"Good evening, Pseldonimov, do you know me?" said Ivan Ilyitch, and felt at the same minute that he had said this very awkwardly; he felt, too, that he was perhaps doing something horribly stupid at that moment. "You-our Ex-cel-len-cy!" muttered Pseldonimov. "To be sure.... I have called in to see you quite by chance, my friend, as you can probably imagine...." But evidently Pseldonimov could imagine nothing. He stood with staring eyes in the utmost perplexity. "You won't turn me out, I suppose.... Pleased or not, you must make a visitor welcome...." Ivan Ilyitch went on, feeling that he was confused to a point of unseemly feebleness; that he was trying to smile and was utterly unable; that the humorous reference to Stepan Nikiforovitch and Trifon was becoming more and more impossible.