THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
Chapter 3 - A Little Demon
GOING in to Lise, he found her half reclining in the
invalid-chair, in which she had been wheeled when she was unable to
walk. She did not move to meet him, but her sharp, keen eyes were
simply riveted on his face. There was a feverish look in her eyes, her
face was pale and yellow. Alyosha was amazed at the change that had
taken place in her in three days. She was positively thinner. She
did not hold out her hand to him. He touched the thin, long fingers
which lay motionless on her dress, then he sat down facing her,
without a word.
"I know you are in a hurry to get to the prison," Lise said
curtly, "and mamma's kept you there for hours; she's just been telling
you about me and Yulia."
"How do you know?" asked Alyosha.
"I've been listening. Why do you stare at me? I want to listen and
I do listen, there's no harm in that. I don't apologise."
"You are upset about something?"
"On the contrary, I am very happy. I've only just been
reflecting for the thirtieth time what a good thing it is I refused
you and shall not be your wife. You are not fit to be a husband. If
I were to marry you and give you a note to take to the man I loved
after you, you'd take it and be sure to give it to him and bring an
answer back, too. If you were forty, you would still go on taking my
love-letters for me."
She suddenly laughed.
"There is something spiteful and yet open-hearted about you,"
Alyosha smiled to her.
"The open-heartedness consists in my not being ashamed of myself
with you. What's more, I don't want to feel ashamed with you, just
with you. Alyosha, why is it I don't respect you? I am very fond of
you, but I don't respect you. If I respected you, I shouldn't talk
to you without shame, should I?"
"No."
"But do you believe that I am not ashamed with you?"
"No, I don't believe it."
Lise laughed nervously again; she spoke rapidly.
"I sent your brother, Dmitri Fyodorovitch, some sweets in
prison. Alyosha, you know, you are quite pretty! I shall love you
awfully for having so quickly allowed me not to love you."
"Why did you send for me to-day, Lise?"
"I wanted to tell you of a longing I have. I should like some
one to torture me, marry me and then torture me, deceive me and go
away. I don't want to be happy."
"You are in love with disorder?"
"Yes, I want disorder. I keep wanting to set fire to the house.
I keep imagining how I'll creep up and set fire to the house on the
sly; it must be on the sly. They'll try to put it out, but it'll go on
burning. And I shall know and say nothing. Ah, what silliness! And how
bored I am!"
She waved her hand with a look of repulsion.
"It's your luxurious life," said Alyosha, softly"
"Is it better, then, to be poor?"
"Yes, it is better."
"That's what your monk taught you. That's not true. Let me be rich
and all the rest poor, I'll eat sweets and drink cream and not give
any to anyone else. Ach, don't speak, don't say anything"; she shook
her hand at him, though Alyosha had not opened his mouth. "You've told
me all that before, I know it all by heart. It bores me. If I am
ever poor, I shall murder somebody, and even if I am rich, I may
murder someone, perhaps- why do nothing! But do you know, I should
like to reap, cut the rye? I'll marry you, and you shall become a
peasant, a real peasant; we'll keep a colt, shall we? Do you know
Kalganov?"
"Yes."
"He is always wandering about, dreaming. He says, 'Why live in
real life? It's better to dream. One can dream the most delightful
things, but real life is a bore.' But he'll be married soon for all
that; he's been making love to me already. Can you spin tops?"
"Yes."
"Well, he's just like a top: he wants to be wound up and set
spinning and then to be lashed, lashed, lashed with a whip. If I marry
him, I'll keep him spinning all his life. You are not ashamed to be
with me?"
"No."
"You are awfully cross, because I don't talk about holy things.
I don't want to be holy. What will they do to one in the next world
for the greatest sin? You must know all about that."
"God will censure you." Alyosha was watching her steadily.
"That's just what I should like. I would go up and they would
censure me, and I would burst out laughing in their faces. I should
dreadfully like to set fire to the house, Alyosha, to our house; you
still don't believe me?"
"Why? There are children of twelve years old, who have a longing
to set fire to something and they do set things on fire, too. It's a
sort of disease."
"That's not true, that's not true; there may be children, but
that's not what I mean."
