<h2><SPAN name="book12"></SPAN>Book XII. A Judicial Error</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap80"></SPAN>Chapter I.<br/> The Fatal Day</h2>
<p>At ten o’clock in the morning of the day following the events I have
described, the trial of Dmitri Karamazov began in our district court.</p>
<p>I hasten to emphasize the fact that I am far from esteeming myself capable of
reporting all that took place at the trial in full detail, or even in the
actual order of events. I imagine that to mention everything with full
explanation would fill a volume, even a very large one. And so I trust I may
not be reproached, for confining myself to what struck me. I may have selected
as of most interest what was of secondary importance, and may have omitted the
most prominent and essential details. But I see I shall do better not to
apologize. I will do my best and the reader will see for himself that I have
done all I can.</p>
<p>And, to begin with, before entering the court, I will mention what surprised me
most on that day. Indeed, as it appeared later, every one was surprised at it,
too. We all knew that the affair had aroused great interest, that every one was
burning with impatience for the trial to begin, that it had been a subject of
talk, conjecture, exclamation and surmise for the last two months in local
society. Every one knew, too, that the case had become known throughout Russia,
but yet we had not imagined that it had aroused such burning, such intense,
interest in every one, not only among ourselves, but all over Russia. This
became evident at the trial this day.</p>
<p>Visitors had arrived not only from the chief town of our province, but from
several other Russian towns, as well as from Moscow and Petersburg. Among them
were lawyers, ladies, and even several distinguished personages. Every ticket
of admission had been snatched up. A special place behind the table at which
the three judges sat was set apart for the most distinguished and important of
the men visitors; a row of arm‐chairs had been placed there—something
exceptional, which had never been allowed before. A large proportion—not
less than half of the public—were ladies. There was such a large number
of lawyers from all parts that they did not know where to seat them, for every
ticket had long since been eagerly sought for and distributed. I saw at the end
of the room, behind the platform, a special partition hurriedly put up, behind
which all these lawyers were admitted, and they thought themselves lucky to
have standing room there, for all chairs had been removed for the sake of
space, and the crowd behind the partition stood throughout the case closely
packed, shoulder to shoulder.</p>
<p>Some of the ladies, especially those who came from a distance, made their
appearance in the gallery very smartly dressed, but the majority of the ladies
were oblivious even of dress. Their faces betrayed hysterical, intense, almost
morbid, curiosity. A peculiar fact—established afterwards by many
observations—was that almost all the ladies, or, at least the vast
majority of them, were on Mitya’s side and in favor of his being
acquitted. This was perhaps chiefly owing to his reputation as a conqueror of
female hearts. It was known that two women rivals were to appear in the case.
One of them—Katerina Ivanovna—was an object of general interest.
All sorts of extraordinary tales were told about her, amazing anecdotes of her
passion for Mitya, in spite of his crime. Her pride and “aristocratic
connections” were particularly insisted upon (she had called upon
scarcely any one in the town). People said she intended to petition the
Government for leave to accompany the criminal to Siberia and to be married to
him somewhere in the mines. The appearance of Grushenka in court was awaited
with no less impatience. The public was looking forward with anxious curiosity
to the meeting of the two rivals—the proud aristocratic girl and
“the hetaira.” But Grushenka was a more familiar figure to the
ladies of the district than Katerina Ivanovna. They had already seen “the
woman who had ruined Fyodor Pavlovitch and his unhappy son,” and all,
almost without exception, wondered how father and son could be so in love with
“such a very common, ordinary Russian girl, who was not even
pretty.”</p>
<p>In brief, there was a great deal of talk. I know for a fact that there were
several serious family quarrels on Mitya’s account in our town. Many
ladies quarreled violently with their husbands over differences of opinion
about the dreadful case, and it was only natural that the husbands of these
ladies, far from being favorably disposed to the prisoner, should enter the
court bitterly prejudiced against him. In fact, one may say pretty certainly
that the masculine, as distinguished from the feminine, part of the audience
were biased against the prisoner. There were numbers of severe, frowning, even
vindictive faces. Mitya, indeed, had managed to offend many people during his
stay in the town. Some of the visitors were, of course, in excellent spirits
and quite unconcerned as to the fate of Mitya personally. But all were
interested in the trial, and the majority of the men were certainly hoping for
the conviction of the criminal, except perhaps the lawyers, who were more
interested in the legal than in the moral aspect of the case.</p>
<p>Everybody was excited at the presence of the celebrated lawyer, Fetyukovitch.
His talent was well known, and this was not the first time he had defended
notorious criminal cases in the provinces. And if he defended them, such cases
became celebrated and long remembered all over Russia. There were stories, too,
about our prosecutor and about the President of the Court. It was said that
Ippolit Kirillovitch was in a tremor at meeting Fetyukovitch, and that they had
been enemies from the beginning of their careers in Petersburg, that though our
sensitive prosecutor, who always considered that he had been aggrieved by some
one in Petersburg because his talents had not been properly appreciated, was
keenly excited over the Karamazov case, and was even dreaming of rebuilding his
flagging fortunes by means of it, Fetyukovitch, they said, was his one anxiety.
