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I entered; than one waiter prepared to remove my coat and bring me
whatever I should order。  It was evident that they had been trained
to brisk and accurate service。  I inquired for the enumerators。

〃Vanya!〃 shouted a small man; dressed in German fashion; who was
engaged in placing something in a cupboard behind the counter; this
was the landlord of the tavern; a Kaluga peasant; Ivan Fedotitch; who
hired one…half of the Zimins' houses and sublet them to lodgers。  The
waiter; a thin; hooked…nosed young fellow of eighteen; with a yellow
complexion; hastened up。

〃Conduct this gentleman to the census…takers; they went into the main
building over the well。〃  The young fellow threw down his napkin; and
donned a coat over his white jacket and white trousers; and a cap
with a large visor; and; tripping quickly along with his white feet;
he led me through the swinging door in the rear。  In the dirty;
malodorous kitchen; in the out…building; we encountered an old woman
who was carefully carrying some very bad…smelling tripe; wrapped in a
rag; off somewhere。  From the out…building we descended into a
sloping court…yard; all encumbered with small wooden buildings on
lower stories of stone。  The odor in this whole yard was extremely
powerful。  The centre of this odor was an out…house; round which
people were thronging whenever I passed it。  It merely indicated the
spot; but was not altogether used itself。  It was impossible; when
passing through the yard; not to take note of this spot; one always
felt oppressed when one entered the penetrating atmosphere which was
emitted by this foul smell。

The waiter; carefully guarding his white trousers; led me cautiously
past this place of frozen and unfrozen uncleanness to one of the
buildings。  The people who were passing through the yard and along
the balconies all stopped to stare at me。  It was evident that a
respectably dressed man was a curiosity in these localities。

The young man asked a woman 〃whether she had seen the census…takers?〃
And three men simultaneously answered his question:  some said that
they were over the well; but others said that they had been there;
but had come out and gone to Nikita Ivanovitch。  An old man dressed
only in his shirt; who was wandering about the centre of the yard;
said that they were in No。 30。  The young man decided that this was
the most probable report; and conducted me to No。 30 through the
basement entrance; and darkness and bad smells; different from that
which existed outside。  We went down…stairs; and proceeded along the
earthen floor of a dark corridor。  As we were passing along the
corridor; a door flew open abruptly; and an old drunken man; in his
shirt; probably not of the peasant class; thrust himself out。  A
washerwoman; wringing her soapy hands; was pursuing and hustling the
old man with piercing screams。  Vanya; my guide; pushed the old man
aside; and reproved him。

〃It's not proper to make such a row;〃 said me; 〃and you an officer;
too!〃 and we went on to the door of No。 30。

Vanya gave it a little pull。  The door gave way with a smack; opened;
and we smelled soapy steam; and a sharp odor of spoilt food and
tobacco; and we entered into total darkness。  The windows were on the
opposite side; but the corridors ran to right and left between board
partitions; and small doors opened; at various angles; into the rooms
made of uneven whitewashed boards。  In a dark room; on the left; a
woman could be seen washing in a tub。  An old woman was peeping from
one of these small doors on the right。  Through another open door we
could see a red…faced; hairy peasant; in bast shoes; sitting on his
wooden bunk; his hands rested on his knees; and he was swinging his
feet; shod in bast shoes; and gazing gloomily at them。

At the end of the corridor was a little door leading to the apartment
where the census…takers were。  This was the chamber of the mistress
of the whole of No。 30; she rented the entire apartment from Ivan
Feodovitch; and let it out again to lodgers and as night…quarters。
In her tiny room; under the tinsel images; sat the student census…
taker with his charts; and; in his quality of investigator; he had
just thoroughly interrogated a peasant wearing a shirt and a vest。
This latter was a friend of the landlady; and had been answering
questions for her。  The landlady herself; an elderly woman; was there
also; and two of her curious tenants。  When I entered; the room was
already packed full。  I pushed my way to the table。  I exchanged
greetings with the student; and he proceeded with his inquiries。  And
I began to look about me; and to interrogate the inhabitants of these
quarters for my own purpose。

