PART VI
6. CHAPTER VI
 (continued)
He got up and sat on the edge of the bedstead with his back to the
 window. "It's better not to sleep at all," he decided. There was a
 cold damp draught from the window, however; without getting up he drew
 the blanket over him and wrapped himself in it. He was not thinking of
 anything and did not want to think. But one image rose after another,
 incoherent scraps of thought without beginning or end passed through
 his mind. He sank into drowsiness. Perhaps the cold, or the dampness,
 or the dark, or the wind that howled under the window and tossed the
 trees roused a sort of persistent craving for the fantastic. He kept
 dwelling on images of flowers, he fancied a charming flower garden, a
 bright, warm, almost hot day, a holiday--Trinity day. A fine,
 sumptuous country cottage in the English taste overgrown with fragrant
 flowers, with flower beds going round the house; the porch, wreathed
 in climbers, was surrounded with beds of roses. A light, cool
 staircase, carpeted with rich rugs, was decorated with rare plants in
 china pots. He noticed particularly in the windows nosegays of tender,
 white, heavily fragrant narcissus bending over their bright, green,
 thick long stalks. He was reluctant to move away from them, but he
 went up the stairs and came into a large, high drawing-room and again
 everywhere--at the windows, the doors on to the balcony, and on the
 balcony itself--were flowers. The floors were strewn with freshly-cut
 fragrant hay, the windows were open, a fresh, cool, light air came
 into the room. The birds were chirruping under the window, and in the
 middle of the room, on a table covered with a white satin shroud,
 stood a coffin. The coffin was covered with white silk and edged with
 a thick white frill; wreaths of flowers surrounded it on all sides.
 Among the flowers lay a girl in a white muslin dress, with her arms
 crossed and pressed on her bosom, as though carved out of marble. But
 her loose fair hair was wet; there was a wreath of roses on her head.
 The stern and already rigid profile of her face looked as though
 chiselled of marble too, and the smile on her pale lips was full of an
 immense unchildish misery and sorrowful appeal. Svidrigailov knew that
 girl; there was no holy image, no burning candle beside the coffin; no
 sound of prayers: the girl had drowned herself. She was only fourteen,
 but her heart was broken. And she had destroyed herself, crushed by an
 insult that had appalled and amazed that childish soul, had smirched
 that angel purity with unmerited disgrace and torn from her a last
 scream of despair, unheeded and brutally disregarded, on a dark night
 in the cold and wet while the wind howled. . . . 
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