"You take evil for good; it's a passing crisis; it's the result of
your illness, perhaps."
"You do despise me, though! It's simply that I don't want to do
good, I want to do evil, and it has nothing to do with illness."
"Why do evil?"
"So that everything might be destroyed. Ah, how nice it would be
if everything were destroyed! You know, Alyosha, I sometimes think
of doing a fearful lot of harm and everything bad, and I should do
it for a long while on the sly and suddenly everyone would find it
out. Everyone will stand round and point their fingers at me and I
would look at them all. That would be awfully nice. Why would it be so
nice, Alyosha?"
"I don't know. It's a craving to destroy something good or, as you
say, to set fire to something. It happens sometimes."
"I not only say it, I shall do it."
"I believe you."
"Ah, how I love you for saying you believe me. And you are not
lying one little bit. But perhaps you think that I am saying all
this on purpose to annoy you?"
"No, I don't think that... though perhaps there is a little desire
to do that in it, too."
"There is a little. I never can tell lies to you," she declared,
with a strange fire in her eyes.
What struck Alyosha above everything was her earnestness. There
was not a trace of humour or jesting in her face now, though, in old
days, fun and gaiety never deserted her even at her most "earnest"
moments.
"There are moments when people love crime," said Alyosha
thoughtfully.
"Yes, yes! You have uttered my thought; they love crime,
everyone loves crime, they love it always, not at some 'moments.'
You know, it's as though people have made an agreement to lie about it
and have lied about it ever since. They all declare that they hate
evil, but secretly they all love it."
"And are you still reading nasty books?"
"Yes, I am. Mamma reads them and hides them under her pillow and I
steal them."
"Aren't you ashamed to destroy yourself?"
"I want to destroy myself. There's a boy here, who lay down
between the railway lines when the train was passing. Lucky fellow!
Listen, your brother is being tried now for murdering his father and
everyone loves his having killed his father."
"Loves his having killed his father?"
"Yes, loves it; everyone loves it! Everybody says it's so awful,
but secretly they simply love it. I for one love it."
"There is some truth in what you say about everyone," said Alyosha
softly.
"Oh, what ideas you have!" Lise shrieked in delight. "And you a
monk, too! You wouldn't believe how I respect you, Alyosha, for
never telling lies. Oh, I must tell you a funny dream of mine. I
sometimes dream of devils. It's night; I am in my room with a candle
and suddenly there are devils all over the place, in all the
corners, under the table, and they open the doors; there's a crowd
of them behind the doors and they want to come and seize me. And
they are just coming, just seizing me. But I suddenly cross myself and
they all draw back, though they don't go away altogether, they stand
at the doors and in the corners, waiting. And suddenly I have a
frightful longing to revile God aloud, and so I begin, and then they
come crowding back to me, delighted, and seize me again and I cross
myself again and they all draw back. It's awful fun, it takes one's
breath away."
"I've had the same dream, too," said Alyosha suddenly.
"Really?" cried Lise, surprised. "I say, Alyosha, don't laugh,
that's awfully important. Could two different people have the same
dream?"
"It seems they can."
"Alyosha, I tell you, it's awfully important," Lise went on,
with really excessive amazement. "It's not the dream that's important,
but your having the same dream as me. You never lie to me, don't lie
now; is it true? You are not laughing?"
"It's true."
Lise seemed extraordinarily impressed and for half a minute she
was silent.
"Alyosha, come and see me, come and see me more often," she said
suddenly, in a supplicating voice.
"I'll always come to see you, all my life," answered Alyosha
firmly.
"You are the only person I can talk to, you know," Lise began
again. "I talk to no one but myself and you. Only you in the whole
world. And to you more readily than to myself. And I am not a bit
ashamed with you, not a bit. Alyosha, why am I not ashamed with you,
not a bit? Alyosha, is it true that at Easter the Jews steal a child
and kill it?"
"I don't know."
"There's a book here in which I read about the trial of a Jew, who
took a child of four years old and cut off the fingers from both
hands, and then crucified him on the wall, hammered nails into him and
crucified him, and afterwards, when he was tried, he said that the
child died soon, within four hours. That was 'soon'! He said the child
moaned, kept on moaning and he stood admiring it. That's nice!"
