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    Chapter 21

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    July 27th.

    MY DEAREST MAKAR ALEXIEVITCH,--Your latest conduct and letters
    had frightened me, and left me thunderstruck and plunged in
    doubt, until what you have said about Thedor explained the
    situation. Why despair and go into such frenzies, Makar
    Alexievitch? Your explanations only partially satisfy me. Perhaps
    I did wrong to insist upon accepting a good situation when it was
    offered me, seeing that from my last experience in that way I
    derived a shock which was anything but a matter for jesting. You
    say also that your love for me has compelled you to hide yourself
    in retirement. Now, how much I am indebted to you I realised when
    you told me that you were spending for my benefit the sum which
    you are always reported to have laid by at your bankers; but, now
    that I have learnED that you never possessed such a fund, but
    that, on hearing of my destitute plight, and being moved by it,
    you decided to spend upon me the whole of your salary--even to
    forestall it--and when I had fallen ill, actually to sell your
    clothes--when I learnED all this I found myself placed in the
    harassing position of not knowing how to accept it all, nor what
    to think of it. Ah, Makar Alexievitch! You ought to have stopped
    at your first acts of charity--acts inspired by sympathy and the
    love of kinsfolk, rather than have continued to squander your
    means upon what was unnecessary. Yes, you have betrayed our
    friendship, Makar Alexievitch, in that you have not been open
    with me; and, now that I see that your last coin has been spent
    upon dresses and bon-bons and excursions and books and visits to
    the theatre for me, I weep bitter tears for my unpardonable
    improvidence in having accepted these things without giving so
    much as a thought to your welfare. Yes, all that you have done to
    give me pleasure has become converted into a source of grief, and
    left behind it only useless regret. Of late I have remarked that
    you were looking depressed; and though I felt fearful that
    something unfortunate was impending, what has happened would
    otherwise never have entered my head. To think that your better
    sense should so play you false, Makar Alexievitch! What will
    people think of you, and say of you? Who will want to know you?

    You whom, like everyone else, I have valued for your goodness of
    heart and modesty and good sense--YOU, I say, have now given way
    to an unpleasant vice of which you seem never before to have been
    guilty. What were my feelings when Thedora informed me that you
    had been discovered drunk in the street, and taken home by the
    police? Why, I felt petrified with astonishment--although, in
    view of the fact that you had failed me for four days, I had been
    expecting some such extraordinary occurrence. Also, have you
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