Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume VI).djvu/72

Rh it is unknown: they are rather disposed to rejoice when the daily routine of life is broken up, when their habitual surroundings are changed. Nezhdanov became so deeply absorbed in his meditations that by degrees, almost unconsciously, he began translating them into words; the emotions passing over him were already ranging themselves into rhythmic cadences.

'Oof, the devil!' he cried aloud, 'I do believe I'm on the high road to a poem!'

He shook himself, turned away from the window. Catching sight of Paklin's ten-rouble note lying on the table, he thrust it in his pocket and set to walking up and down the room.

'I must take an advance,' he mused to himself; 'a good thing this gentleman offers it. A hundred roubles and from my brothers─from their excellencies─a hundred roubles  fifty for debts, fifty or seventy for the journey  and the rest for Ostrodumov. And what Paklin gives─he can have to. And we shall have to get something from Merkulov too.'

Even while he was making these calculations in his head, the same cadences were again astir within him. He stopped, fell to dreaming and, his eyes fixed on the distance, he stood rooted to the spot. Then his hands, gropingly, as it were, felt for and opened a drawer in the