The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (easy to read books for adults list .txt) 📕
"Those innocent eyes slit my soul up like a razor," he used to say afterwards, with his loathsome snigger. In a man so depraved this might, of course, mean no more than sensual attraction. As he had received no dowry with his wife, and had, so to speak, taken her "from the halter," he did not stand on ceremony with her. Making her feel that she had "wronged" him, he took advantage of her phenomenal meekness and submissiveness to trample on the elemen
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answers in detail. I will only give the substance of her evidence.
“I was firmly convinced that he would send off that sum as soon as
he got money from his father,” she went on. “I have never doubted
his disinterestedness and his honesty… his scrupulous honesty…
in money matters. He felt quite certain that he would receive the
money from his father, and spoke to me several times about it. I
knew he had a feud with his father and have always believed that he
had been unfairly treated by his father. I don’t remember any threat
uttered by him against his father. He certainly never uttered any such
threat before me. If he had come to me at that time, I should have
at once relieved his anxiety about that unlucky three thousand
roubles, but he had given up coming to see me… and I myself was
put in such a position… that I could not invite him…. And I had no
right, indeed, to be exacting as to that money, she added suddenly,
and there was a ring of resolution in her voice. “I was once
indebted to him for assistance in money for more than three
thousand, and I took it, although I could not at that time foresee
that I should ever be in a position to repay my debt.”
There was a note of defiance in her voice. It was then
Fetyukovitch began his cross-examination.
“Did that take place not here, but at the beginning of your
acquaintance?” Fetyukovitch suggested cautiously, feeling his way,
instantly scenting something favourable. I must mention in parenthesis
that, though Fetyukovitch had been brought from Petersburg partly at
the instance of Katerina Ivanovna herself, he knew nothing about the
episode of the four thousand roubles given her by Mitya, and of her
“bowing to the ground to him.” She concealed this from him and said
nothing about it, and that was strange. It may be pretty certainly
assumed that she herself did not know till the very last minute
whether she would speak of that episode in the court, and waited for
the inspiration of the moment.
No, I can never forget those moments. She began telling her story.
She told everything, the whole episode that Mitya had told Alyosha,
and her bowing to the ground, and her reason. She told about her
father and her going to Mitya, and did not in one word, in a single
hint, suggest that Mitya had himself, through her sister, proposed
they should “send him Katerina Ivanovna” to fetch the money. She
generously concealed that and was not ashamed to make it appear as
though she had of her own impulse run to the young officer, relying on
something… to beg him for the money. It was something tremendous!
I turned cold and trembled as I listened. The court was hushed, trying
to catch each word. It was something unexampled. Even from such a
self-willed and contemptuously proud girl as she was, such an
extremely frank avowal, such sacrifice, such self-immolation, seemed
incredible. And for what, for whom? To save the man who had deceived
and insulted her and to help, in however small a degree, in saving
him, by creating a strong impression in his favour. And, indeed, the
figure of the young officer who, with a respectful bow to the innocent
girl, handed her his last four thousand roubles-all he had in the
world-was thrown into a very sympathetic and attractive light, but…
I had a painful misgiving at heart! I felt that calumny might come
of it later (and it did, in fact, it did). It was repeated all over
the town afterwards with spiteful laughter that was perhaps not
quite complete-that is, in the statement that the officer had let the
young lady depart “with nothing but a respectful bow.” It was hinted
that something was here omitted.
“And even if nothing had been omitted, if this were the whole
story,” the most highly respected of our ladies maintained, “even then
it’s very doubtful whether it was creditable for a young girl to
behave in that way, even for the sake of saving her father.”
And can Katerina Ivanovna, with her intelligence, her morbid
sensitiveness, have failed to understand that people would talk like
that? She must have understood it, yet she made up her mind to tell
everything. Of course, all these nasty little suspicions as to the
truth of her story only arose afterwards and at the first moment all
were deeply impressed by it. As for the judges and the lawyers, they
listened in reverent, almost shamefaced silence to Katerina
Ivanovna. The prosecutor did not venture upon even one question on the
subject. Fetyukovitch made a low bow to her. Oh, he was almost
triumphant! Much ground had been gained. For a man to give his last
four thousand on a generous impulse and then for the same man to
murder his father for the sake of robbing him of three thousand-the
idea seemed too incongruous. Fetyukovitch felt that now the charge
of theft, at least, was as good as disproved. “The case” was thrown
into quite a different light. There was a wave of sympathy for
Mitya. As for him…. I was told that once or twice, while Katerina
Ivanovna was giving her evidence, he jumped up from his seat, sank
back again, and hid his face in his hands. But when she had
finished, he suddenly cried in a sobbing voice:
“Katya, why have you ruined me?” and his sobs were audible all
over the court. But he instantly restrained himself, and cried again:
“Now I am condemned!”
Then he sat rigid in his place, with his teeth clenched and his
arms across his chest. Katerina Ivanovna remained in the court and sat
down in her place. She was pale and sat with her eyes cast down. Those
who were sitting near her declared that for a long time she shivered
all over as though in a fever. Grushenka was called.
I am approaching the sudden catastrophe which was perhaps the
final cause of Mitya’s ruin. For I am convinced, so is everyone-all
the lawyers said the same afterwards-that if the episode had not
occurred, the prisoner would at least have been recommended to
mercy. But of that later. A few words first about Grushenka.
She, too, was dressed entirely in black, with her magnificent
black shawl on her shoulders. She walked to the witness-box with her
smooth, noiseless tread, with the slightly swaying gait common in
women of full figure. She looked steadily at the President, turning
her eyes neither to the right nor to the left. To my thinking she
looked very handsome at that moment, and not at all pale, as the
ladies alleged afterwards. They declared, too, that she had a
concentrated and spiteful expression. I believe that she was simply
irritated and painfully conscious of the contemptuous and
inquisitive eyes of our scandal-loving public. She was proud and could
not stand contempt. She was one of those people who flare up, angry
and eager to retaliate, at the mere suggestion of contempt. There
was an element of timidity, too, of course, and inward shame at her
own timidity, so it was not strange that her tone kept changing. At
one moment it was angry, contemptuous and rough, and at another
there was a sincere note of self-condemnation. Sometimes she spoke
as though she were taking a desperate plunge; as though she felt, “I
don’t care what happens, I’ll say it….” Apropos of her
acquaintance with Fyodor Pavlovitch, she remarked curtly, “That’s
all nonsense, and was it my fault that he would pester me?” But a
minute later she added, “It was all my fault. I was laughing at them
both-at the old man and at him, too-and I brought both of them to
this. It was all on account of me it happened.”
Samsonov’s name came up somehow. “That’s nobody’s business,” she
snapped at once, with a sort of insolent defiance. “He was my
benefactor; he took me when I hadn’t a shoe to my foot, when my family
had turned me out.” The President reminded her, though very
politely, that she must answer the questions directly, without going
off into irrelevant details. Grushenka crimsoned and her eyes flashed.
The envelope with the notes in it she had not seen, but had only
heard from “that wicked wretch” that Fyodor Pavlovitch had an envelope
with notes for three thousand in it. “But that was all foolishness.
I was only laughing. I wouldn’t have gone to him for anything.”
“To whom are you referring as ‘that wicked wretch’?” inquired
the prosecutor.
“The lackey, Smerdyakov, who murdered his master and hanged
himself last night.”
She was, of course, at once asked what ground she had for such a
definite accusation; but it appeared that she, too, had no grounds for
it.
“Dmitri Fyodorovitch told me so himself; you can believe him.
The woman who came between us has ruined him; she is the cause of it
all, let me tell you,” Grushenka added. She seemed to be quivering
with hatred, and there was a vindictive note in her voice.
She was again asked to whom she was referring.
“The young lady, Katerina Ivanovna there. She sent for me, offered
me chocolate, tried to fascinate me. There’s not much true shame about
her, I can tell you that…”
At this point the President checked her sternly, begging her to
moderate her language. But the jealous woman’s heart was burning,
and she did not care what she did.
“When the prisoner was arrested at Mokroe,” the prosecutor
asked, “everyone saw and heard you run out of the next room and cry
out: ‘It’s all my fault. We’ll go to Siberia together!’ So you already
believed him to have murdered his father?”
“I don’t remember what I felt at the time,” answered Grushenka.
“Everyone was crying out that he had killed his father, and I felt
that it was my fault, that it was on my account he had murdered him.
But when he said he wasn’t guilty, I believed him at once, and I
believe him now and always shall believe him. He is not the man to
tell a lie.”
Fetyukovitch began his cross-examination. I remember that among
other things he asked about Rakitin and the twenty-five roubles “you
paid him for bringing Alexey Fyodorovitch Karamazov to see you.”
“There was nothing strange about his taking the money,” sneered
Grushenka, with angry contempt. “He was always coming to me for money:
he used to get thirty roubles a month at least out of me, chiefly
for luxuries: he had enough to keep him without my help.”
“What led you to be so liberal to Mr. Rakitin?” Fetyukovitch
asked, in spite of an uneasy movement on the part of the President.
“Why, he is my cousin. His mother was my mother’s sister. But he’s
always besought me not to tell anyone here of it, he is so
dreadfully ashamed of me.”
This fact was a complete surprise to everyone; no one in the
town nor in the monastery, not even Mitya, knew of it. I was told that
Rakitin turned purple with shame where he sat. Grushenka had somehow
heard before she came into the court that he had given evidence
against Mitya, and so she was angry. The whole effect on the public,
of Rakitin’s speech, of his noble sentiments, of his attacks upon
serfdom and the political disorder of Russia, was this time finally
ruined. Fetyukovitch was satisfied: it was another godsend.
Grushenka’s cross-examination did not last long and, of course,
there could be nothing particularly new in her evidence. She left
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