[A House of Gentlefolk by Ivan Turgenev]@TWC D-Link bookA House of Gentlefolk CHAPTER XXV 5/9
"Why do you attribute such ideas to me ?" "And, besides that, you are all, all the tribe of you," continued Mihalevitch, "cultivated loafers.
You know which leg the German limps on, you know what's amiss with the English and the French, and your pitiful culture goes to make it worse, your shameful idleness, your abominable inactivity is justified by it.
Some are even proud of it: 'I'm such a clever fellow,' they say, 'I do nothing, while these fools are in a fuss.' Yes! and there are fine gentlemen among us--though I don't say this as to you--who reduce their whole life to a kind of stupor of boredom, get used to it, live in it, like--like a mushroom in white sauce," Mihalevitch added hastily, and he laughed at his own comparison.
"Oh! this stupor of boredom is the ruin of Russians.
Ours is the age for work, and the sickening loafer"... "But what is all this abuse about ?" Lavretsky clamoured in his turn. "Work--doing--you'd better say what is to be done, instead of abusing me, Desmosthenes of Poltava!" "There, what a thing to ask! I can't tell you that brother; that every one ought to know for himself," retorted the Desmosthenes ironically. "A landowner, a nobleman, and not know what to do? You have no faith, or else you would know; no faith--and no intuition." "Let me at least have time to breathe; you don't let me have time to look round," Lavretsky besought him. "Not a minute, nor a second!" retorted Mihalevitch with an imperious wave of the hand.
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