Page 916 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 916

child.
         ‘Zhutchka!  It’s  Zhutchka!’  he  cried  in  a  blissful  voice,
       ‘Ilusha, this is Zhutchka, your Zhutchka! Mamma, this is
       Zhutchka!’ He was almost weeping.
         ‘And I never guessed!’ cried Smurov regretfully. ‘Bravo,
       Krassotkin!  I  said  he’d  find  the  dog  and  here  he’s  found
       him.’
         ‘Here he’s found him!’ another boy repeated gleefully.
         ‘Krassotkin’s a brick! cried a third voice.
         ‘He’s a brick, he’s a brick!’ cried the other boys, and they
       began clapping.
         ‘Wait, wait,’ Krassotkin did his utmost to shout above
       them all. ‘I’ll tell you how it happened, that’s the whole point.
       I found him, I took him home and hid him at once. I kept
       him locked up at home and did not show him to anyone till
       to-day. Only Smurov has known for the last fortnight, but
       I assured him this dog was called Perezvon and he did not
       guess. And meanwhile I taught the dog all sorts of tricks.
       You should only see all the things he can do! I trained him
       so as to bring you a well trained dog, in good condition, old
       man, so as to be able to say to you, ‘See, old man, what a fine
       dog your Zhutchka is now!’ Haven’t you a bit of meat? He’ll
       show you a trick that will make you die with laughing. A
       piece of meat, haven’t you got any?’
         The captain ran across the passage to the landlady, where
       their cooking was done. Not to lose precious time, Kolya, in
       desperate haste, shouted to Perezvon, ‘Dead!’ And the dog
       immediately turned round and lay on his back with its four
       paws in the air. The boys laughed, Ilusha looked on with the

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