Fyodor Dostoevsky

it now? At times I fancy that I must be mad; that somewhere I

am sitting in a madhouse; that these events have merely SEEMED

to happen; that still they merely SEEM to be happening.

I have been arranging and re-perusing my notes (perhaps for the

purpose of convincing myself that I am not in a madhouse). At

present I am lonely and alone. Autumn is coming--already it is

mellowing the leaves; and, as I sit brooding in this melancholy

little town (and how melancholy the little towns of Germany can

be!), I find myself taking no thought for the future, but

living under the influence of passing moods, and of my

recollections of the tempest which recently drew me into its

vortex, and then cast me out again. At times I seem still seem to

be caught within that vortex. At times, the tempest seems once

more to be gathering, and, as it passes overhead, to be

wrapping me in its folds, until I have lost my sense of order

and reality, and continue whirling and whirling and whirling

around.

Yet, it may be that I shall be able to stop myself from

revolving if once I can succeed in rendering myself an exact

account of what has happened within the month just past.

Somehow I feel drawn towards the pen; on many and many an

evening I have had nothing else in the world to do. But,

curiously enough, of late I have taken to amusing myself with

the works of M. Paul de Kock, which I read in German

translations obtained from a wretched local library. These

works I cannot abide, yet I read them, and find myself

marvelling that I should be doing so. Somehow I seem to be

afraid of any SERIOUS book--afraid of permitting any SERIOUS

preoccupation to break the spell of the passing moment. So

dear to me is the formless dream of which I have spoken, so

dear to me are the impressions which it has left behind it,

that I fear to touch the vision with anything new, lest it

should dissolve in smoke. But is it so dear to me? Yes, it IS

dear to me, and will ever be fresh in my recollections--even

forty years hence. . . .

So let me write of it, but only partially, and in a more

abridged form than my full impressions might warrant.

First of all, let me conclude the history of the Grandmother.

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