"Nice?"
"Nice; I sometimes imagine that it was I who crucified him. He
would hang there moaning and I would sit opposite him eating pineapple
compote. I am awfully fond of pineapple compote. Do you like it?"
Alyosha looked at her in silence. Her pale, sallow face was
suddenly contorted, her eyes burned.
"You know, when I read about that Jew I shook with sobs all night.
I kept fancying how the little thing cried and moaned (a child of four
years old understands, you know), and all the while the thought of
pineapple compote haunted me. In the morning I wrote a letter to a
certain person, begging him particularly to come and see me. He came
and I suddenly told him all about the child and the pineapple compote.
All about it, all, and said that it was nice. He laughed and said it
really was nice. Then he got up and went away. He was only here five
minutes. Did he despise me? Did he despise me? Tell me, tell me,
Alyosha, did he despise me or not?" She sat up on the couch, with
flashing eyes.
"Tell me," Alyosha asked anxiously, "did you send for that
person?"
"Yes, I did."
"Did you send him a letter?"
"Yes."
"Simply to ask about that, about that child?"
"No, not about that at all. But when he came, I asked him about
that at once. He answered, laughed, got up and went away."
"That person behaved honourably," Alyosha murmured.
"And did he despise me? Did he laugh at me?"
"No, for perhaps he believes in the pineapple compote himself.
He is very ill now, too, Lise."
"Yes, he does believe in it," said Lise, with flashing eyes.
"He doesn't despise anyone," Alyosha went on. "Only he does not
believe anyone. If he doesn't believe in people, of course, he does
despise them."
"Then he despises me, me?"
"You, too."
"Good." Lise seemed to grind her teeth. "When he went out
laughing, I felt that it was nice to be despised. The child with
fingers cut off is nice, and to be despised is nice..."
And she laughed in Alyosha's face, a feverish malicious laugh.
"Do you know, Alyosha, do you know, I should like- Alyosha, save
me!" She suddenly jumped from the couch, rushed to him and seized
him with both hands. "Save me!" she almost groaned. "Is there anyone
in the world I could tell what I've told you? I've told you the truth,
the truth. I shall kill myself, because I loathe everything! I don't
want to live, because I loathe everything! I loathe everything,
everything. Alyosha, why don't you love me in the least?" she finished
in a frenzy.
"But I do love you!" answered Alyosha warmly.
"And will you weep over me, will you?"
"Yes."
"Not because I won't be your wife, but simply weep for me?"
"Yes."
"Thank you! It's only your tears I want. Everyone else may
punish me and trample me under foot, everyone, everyone, not excepting
anyone. For I don't love anyone. Do you hear, not anyone! On the
contrary, I hate him! Go, Alyosha; it's time you went to your
brother"; she tore herself away from him suddenly.
"How can I leave you like this?" said Alyosha, almost in alarm.
"Go to your brother, the prison will be shut; go, here's your hat.
Give my love to Mitya, go, go!"
And she almost forcibly pushed Alyosha out of the door. He
looked at her with pained surprise, when he was suddenly aware of a
letter in his right hand, a tiny letter folded up tight and sealed. He
glanced at it and instantly read the address, "To Ivan Fyodorovitch
Karamazov." He looked quickly at Lise. Her face had become almost
menacing.
"Give it to him, you must give it to him!" she ordered him,
trembling and beside herself. "To-day, at once, or I'll poison myself!
That's why I sent for you."
And she slammed the door quickly. The bolt clicked. Alyosha put
the note in his pocket and went straight downstairs, without going
back to Madame Hohlakov; forgetting her, in fact. As soon as Alyosha
had gone, Lise unbolted the door, opened it a little, put her finger
in the crack and slammed the door with all her might, pinching her
finger. Ten seconds after, releasing her finger, she walked softly,
slowly to her chair, sat up straight in it and looked intently at
her blackened finger and at the blood that oozed from under the
nail. Her lips were quivering and she kept whispering rapidly to
herself:
"I am a wretch, wretch, wretch, wretch!"