PART 5
Chapter 27
 (continued)
He frowned, and began explaining what Seryozha had heard many
 times before and never could remember, because he understood it
 too well, just as that "suddenly" is an adverb of manner of
 action.  Seryozha looked with scared eyes at his father, and
 could think of nothing but whether his father would make him
 repeat what he had said, as he sometimes did.  And this thought
 so alarmed Seryozha that he now understood nothing.  But his
 father did not make him repeat it, and passed on to the lesson
 out of the Old Testament.  Seryozha recounted the events
 themselves well enough, but when he had to answer questions as to
 what certain events prefigured, he knew nothing, though he had
 already been punished over this lesson.  The passage at which he
 was utterly unable to say anything, and began fidgeting and
 cutting the table and swinging his chair, was where he had to
 repeat the patriarchs before the Flood.  He did not know one of
 them, except Enoch, who had been taken up alive to heaven.  Last
 time he had remembered their names, but now he had forgotten them
 utterly, chiefly because Enoch was the personage he liked best in
 the whole of the Old Testament, and Enoch's translation to heaven
 was connected in his mind with a whole long train of thought, in
 which he became absorbed now while he gazed with fascinated eyes
 at his father's watch-chain and a half-unbuttoned button on his
 waistcoat. 
In death, of which they talked to him so often, Seryozha
 disbelieved entirely.  He did not believe that those he loved
 could die, above all that he himself would die.  That was to him
 something utterly inconceivable and impossible.  But he had been
 told that all men die; he had asked people, indeed, whom he
 trusted, and they too, had confirmed it; his old nurse, too, said
 the same, though reluctantly.  But Enoch had not died, and so it
 followed that everyone did not die.  "And why cannot anyone else
 so serve God and be taken alive to heaven?" thought Seryozha. 
 Bad people, that is those Seryozha did not like, they might die,
 but the good might all be like Enoch. 
"Well, what are the names of the patriarchs?" 
"Enoch, Enos--" 
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