| PART VI
8. CHAPTER VIII
 (continued)He suddenly recalled Sonia's words, "Go to the cross-roads, bow down
 to the people, kiss the earth, for you have sinned against it too, and
 say aloud to the whole world, 'I am a murderer.'" He trembled,
 remembering that. And the hopeless misery and anxiety of all that
 time, especially of the last hours, had weighed so heavily upon him
 that he positively clutched at the chance of this new unmixed,
 complete sensation. It came over him like a fit; it was like a single
 spark kindled in his soul and spreading fire through him. Everything
 in him softened at once and the tears started into his eyes. He fell
 to the earth on the spot. . . . He knelt down in the middle of the square, bowed down to the earth,
 and kissed that filthy earth with bliss and rapture. He got up and
 bowed down a second time. "He's boozed," a youth near him observed. There was a roar of laughter. "He's going to Jerusalem, brothers, and saying good-bye to his
 children and his country. He's bowing down to all the world and
 kissing the great city of St. Petersburg and its pavement," added a
 workman who was a little drunk. "Quite a young man, too!" observed a third. "And a gentleman," someone observed soberly. "There's no knowing who's a gentleman and who isn't nowadays." These exclamations and remarks checked Raskolnikov, and the words, "I
 am a murderer," which were perhaps on the point of dropping from his
 lips, died away. He bore these remarks quietly, however, and, without
 looking round, he turned down a street leading to the police office.
 He had a glimpse of something on the way which did not surprise him;
 he had felt that it must be so. The second time he bowed down in the
 Hay Market he saw, standing fifty paces from him on the left, Sonia.
 She was hiding from him behind one of the wooden shanties in the
 market-place. She had followed him then on his painful way!
 Raskolnikov at that moment felt and knew once for all that Sonia was
 with him for ever and would follow him to the ends of the earth,
 wherever fate might take him. It wrung his heart . . . but he was just
 reaching the fatal place. |