âI suppose you have forgotten all your learning?â observed Kuzmitchov.
âI should think so! Thank God, I have reached my eightieth year! Something of philosophy and rhetoric I do remember, but languages and mathematics I have quite forgotten.â
Father Christopher screwed up his eyes, thought a minute and said in an undertone:
âWhat is a substance? A creature is a self-existing object, not requiring anything else for its completion.â
He shook his head and laughed with feeling.
âSpiritual nourishment!â he said. âOf a truth matter nourishes the flesh and spiritual nourishment the soul!â
âLearning is all very well,â sighed Kuzmitchov, âbut if we donât overtake Varlamov, learning wonât do much for us.â
âA man isnât a needleâ âwe shall find him. He must be going his rounds in these parts.â
Among the sedge were flying the three snipe they had seen before, and in their plaintive cries there was a note of alarm and vexation at having been driven away from the stream. The horses were steadily munching and snorting. Deniska walked about by them and, trying to appear indifferent to the cucumbers, pies, and eggs that the gentry were eating, he concentrated himself on the gadflies and horseflies that were fastening upon the horsesâ backs and bellies; he squashed his victims apathetically, emitting a peculiar, fiendishly triumphant, guttural sound, and when he missed them cleared his throat with an air of vexation and looked after every lucky one that escaped death.
âDeniska, where are you? Come and eat,â said Kuzmitchov, heaving a deep sigh, a sign that he had had enough.