e authorized edition.
{94} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{96} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{99} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{108} Omitted by the Censor from the authorized edition.
{111} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{113} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition
{116} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{122a} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{122b} A very complicated sort of whist.
{124} The whole of this chapter is omitted by the Censor in the
authorized edition, and is there represented by the following sentence:
"And I felt that in money, in money itself, in the possession of it,
there was something immoral; and I asked myself, What is money?"
{135} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{138} Omitted by the Censor in the authorized edition.
{139} The above passage is omitted in the authorized edition, and the
following is added: "I came to the simple and natural conclusion, that,
if I pity the tortured horse upon which I am riding, the first thing for
me to do is to alight, and to walk on my own feet."
{140} Omitted in the authorized edition.
{142} Omitted in the authorized edition.
{152a} "Into a worse state," in the authorized edition.
{152b} Omitted in the authorized edition.
{154} Omitted in the authorized edition.
{155} Reaumur.
{158} In the Moscow edition (authorized by the Censor), the concluding
paragraph is replaced by the following:--"They say: The action of a
single man is but a drop in the sea. A drop in the sea!
"There is an Indian legend relating how a man dropped a pearl into the
sea, and in order to recover it he took a bucket, and began to bail out,
and to pour the water on the shore. Thus he toiled without intermission,
and on the seventh day the spirit of the sea grew alarmed lest the man
should dip the sea dry, and so he brought him his pearl. If our social
evil of persecuting man were the sea, then that pearl which we have lost
is equivalent to devoting our lives to bailing out the sea of that evil.
The prince of this world will take fright, he will succumb more promptly
than did the spirit of the sea; but this social evil is not the sea, but
a foul cesspool, which we assiduously fill with our own uncleanness. All
that is required is for us to come to our senses, and to comprehend what
we are doing; to
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