Page 911 - the-brothers-karamazov
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he, smiling sadly, stroked it with his thin, pale, wasted hand.
           Clearly he liked the puppy, but... it wasn’t Zhutchka; if he
            could have had Zhutchka and the puppy, too, then he would
           have been completely happy.
              ‘Krassotkin!’ cried one of the boys suddenly. He was the
           first to see him come in.
              Krassotkin’s entrance made a general sensation; the boys
           moved away and stood on each side of the bed, so that he
            could get a full view of Ilusha. The captain ran eagerly to
           meet Kolya.
              ‘Please  come  in...  you  are  welcome!’  he  said  hurriedly.
           ‘Ilusha, Mr. Krassotkin has come to see you!
              But Krassotkin, shaking hands with him hurriedly, in-
            stantly showed his complete knowledge of the manners of
            good society. He turned first to the captain’s wife sitting in
           her armchair, who was very ill-humoured at the moment,
            and was grumbling that the boys stood between her and
           Ilusha’s bed and did not let her see the new puppy. With the
            greatest courtesy he made her a bow, scraping his foot, and
           turning to Nina, he made her, as the only other lady pres-
            ent, a similar bow. This polite behaviour made an extremely
           favourable impression on the deranged lady.
              ‘There,.you can see at once he is a young man that has
            been well brought up,’ she commented aloud, throwing up
           her hands; ‘But as for our other visitors they come in one on
           the top of another.’
              ‘How do you mean, mamma, one on the top of another,
           how is that?’ muttered the captain affectionately, though a
            little anxious on her account.

            10                             The Brothers Karamazov
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