Fyodor Dostoevsky

ache. Of course the only thing left for it is to dismiss all that with a wave

of its paw, and, with a smile of assumed contempt in which it does not

even itself believe, creep ignominiously into its mouse-hole. There in its

nasty, stinking, underground home our insulted, crushed and ridiculed

mouse promptly becomes absorbed in cold, malignant and, above all,

everlasting spite. For forty years together it will remember its injury down

to the smallest, most ignominious details, and every time will add, of

itself, details still more ignominious, spitefully teasing and tormenting

itself with its own imagination. It will itself be ashamed of its imaginings,

but yet it will recall it all, it will go over and over every detail, it will

invent unheard of things against itself, pretending that those things

might happen, and will forgive nothing. Maybe it will begin to revenge

itself, too, but, as it were, piecemeal, in trivial ways, from behind the

stove, incognito, without believing either in its own right to vengeance,

or in the success of its revenge, knowing that from all its efforts at revenge

it will suffer a hundred times more than he on whom it revenges itself,

while he, I daresay, will not even scratch himself. On its deathbed it will

recall it all over again, with interest accumulated over all the years

and ...

But it is just in that cold, abominable half despair, half belief, in that

conscious burying oneself alive for grief in the underworld for forty years,

in that acutely recognised and yet partly doubtful hopelessness of one's

position, in that hell of unsatisfied desires turned inward, in that fever of

oscillations, of resolutions determined for ever and repented of again a

minute later--that the savour of that strange enjoyment of which I have

spoken lies. It is so subtle, so difficult of analysis, that persons who are a

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