Page 974 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 974

denly heard he’d been here again, not to see me but to see
       Lise. That’s six days ago now. He came, stayed five minutes,
       and went away. And I didn’t hear of it till three days after-
       wards, from Glafira, so it was a great shock to me. I sent for
       Lise directly. She laughed. ‘He thought you were asleep,’ she
       said, ‘and came in to me to ask after your health.’ Of course,
       that’s how it happened. But Lise, Lise, mercy on us, how she
       distresses me! Would you believe it, one night, four days
       ago, just after you saw her last time, and had gone away, she
       suddenly had a fit, screaming, shrieking, hysterics! Why is
       it I never have hysterics? Then, next day another fit, and the
       same thing on the third, and yesterday too, and then yester-
       day that aberration. She suddenly screamed out, ‘I hate Ivan
       Fyodorovitch. I insist on your never letting him come to the
       house again.’ I was struck dumb at these amazing words,
       and answered, ‘On what grounds could I refuse to see such
       an excellent young man, a young man of such learning too,
       and so unfortunate?’ — for all this business is a misfortune,
       isn’t it?’ She suddenly burst out laughing at my words, and
       so rudely, you know. Well, I was pleased; I thought I had
       amused her and the fits would pass off, especially as I want-
       ed to refuse to see Ivan Fyodorovitch anyway on account of
       his strange visits without my knowledge, and meant to ask
       him for an explanation. But early this morning Lise waked
       up and flew into a passion with Yulia and, would you believe
       it, slapped her in the face. That’s monstrous; I am always
       polite to my servants. And an hour later she was hugging
       Yulia’s feet and kissing them. She sent a message to me that
       she wasn’t coming to me at all, and would never come and
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