Fyodor Dostoevsky

though he noticed nothing. But it was the end of everything; he had not

the axe! He was overwhelmed.

"What made me think," he reflected, as he went under the gateway, "what

made me think that she would be sure not to be at home at that moment!

Why, why, why did I assume this so certainly?"

He was crushed and even humiliated. He could have laughed at himself in

his anger.... A dull animal rage boiled within him.

He stood hesitating in the gateway. To go into the street, to go a walk

for appearance' sake was revolting; to go back to his room, even more

revolting. "And what a chance I have lost for ever!" he muttered,

standing aimlessly in the gateway, just opposite the porter's little

dark room, which was also open. Suddenly he started. From the porter's

room, two paces away from him, something shining under the bench to the

right caught his eye.... He looked about him--nobody. He approached the

room on tiptoe, went down two steps into it and in a faint voice called

the porter. "Yes, not at home! Somewhere near though, in the yard, for

the door is wide open." He dashed to the axe (it was an axe) and pulled

it out from under the bench, where it lay between two chunks of wood;

at once, before going out, he made it fast in the noose, he thrust both

hands into his pockets and went out of the room; no one had noticed him!

"When reason fails, the devil helps!" he thought with a strange grin.

This chance raised his spirits extraordinarily.

He walked along quietly and sedately, without hurry, to avoid awakening

suspicion. He scarcely looked at the passers-by, tried to escape looking

at their faces at all, and to be as little noticeable as possible.

Suddenly he thought of his hat. "Good heavens! I had the money the day

before yesterday and did not get a cap to wear instead!" A curse rose

from the bottom of his soul.

Glancing out of the corner of his eye into a shop, he saw by a clock on

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