PART V
1. CHAPTER I
 (continued)
Andrey Semyonovitch was an anaemic, scrofulous little man, with
 strangely flaxen mutton-chop whiskers of which he was very proud. He
 was a clerk and had almost always something wrong with his eyes. He
 was rather soft-hearted, but self-confident and sometimes extremely
 conceited in speech, which had an absurd effect, incongruous with his
 little figure. He was one of the lodgers most respected by Amalia
 Ivanovna, for he did not get drunk and paid regularly for his
 lodgings. Andrey Semyonovitch really was rather stupid; he attached
 himself to the cause of progress and "our younger generation" from
 enthusiasm. He was one of the numerous and varied legion of dullards,
 of half-animate abortions, conceited, half-educated coxcombs, who
 attach themselves to the idea most in fashion only to vulgarise it and
 who caricature every cause they serve, however sincerely. 
Though Lebeziatnikov was so good-natured, he, too, was beginning to
 dislike Pyotr Petrovitch. This happened on both sides unconsciously.
 However simple Andrey Semyonovitch might be, he began to see that
 Pyotr Petrovitch was duping him and secretly despising him, and that
 "he was not the right sort of man." He had tried expounding to him the
 system of Fourier and the Darwinian theory, but of late Pyotr
 Petrovitch began to listen too sarcastically and even to be rude. The
 fact was he had begun instinctively to guess that Lebeziatnikov was
 not merely a commonplace simpleton, but, perhaps, a liar, too, and
 that he had no connections of any consequence even in his own circle,
 but had simply picked things up third-hand; and that very likely he
 did not even know much about his own work of propaganda, for he was in
 too great a muddle. A fine person he would be to show anyone up! It
 must be noted, by the way, that Pyotr Petrovitch had during those ten
 days eagerly accepted the strangest praise from Andrey Semyonovitch;
 he had not protested, for instance, when Andrey Semyonovitch belauded
 him for being ready to contribute to the establishment of the new
 "commune," or to abstain from christening his future children, or to
 acquiesce if Dounia were to take a lover a month after marriage, and
 so on. Pyotr Petrovitch so enjoyed hearing his own praises that he did
 not disdain even such virtues when they were attributed to him. 
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