Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume V).djvu/317

Rh 'let him be! You see what sort of a fellow he is; and all his family are the same. He has an aunt; at first she struck me as a sensible woman, but the day before yesterday I went to see her here—she had only just before gone to Baden and was back here again before you could look round—well, I went to see her; began questioning her. . . Would you believe me, I couldn't get a word out of the stuck-up thing. Horrid aristocrat!' Poor Kapitolina Markovna an aristocrat! Could she ever have anticipated such a humiliation? But Litvinov still held his peace, turned away, and pulled his cap over his eyes. The train started at last. 'Well, say something at parting at least, you stonyhearted man!' shouted Bambaev, 'this is really too much!' 'Rotten milksop!' yelled Bindasov. The carriages were moving more and more rapidly, and he could vent his abuse with impunity. 'Niggardly stick-in-the-mud.' Whether Bindasov invented this last appellation on the spot, or whether it had come to him second-hand, it apparently gave great satisfaction to two of the noble young fellows studying natural science, who happened to be standing by, for only a few days later it