Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume XIV).djvu/104

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PUNIN AND BABURIN

through her nose, which was always a bad sign, 'And what age is he, your protégé?'

'About my own age.'

'Really, I imagined that you were bringing him up.'

'Not so; he is my comrade—and besides . . .'

'That's enough,' my grandmother cut him short a second time. 'You're a philanthropist, it seems. Yakov Petrovitch is right; for a man in your position it's something very peculiar. But now let's get to business. I'll explain to you what your duties will be. And as regards wages. . . . Que faites vous ici? ' added my grandmother suddenly, turning her dry, yellow face to me:— 'Allez étudier votre devoir de mythologie. '

I jumped up, went up to kiss my grandmother's hand, and went out,—not to study mythology, but simply into the garden.


The garden on my grandmother's estate was very old and large, and was bounded on one side by a flowing pond, in which there were not only plenty of carp and eels, but even loach were caught, those renowned loach, that have nowadays disappeared almost everywhere. At the head of this pond was a thick clump of willows; further and higher, on both sides of a rising slope, were dense bushes of hazel, elder, honeysuckle, and sloe-thorn, with an undergrowth of heather and clover flowers. Here and there

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