commissioned the monk who brought his message ‘to
           inform most respectfully his reverence Father Paissy, that
           he, Rakitin, has a matter to speak of with him, of such grav-
           ity that he dare not defer it for a moment, and humbly begs
           forgiveness for his presumption.’ As the monk had given
           the message to Father Paissy, before that to Alyosha, the lat-
           ter found after reading the letter, there was nothing left for
           him to do but to hand it to Father Paissy in confirmation of
           the story.
              And  even  that  austere  and  cautious  man,  though  he
           frowned as he read the news of the ‘miracle,’ could not com-
           pletely restrain some inner emotion. His eyes gleamed, and
            a grave and solemn smile came into his lips.

                                           The Brothers Karamazov
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