s a rule she is lying on the sofa or in a lounge-chair reading. Seeing me, she raises her head languidly, sits up, and shakes hands. "You are always lying down," I say, after pausing and taking breath. "That's not good for you. You ought to occupy yourself with something." "What?" "I say you ought to occupy yourself in some way." "With what? A woman can be nothing but a simple workwoman or an actress." "Well, if you can't be a workwoman, be an actress." She says nothing. "You ought to get married," I say, half in jest. "There is no one to marry. There's no reason to, either." "You can't live like this." "Without a husband? Much that matters; I could have as many men as I like if I wanted to." "That's ugly, Katya." "What is ugly?" "Why, what you have just said." Noticing that I am hurt and wishing to efface the disagreeable impression, Katya says: "Let us go; come this way." She takes me into a very snug little room, and says, pointing to the writing-table: