THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
Chapter 6 - The Prosecutor's Speech. Sketches of Character
IPPOLIT KIRILLOVITCH began his speech, trembling with nervousness,
with cold sweat on his forehead, feeling hot and cold all over by
turns. He described this himself afterwards. He regarded this speech
as his chef-d'oeuvre, the chef-d'oeuvre of his whole life, as his
swan-song. He died, it is true, nine months later of rapid
consumption, so that he had the right, as it turned out, to compare
himself to a swan singing his last song. He had put his whole heart
and all the brain he had into that speech. And poor Ippolit
Kirillovitch unexpectedly revealed that at least some feeling for
the public welfare and "the eternal question" lay concealed in him.
Where his speech really excelled was in its sincerity. He genuinely
believed in the prisoner's guilt; he was accusing him not as an
official duty only, and in calling for vengeance he quivered with a
genuine passion "for the security of society." Even the ladies in thee
audience, though they remained hostile to Ippolit Kirillovitch,
admitted that he made an extraordinary impression on them. He began in
a breaking voice, but it soon gained strength and filled the court
to the end of his speech. But as soon as he had finished, he almost
fainted.
"Gentlemen of the jury," began the prosecutor, "this case has made
a stir throughout Russia. But what is there to wonder at, what is
there so peculiarly horrifying in it for us? We are so accustomed to
such crimes! That's what's so horrible, that such dark deeds have
ceased to horrify us. What ought to horrify us is that we are so
accustomed to it, and not this or that isolated crime. What are the
causes of our indifference, our lukewarm attitude to such deeds, to
such signs of the times, ominous of an unenviable future? Is it our
cynicism, is it the premature exhaustion of intellect and
imagination in a society that is sinking into decay, in spite of its
youth? Is it that our moral principles are shattered to their
foundations, or is it, perhaps, a complete lack of such principles
among us? I cannot answer such questions; nevertheless they are
disturbing, and every citizen not only must, but ought to be
harassed by them. Our newborn and still timid press has done good
service to the public already, for without it we should never have
heard of the horrors of unbridled violence and moral degradation which
are continually made known by the press, not merely to those who
attend the new jury courts established in the present reign, but to
everyone. And what do we read almost daily? Of things beside which the
present case grows pale, and seems almost commonplace. But what is
most important is that the majority of our national crimes of violence
bear witness to a widespread evil, now so general among us that it
is difficult to contend against it.
"One day we see a brilliant young officer of high society, at
the very outset of his career, in a cowardly underhand way, without
a pang of conscience, murdering an official who had once been his
benefactor, and the servant girl, to steal his own I O U and what
ready money he could find on him; 'it will come in handy for my
pleasures in the fashionable world and for my career in the future.'
After murdering them, he puts pillows under the head of each of his
victims; he goes away. Next, a young hero 'decorated for bravery'
kills the mother of his chief and benefactor, like a highwayman, and
to urge his companions to join him he asserts that 'she loves him like
a son, and so will follow all his directions and take no precautions.'
Granted that he is a monster, yet I dare not say in these days that he
is unique. Another man will not commit the murder, but will feel and
think like him, and is as dishonourable in soul. In silence, alone
with his conscience, he asks himself perhaps, 'What is honour, and
isn't the condemnation of bloodshed a prejudice?'
"Perhaps people will cry out against me that I am morbid,
hysterical, that it is a monstrous slander, that I am exaggerating.
Let them say so- and heavens! I should be the first to rejoice if it
were so! Oh, don't believe me, think of me as morbid, but remember
my words; if only a tenth, if only a twentieth part of what I say is
true- even so it's awful! Look how our young people commit suicide,
without asking themselves Hamlet's question what there is beyond,
without a sign of such a question, as though all that relates to the
soul and to what awaits us beyond the grave had long been erased in
their minds and buried under the sands. Look at our vice, at our
profligates. Fyodor Pavlovitch, the luckless victim in the present
case, was almost an innocent babe compared with many of them. And
yet we all knew him, 'he lived among us!'...
"Yes, one day perhaps the leading intellects of Russia and of
Europe will study the psychology of Russian crime, for the subject
is worth it. But this study will come later, at leisure, when all
the tragic topsy-turvydom of to-day is farther behind us, so that it's
possible to examine it with more insight and more impartiality than
I can do. Now we are either horrified or pretend to be horrified,
though we really gloat over the spectacle, and love strong and
eccentric sensations which tickle our cynical, pampered idleness.
Or, like little children, we brush the dreadful ghosts away and hide
our heads in the pillow so as to return to our sports and merriment as
soon as they have vanished. But we must one day begin life in sober
earnest, we must look at ourselves as a society; it's time we tried to
grasp something of our social position, or at least to make a
beginning in that direction.
"A great writer* of the last epoch, comparing Russia to a swift
troika galloping to an unknown goal, exclaims, 'Oh, troika, birdlike
troika, who invented thee!' and adds, in proud ecstasy, that all the
peoples of the world stand aside respectfully to make way for the
recklessly galloping troika to pass. That may be, they may stand
aside, respectfully or no, but in my poor opinion the great writer
ended his book in this way either in an excess of childish and naive
optimism, or simply in fear of the censorship of the day. For if the
troika were drawn by his heroes, Sobakevitch, Nozdryov, Tchitchikov,
it could reach no rational goal, whoever might be driving it. And
those were the heroes of an older generation, ours are worse specimens
still...."
* Gogol.
At this point Ippolit Kirillovitch's speech was interrupted by
applause. The liberal significance of this simile was appreciated. The
applause was, it's true, of brief duration, so that the President
did not think it necessary to caution the public, and only looked
severely in the direction of the offenders. But Ippolit Kirillovitch
was encouraged; he had never been applauded before! He had been all
his life unable to get a hearing, and now he suddenly had an
opportunity of securing the ear of all Russia.
"What, after all, is this Karamazov family, which has gained
such an unenviable notoriety throughout Russia?" he continued.
"Perhaps I am exaggerating, but it seems to me that certain
fundamental features of the educated class of to-day are reflected
in this family picture- only, of course, in miniature, 'like the sun
in a drop of water.' Think of that unhappy, vicious, unbridled old
man, who has met with such a melancholy end, the head of a family!
Beginning life of noble birth, but in a poor dependent position,
through an unexpected marriage he came into a small fortune. A petty
knave, a toady and buffoon, of fairly good, though undeveloped,
intelligence, he was, above all, a moneylender, who grew bolder with
growing prosperity. His abject and servile characteristics
disappeared, his, malicious and sarcastic cynicism was all that
remained. On the spiritual side he was undeveloped, while his vitality
was excessive. He saw nothing in life but sensual pleasure, and he
brought his children up to be the same. He had no feelings for his
duties as a father. He ridiculed those duties. He left his little
children to the servants, and was glad to be rid of them, forgot about
them completely. The old man's maxim was Apres moi le deluge.* He
was an example of everything that is opposed to civic duty, of the
most complete and malignant individualism. 'The world may burn for
aught I care, so long as I am all right,' and he was all right; he was
content, he was eager to go on living in the same way for another
twenty or thirty years. He swindled his own son and spent his money,
his maternal inheritance, on trying to get his mistress from him.
No, I don't intend to leave the prisoner's defence altogether to my
talented colleague from Petersburg. I will speak the truth myself, I
can well understand what resentment he had heaped up in his son's
heart against him.
* After me, the deluge.
"But enough, enough of that unhappy old man; he has paid the
penalty. Let us remember, however, that he was a father, and one of
the typical fathers of to-day. Am I unjust, indeed, in saying that
he is typical of many modern fathers? Alas! many of them only differ
in not openly professing such cynicism, for they are better
educated, more cultured, but their philosophy is essentially the
same as his. Perhaps I am a pessimist, but you have agreed to
forgive me. Let us agree beforehand, you need not believe me, but
let me speak. Let me say what I have to say, and remember something of
my words.
"Now for the children of this father, this head of a family. One
of them is the prisoner before us, all the rest of my speech will deal
with him. Of the other two I will speak only cursorily.
"The elder is one of those modern young men of brilliant education
and vigorous intellect, who has lost all faith in everything. He has
denied and rejected much already, like his father. We have all heard
him, he was a welcome guest in local society. He never concealed his
opinions, quite the contrary in fact, which justifies me in speaking
rather openly of him now, of course, not as an individual, but as a
member of the Karamazov family. Another personage closely connected
with the case died here by his own hand last night. I mean an
afflicted idiot, formerly the servant, and possibly the illegitimate
son, of Fyodor Pavlovitch, Smerdyakov. At the preliminary inquiry,
he told me with hysterical tears how the young Ivan Karamazov had
horrified him by his spiritual audacity. 'Everything in the world is
lawful according to him, and nothing must be forbidden in the
future- that is what he always taught me.' I believe that idiot was
driven out of his mind by this theory, though, of course, the
epileptic attacks from which he suffered, and this terrible
catastrophe, have helped to unhinge his faculties. But he dropped
one very interesting observation, which would have done credit to a
more intelligent observer, and that is, indeed, why I've mentioned it:
'If there is one of the sons that is like Fyodor Pavlovitch in
character, it is Ivan Fyodorovitch.'
"With that remark I conclude my sketch of his character, feeling
it indelicate to continue further. Oh, I don't want to draw any
further conclusions and croak like a raven over the young man's
future. We've seen to-day in this court that there are still good
impulses in his young heart, that family feeling has not been
destroyed in him by lack of faith and cynicism, which have come to him
rather by inheritance than by the exercise of independent thought.
"Then the third son. Oh, he is a devout and modest youth, who does
not share his elder brother's gloomy and destructive theory of life.
He has sought to cling to the 'ideas of the people,' or to what goes
by that name in some circles of our intellectual classes. He clung
to the monastery, and was within an ace of becoming a monk. He seems
to me to have betrayed unconsciously, and so early, that timid despair
which leads so many in our unhappy society, who dread cynicism and its
corrupting influences, and mistakenly attribute all the mischief to
European enlightenment, to return to their 'native soil,' as they say,
to the bosom, so to speak, of their mother earth, like frightened
children, yearning to fall asleep on the withered bosom of their
decrepit mother, and to sleep there for ever, only to escape the
horrors that terrify them.
"For my part I wish the excellent and gifted young man every
success; I trust that youthful idealism and impulse towards the
ideas of the people may never degenerate, as often happens, on the
moral side into gloomy mysticism, and on the political into blind
chauvinism- two elements which are even a greater menace to Russia
than the premature decay, due to misunderstanding and gratuitous
adoption of European ideas, from which his elder brother is
suffering."
Two or three people clapped their hands at the mention of
chauvinism and mysticism. Ippolit Kirillovitch had been, indeed,
carried away by his own eloquence. All this had little to do with
the case in hand, to say nothing of the fact of its being somewhat
vague, but the sickly and consumptive man was overcome by the desire
to express himself once in his life. People said afterwards that he
was actuated by unworthy motives in his criticism of Ivan, because the
latter had on one or two occasions got the better of him in
argument, and Ippolit Kirillovitch, remembering it, tried now to
take his revenge. But I don't know whether it was true. All this was
only introductory, however, and the speech passed to more direct
consideration of the case.
"But to return to the eldest son," Ippolit Kirillovitch went on.
"He is the prisoner before us. We have his life and his actions,
too, before us; the fatal day has come and all has been brought to the
surface. While his brothers seem to stand for 'Europeanism' and 'the
principles of the people,' he seems to represent Russia as she is. Oh,
not all Russia, not all! God preserve us, if it were! Yet, here we
have her, our mother Russia, the very scent and sound of her. Oh, he
is spontaneous, he is a marvellous mingling of good and evil, he is
a lover of culture and Schiller, yet he brawls in taverns and plucks
out the beards of his boon companions. Oh, he, too, can be good and
noble, but only when all goes well with him. What is more, he can be
carried off his feet, positively carried off his feet by noble ideals,
but only if they come of themselves, if they fall from heaven for him,
if they need not be paid for. He dislikes paying for anything, but
is very fond of receiving, and that's so with him in everything. Oh,
give him every possible good in life (he couldn't be content with
less), and put no obstacle in his way, and he will show that he,
too, can be noble. He is not greedy, no, but he must have money, a
great deal of money, and you will see how generously, with what
scorn of filthy lucre, he will fling it all away in the reckless
dissipation of one night. But if he has not money, he will show what
he is ready to do to get it when he is in great need of it. But all
this later, let us take events in their chronological order.
"First, we have before us a poor abandoned child, running about
the back-yard 'without boots on his feet,' as our worthy and
esteemed fellow citizen, of foreign origin, alas! expressed it just
now. I repeat it again, I yield to no one the defence of the criminal.
I am here to accuse him, but to defend him also. Yes, I, too, am
human; I, too, can weigh the influence of home and childhood on the
character. But the boy grows up and becomes an officer; for a duel and
other reckless conduct he is exiled to one of the remote frontier
towns of Russia. There he led a wild life as an officer. And, of
course, he needed money, money before all things, and so after
prolonged disputes he came to a settlement with his father, and the
last six thousand was sent him. A letter is in existence in which he
practically gives up his claim to the rest and settles his conflict
with his father over the inheritance on the payment of this six
thousand.
"Then came his meeting with a young girl of lofty character and
brilliant education. Oh, I do not venture to repeat the details; you
have only just heard them. Honour, self-sacrifice were shown there,
and I will be silent. The figure of the young officer, frivolous and
profligate, doing homage to true nobility and a lofty ideal, was shown
in a very sympathetic light before us. But the other side of the medal
was unexpectedly turned to us immediately after in this very court.
