Page 917 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 917

same suffering smile, but the person most delighted with
           the  dog’s  performance  was  ‘mamma.’  She  laughed  at  the
            dog and began snapping her fingers and calling it, ‘Perez-
           von, Perezvon!’
              ‘Nothing will make him get up, nothing!’ Kolya cried tri-
           umphantly, proud of his success. ‘He won’t move for all the
            shouting in the world, but if I call to him, he’ll jump up in a
           minute. Ici, Perezvon!’ The dog leapt up and bounded about,
           whining with delight. The captain ran back with a piece of
            cooked beef.
              ‘Is  it  hot?’  Kolya  inquired  hurriedly,  with  a  business-
            like air, taking the meat. ‘Dogs don’t like hot things. No,
           it’s all right. Look, everybody, look, Ilusha, look, old man;
           why aren’t you looking? He does not look at him, now I’ve
            brought him.’
              The  new  trick  consisted  in  making  the  dog  stand  mo-
           tionless with his nose out and putting a tempting morsel of
           meat just on his nose. The luckless dog had to stand with-
            out moving, with the meat on his nose, as long as his master
            chose to keep him, without a movement, perhaps for half an
           hour. But he kept Perezvon only for a brief moment.
              ‘Paid  for!’  cried  Kolya,  and  the  meat  passed  in  a  flash
           from the dog’s nose to his mouth. The audience, of course,
            expressed enthusiasm and surprise.
              ‘Can you really have put off coming all this time simply
           to train the dog?’ exclaimed Alyosha, with an involuntary
           note of reproach in his voice.
              ‘Simply for that!’ answered Kolya, with perfect simplicity.
           ‘I wanted to show him in all his glory.’

            1                              The Brothers Karamazov
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