[A House of Gentlefolk by Ivan Turgenev]@TWC D-Link book
A House of Gentlefolk

CHAPTER IV
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In spite of his smartness, he was almost always on the brink of ruin, and the property he left his son was small and heavily-encumbered.

To make up for that, however, he did exert himself, after his own fashion, over his son's education.
Vladimir Nikolaitch spoke French very well, English well, and German badly; that is the proper thing; fashionable people would be ashamed to speak German well; but to utter an occasional--generally a humorous--phrase in German is quite correct, c'est meme tres chic, as the Parisians of Petersburg express themselves.

By the time he was fifteen, Vladimir knew how to enter any drawing-room without embarrassment, how to move about in it gracefully and to leave it at the appropriate moment.

Panshin's father gained many connections for his son.

He never lost an opportunity, while shuffling the cards between two rubbers, or playing a successful trump, of dropping a hint about his Volodka to any personage of importance who was a devotee of cards.


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