Again I will not venture to conjecture why it happened so, but there
were causes. The same lady, bathed in tears of long-concealed
indignation, alleged that he, he of all men, had despised her for
her action, which, though incautious, reckless perhaps, was still
dictated by lofty and generous motives. He, he, the girl's
betrothed, looked at her with that smile of mockery, which was more
insufferable from him than from anyone. And knowing that he had
already deceived her (he had deceived her, believing that she was
bound to endure everything from him, even treachery), she
intentionally offered him three thousand roubles, and clearly, too
clearly, let him understand that she was offering him money to deceive
her. 'Well, will you take it or not, are you so lost to shame?' was
the dumb question in her scrutinising eyes. He looked at her, saw
clearly what was in her mind (he's admitted here before you that he
understood it all), appropriated that three thousand
unconditionally, and squandered it in two days with the new object
of his affections.
"What are we to believe then? The first legend of the young
officer sacrificing his last farthing in a noble impulse of generosity
and doing reverence to virtue, or this other revolting picture? As a
rule, between two extremes one has to find the mean, but in the
present case this is not true. The probability is that in the first
case he was genuinely noble, and in the second as genuinely base.
And why? Because he was of the broad Karamazov character- that's
just what I am leading up to- capable of combining the most
incongruous contradictions, and capable of the greatest heights and of
the greatest depths. Remember the brilliant remark made by a young
observer who has seen the Karamazov family at close quarters- Mr.
Rakitin: 'The sense of their own degradation is as essential to
those reckless, unbridled natures as the sense of their lofty
generosity.' And that's true, they need continually this unnatural
mixture. Two extremes at the same moment, or they are miserable and
dissatisfied and their existence is incomplete. They are wide, wide as
mother Russia; they include everything and put up with everything.
"By the way, gentlemen of the jury, we've just touched upon that
three thousand roubles, and I will venture to anticipate things a
little. Can you conceive that a man like that, on receiving that sum
and in such a way, at the price of such shame, such disgrace, such
utter degradation, could have been capable that very day of setting
apart half that sum, that very day, and sewing it up in a little
bag, and would have had the firmness of character to carry it about
with him for a whole month afterwards, in spite of every temptation
and his extreme need of it! Neither in drunken debauchery in
taverns, nor when he was flying into the country, trying to get from
God knows whom, the money so essential to him to remove the object
of his affections from being tempted by his father, did he bring
himself to touch that little bag! Why, if only to avoid abandoning his
mistress to the rival of whom he was so jealous, he would have been
certain to have opened that bag and to have stayed at home to keep
watch over her, and to await the moment when she would say to him at
last 'I am yours,' and to fly with her far from their fatal
surroundings.
"But no, he did not touch his talisman, and what is the reason
he gives for it? The chief reason, as I have just said, was that
when she would say' I am yours, take me where you will,' he might have
the wherewithal to take her. But that first reason, in the
prisoner's own words, was of little weight beside the second. While
I have that money on me, he said, I am a scoundrel, not a thief, for I
can always go to my insulted betrothed, and, laying down half the
sum I have fraudulently appropriated, I can always say to her, 'You
see, I've squandered half your money, and shown I am a weak and
immoral man, and, if you like, a scoundrel' (I use the prisoner's
own expressions), 'but though I am a scoundrel, I am not a thief,
for if I had been a thief, I shouldn't have brought you back this half
of the money, but should have taken it as I did the other half!' A
marvellous explanation! This frantic, but weak man, who could not
resist the temptation of accepting the three thousand roubles at the
price of such disgrace, this very man suddenly develops the most
stoical firmness, and carries about a thousand roubles without
daring to touch it. Does that fit in at all with the character we have
analysed? No, and I venture to tell you how the real Dmitri
Karamazov would have behaved in such circumstances, if he really had
brought himself to put away the money.
"At the first temptation- for instance, to entertain the woman
with whom he had already squandered half the money- he would have
unpicked his little bag and have taken out some hundred roubles, for
why should he have taken back precisely half the money, that is,
fifteen hundred roubles? Why not fourteen hundred? He could just as
well have said then that he was not a thief, because he brought back
fourteen hundred roubles. Then another time he would have unpicked
it again and taken out another hundred, and then a third, and then a
fourth, and before the end of the month he would have taken the last
note but one, feeling that if he took back only a hundred it would
answer the purpose, for a thief would have stolen it all. And then
he would have looked at this last note, and have said to himself,
'It's really not worth while to give back one hundred; let's spend
that, too!' That's how the real Dmitri Karamazov, as we know him,
would have behaved. One cannot imagine anything more incongruous
with the actual fact than this legend of the little bag. Nothing could
be more inconceivable. But we shall return to that later."
After touching upon what had come out in the proceedings
concerning the financial relations of father and son, and arguing
again and again that it was utterly impossible, from the facts
known, to determine which was in the wrong, Ippolit Kirillovitch
passed to the evidence of the medical experts in reference to
Mitya's fixed idea about the three thousand owing him.