"No!" he thought. "It doesn't matter if it's death, or Siberia, but get

away from here I must! Yet, where shall I go? Everywhere it's the same

thing, and there's no escaping from one's self. When once a man sets

himself above life, then life in any form can never satisfy him,

whether he lives in a hole like this, or in St. Petersburg."

"As I take it," cried Schafroff, "man, individually, is a mere

nothing."

Yourii looked at the speaker's dull, unintelligent countenance, with

its tired little eyes behind their glasses, and thought that such a man

as that was in truth nothing.

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"The individual is a cypher. It is only they who emerge from the

masses, yet are never out of touch with them, and who do not oppose the

crowd, as bourgeois heroes usually do--it is only they who have real

strength."

"And in what does such strength consist, pray?" asked Ivanoff

aggressively, as he leant across the table. "Is it in fighting against

the actual government? Very likely. But in their struggle for personal

happiness, how can the masses help them?"

"Ah! there you go! You're a super-man, and want happiness of a special

kind to suit yourself. But, we men of the masses, we think that in

fighting for the welfare of others our own happiness lies. The triumph

of the idea--that is happiness!"

"Yet, suppose the idea is a false one?"

"That doesn't matter. Belief's the thing!" Schafroff tossed his head

stubbornly.

"Bah!" said Ivanoff in a contemptuous tone, "every man believes that

his own occupation is the most important and most indispensable thing

in the whole world. Even a ladies' tailor thinks so. You know that

perfectly well, but apparently you have forgotten it; therefore, as a

friend I am bound to remind you of the fact."

With involuntary hatred Yourii regarded Ivanoff's flabby, perspiring

face, and grey, lustreless eyes.

"And, in your opinion, what constitutes happiness, pray?" he asked, as

his lips curled in contempt.

"Well, most assuredly not in perpetual sighing and groaning, or

incessant questionings such as, 'I sneezed just now. Was that the right

thing to do? Will it not cause harm to some one? Have I, in sneezing,

fulfilled my destiny?'"

Yourii could read hatred in the speaker's cold eyes, and it infuriated

him to think that Ivanoff considered himself his superior

intellectually, and was laughing at him.

"We'll soon see," he thought.

"That's not a programme," he retorted, striving to let his face express

intense disdain, as well as reluctance to pursue the discussion.




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