It turned out; that in this first set of lodgings; I found not a
single person upon whom I could pour out my benevolence。  The
landlady; in spite of the fact that the poverty; smallness and dirt
of these quarters struck me after the palatial house in which I
dwell; lived in comfort; compared with many of the poor inhabitants
of the city; and in comparison with the poverty in the country; with
which I was thoroughly familiar; she lived luxuriously。  She had a
feather…bed; a quilted coverlet; a samovar; a fur cloak; and a
dresser with crockery。  The landlady's friend had the same
comfortable appearance。  He had a watch and a chain。  Her lodgers
were not so well off; but there was not one of them who was in need
of immediate assistance:  the woman who was washing linen in a tub;
and who had been abandoned by her husband and had children; an aged
widow without any means of livelihood; as she said; and that peasant
in bast shoes; who told me that he had nothing to eat that day。  But
on questioning them; it appeared that none of these people were in
special want; and that; in order to help them; it would be necessary
to become well acquainted with them。

When I proposed to the woman whose husband had abandoned her; to
place her children in an asylum; she became confused; fell into
thought; thanked me effusively; but evidently did not wish to do so;
she would have preferred pecuniary assistance。  The eldest girl
helped her in her washing; and the younger took care of the little
boy。  The old woman begged earnestly to be taken to the hospital; but
on examining her nook I found that the old woman was not particularly
poor。  She had a chest full of effects; a teapot with a tin spout;
two cups; and caramel boxes filled with tea and sugar。  She knitted
stockings and gloves; and received monthly aid from some benevolent
lady。  And it was evident that what the peasant needed was not so
much food as drink; and that whatever might be given him would find
its way to the dram…shop。  In these quarters; therefore; there were
none of the sort of people whom I could render happy by a present of
money。  But there were poor people who appeared to me to be of a
doubtful character。  I noted down the old woman; the woman with the
children; and the peasant; and decided that they must be seen to; but
later on; as I was occupied with the peculiarly unfortunate whom I
expected to find in this house; I made up my mind that there must be
some order in the aid which we should bestow; first came the most
wretched; and then this kind。  But in the next quarters; and in the
next after that; it was the same story; all the people had to be
narrowly investigated before they could be helped。  But unfortunates
of the sort whom a gift of money would convert from unfortunate into
fortunate people; there were none。  Mortifying as it is to me to avow
this; I began to get disenchanted; because I did not find among these
people any thing of the sort which I had expected。  I had expected to
find peculiar people here; but; after making the round of all the
apartments; I was convinced that the inhabitants of these houses were
not peculiar people at all; but precisely such persons as those among
whom I lived。  As there are among us; just so among them; there were
here those who were more or less good; more or less stupid; happy and
unhappy。  The unhappy were exactly such unhappy beings as exist among
us; that is; unhappy people whose unhappiness lies not in their
external conditions; but in themselves; a sort of unhappiness which
it is impossible to right by any sort of bank…note whatever。



CHAPTER VI。



The inhabitants of these houses constitute the lower class of the
city; which numbers in Moscow; probably; one hundred thousand。
There; in that house; are representatives of every description of
this class。  There are petty employers; and master…artisans;
bootmakers; brush…makers; cabinet…makers; turners; shoemakers;
tailors; blacksmiths; there are cab…drivers; young women living
alone; and female pedlers; laundresses; old…clothes dealers; money…
lenders; day…laborers; and people without any definite employment;
and also beggars and dissolute women。

Here were many of the very people whom I had seen at the entrance to
the Lyapinsky house; but here these people were scattered about among
the working…people。  And moreover; I had seen these people at their
most unfortunate time; when they had eaten and drunk up every thing;
and when; cold; hungry; and driven 

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