| EPILOGUE
1. EPILOGUE - I (continued)For a long time Raskolnikov did not know of his mother's death, though
 a regular correspondence had been maintained from the time he reached
 Siberia. It was carried on by means of Sonia, who wrote every month to
 the Razumihins and received an answer with unfailing regularity. At
 first they found Sonia's letters dry and unsatisfactory, but later on
 they came to the conclusion that the letters could not be better, for
 from these letters they received a complete picture of their
 unfortunate brother's life. Sonia's letters were full of the most
 matter-of-fact detail, the simplest and clearest description of all
 Raskolnikov's surroundings as a convict. There was no word of her own
 hopes, no conjecture as to the future, no description of her feelings.
 Instead of any attempt to interpret his state of mind and inner life,
 she gave the simple facts--that is, his own words, an exact account of
 his health, what he asked for at their interviews, what commission he
 gave her and so on. All these facts she gave with extraordinary
 minuteness. The picture of their unhappy brother stood out at last
 with great clearness and precision.  There could be no mistake,
 because nothing was given but facts. But Dounia and her husband could get little comfort out of the news,
 especially at first. Sonia wrote that he was constantly sullen and not
 ready to talk, that he scarcely seemed interested in the news she gave
 him from their letters, that he sometimes asked after his mother and
 that when, seeing that he had guessed the truth, she told him at last
 of her death, she was surprised to find that he did not seem greatly
 affected by it, not externally at any rate. She told them that,
 although he seemed so wrapped up in himself and, as it were, shut
 himself off from everyone--he took a very direct and simple view of
 his new life; that he understood his position, expected nothing better
 for the time, had no ill-founded hopes (as is so common in his
 position) and scarcely seemed surprised at anything in his
 surroundings, so unlike anything he had known before. She wrote that
 his health was satisfactory; he did his work without shirking or
 seeking to do more; he was almost indifferent about food, but except
 on Sundays and holidays the food was so bad that at last he had been
 glad to accept some money from her, Sonia, to have his own tea every
 day. He begged her not to trouble about anything else, declaring that
 all this fuss about him only annoyed him. Sonia wrote further that in
 prison he shared the same room with the rest, that she had not seen
 the inside of their barracks, but concluded that they were crowded,
 miserable and unhealthy; that he slept on a plank bed with a rug under
 him and was unwilling to make any other arrangement. But that he lived
 so poorly and roughly, not from any plan or design, but simply from
 inattention and indifference. |