Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume XV).djvu/172

 and a tiny tear rolled over her round cheek, that looked varnished like a doll's. 'I'm very sorry that such a young person who ought to have lived and enjoyed everything  everything  And to fall into despair so suddenly!'

'Na! gut, gut geh, alte!' Mr. Ratsch cut her short.

'Geh' schon, geh' schon,' muttered Eleonora Karpovna, and she went away, still holding the kerchief with her fingers, and shedding tears.

And I followed her. In the passage stood Viktor in a student's coat with a beaver collar and a cap stuck jauntily on one side. He barely glanced at me over his shoulder, shook his collar up, and did not nod to me, for which I mentally thanked him.

I went back to Fustov.

my friend sitting in a corner of his room with downcast head and arms folded across his breast. He had sunk into a state of numbness, and he gazed around him with the slow, bewildered look of a man who has slept very heavily and has only just been wake