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    Chapter 12 - Page 2

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    had told him not to weep, and to leave the monastery. Good God! It was long since Alyosha had known such anguish. He hurried through the copse that divided the monastery from the hermitage, and unable to bear the burden of his thoughts, he gazed at the ancient pines beside the path. He had not far to go -- about five hundred paces. He expected to meet no one at that hour, but at the first turn of the path he noticed Rakitin. He was waiting for someone.

    "Are you waiting for me?" asked Alyosha, overtaking him.

    "Yes," grinned Rakitin. "You are hurrying to the Father Superior, I know; he has a banquet. There's not been such a banquet since the Superior entertained the Bishop and General Pahatov, do you remember? I shan't be there, but you go and hand the sauces. Tell me one thing, Alexey, what does that vision mean? That's what I want to ask you."

    "What vision?"

    "That bowing to your brother, Dmitri. And didn't he tap the ground with his forehead, too!"

    "You speak of Father Zossima?"

    "Yes, of Father Zossima,"

    "Tapped the ground?"

    "Ah, an irreverent expression! Well, what of it? Anyway, what does that vision mean?"

    "I don't know what it means, Misha."

    "I knew he wouldn't explain it to you There's nothing wonderful about it, of course, only the usual holy mummery. But there was an object in the performance. All the pious people in the town will talk about it and spread the story through the province, wondering what it meant. To my thinking the old man really has a keen nose; he sniffed a crime. Your house stinks of it."

    Rakitin evidently had something he was eager to speak of.

    "It'll be in your family, this crime. Between your brothers and your rich old father. So Father Zossima flopped down to be ready for what may turn up. If something happens later on, it'll be: 'Ah, the holy man foresaw it, prophesied it!' though it's a poor sort of prophecy, flopping like that. 'Ah, but it was symbolic,' they'll say, 'an allegory,' and the devil knows what all! It'll be remembered to his glory: 'He predicted the crime and marked the criminal!' That's always the way with these crazy fanatics; they cross themselves at the tavern and throw stones at the temple. Like your elder, he takes a stick to a just man and falls at the feet of a murderer."

    "What crime? What do you mean?"

    Alyosha stopped dead. Rakitin stopped, too.

    "What murderer? As though you didn't know! I'll bet you've thought of it before. That's interesting, too, by the way. Listen, Alyosha, you always speak the truth, though you're always between two stools. Have you thought of it or not? Answer."

    "I have," answered Alyosha in a low voice. Even Rakitin was taken aback.

    "What? Have you really?" he cried.

    "I... I've not exactly thought it," muttered Alyosha, "but directly you began speaking so strangely, I fancied
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