But these rumors were not quite just. Our prosecutor was not one of those men
who lose heart in face of danger. On the contrary, his self‐confidence
increased with the increase of danger. It must be noted that our prosecutor was
in general too hasty and morbidly impressionable. He would put his whole soul
into some case and work at it as though his whole fate and his whole fortune
depended on its result. This was the subject of some ridicule in the legal
world, for just by this characteristic our prosecutor had gained a wider
notoriety than could have been expected from his modest position. People
laughed particularly at his passion for psychology. In my opinion, they were
wrong, and our prosecutor was, I believe, a character of greater depth than was
generally supposed. But with his delicate health he had failed to make his mark
at the outset of his career and had never made up for it later.</p>
<p>As for the President of our Court, I can only say that he was a humane and
cultured man, who had a practical knowledge of his work and progressive views.
He was rather ambitious, but did not concern himself greatly about his future
career. The great aim of his life was to be a man of advanced ideas. He was,
too, a man of connections and property. He felt, as we learnt afterwards,
rather strongly about the Karamazov case, but from a social, not from a
personal standpoint. He was interested in it as a social phenomenon, in its
classification and its character as a product of our social conditions, as
typical of the national character, and so on, and so on. His attitude to the
personal aspect of the case, to its tragic significance and the persons
involved in it, including the prisoner, was rather indifferent and abstract, as
was perhaps fitting, indeed.</p>
<p>The court was packed and overflowing long before the judges made their
appearance. Our court is the best hall in the town—spacious, lofty, and
good for sound. On the right of the judges, who were on a raised platform, a
table and two rows of chairs had been put ready for the jury. On the left was
the place for the prisoner and the counsel for the defense. In the middle of
the court, near the judges, was a table with the “material proofs.”
On it lay Fyodor Pavlovitch’s white silk dressing‐gown, stained with
blood; the fatal brass pestle with which the supposed murder had been
committed; Mitya’s shirt, with a blood‐stained sleeve; his coat, stained
with blood in patches over the pocket in which he had put his handkerchief; the
handkerchief itself, stiff with blood and by now quite yellow; the pistol
loaded by Mitya at Perhotin’s with a view to suicide, and taken from him
on the sly at Mokroe by Trifon Borissovitch; the envelope in which the three
thousand roubles had been put ready for Grushenka, the narrow pink ribbon with
which it had been tied, and many other articles I don’t remember. In the
body of the hall, at some distance, came the seats for the public. But in front
of the balustrade a few chairs had been placed for witnesses who remained in
the court after giving their evidence.</p>
<p>At ten o’clock the three judges arrived—the President, one honorary
justice of the peace, and one other. The prosecutor, of course, entered
immediately after. The President was a short, stout, thick‐set man of fifty,
with a dyspeptic complexion, dark hair turning gray and cut short, and a red
ribbon, of what Order I don’t remember. The prosecutor struck me and the
others, too, as looking particularly pale, almost green. His face seemed to
have grown suddenly thinner, perhaps in a single night, for I had seen him
looking as usual only two days before. The President began with asking the
court whether all the jury were present.</p>
<p>But I see I can’t go on like this, partly because some things I did not
hear, others I did not notice, and others I have forgotten, but most of all
because, as I have said before, I have literally no time or space to mention
everything that was said and done. I only know that neither side objected to
very many of the jurymen. I remember the twelve jurymen—four were petty
officials of the town, two were merchants, and six peasants and artisans of the
town. I remember, long before the trial, questions were continually asked with
some surprise, especially by ladies: “Can such a delicate, complex and
psychological case be submitted for decision to petty officials and even
peasants?” and “What can an official, still more a peasant,
understand in such an affair?” All the four officials in the jury were,
in fact, men of no consequence and of low rank. Except one who was rather
younger, they were gray‐headed men, little known in society, who had vegetated
on a pitiful salary, and who probably had elderly, unpresentable wives and
crowds of children, perhaps even without shoes and stockings. At most, they
spent their leisure over cards and, of course, had never read a single book.
The two merchants looked respectable, but were strangely silent and stolid. One
of them was close‐shaven, and was dressed in European style; the other had a
small, gray beard, and wore a red ribbon with some sort of a medal upon it on
his neck. There is no need to speak of the artisans and the peasants. The
artisans of Skotoprigonyevsk are almost peasants, and even work on the land.
Two of them also wore European dress, and, perhaps for that reason, were
dirtier and more uninviting‐looking than the others. So that one might well
wonder, as I did as soon as I had looked at them, “what men like that
could possibly make of such a case?” Yet their faces made a strangely
imposing, almost menacing, impression; they were stern and frowning.</p>
<p>At last the President opened the case of the murder of Fyodor Pavlovitch
Karamazov. I don’t quite remember how he described him. The court usher
was told to bring in the prisoner, and Mitya made his appearance. There was a
hush through the court. One could have heard a fly. I don’t know how it
was with others, but Mitya made a most unfavorable impression on me. He looked
an awful dandy in a brand‐new frock‐coat. I heard afterwards that he had
ordered it in Moscow expressly for the occasion from his own tailor, who had
his measure. He wore immaculate black kid gloves and exquisite linen. He walked
in with his yard‐long strides, looking stiffly straight in front of him, and
sat down in his place with a most unperturbed air.</p>
<p>At the same moment the counsel for defense, the celebrated Fetyukovitch,
entered, and a sort of subdued hum passed through the court. He was a tall,
spare man, with long thin legs, with extremely long, thin, pale fingers,
clean‐shaven face, demurely brushed, rather short hair, and thin lips that were
at times curved into something between a sneer and a smile. He looked about
forty. His face would have been pleasant, if it had not been for his eyes,
which, in themselves small and inexpressive, were set remarkably close
together, with only the thin, long nose as a dividing line between them. In
fact, there was something strikingly birdlike about his face. He was in evening
dress and white tie.</p>
<p>I remember the President’s first questions to Mitya, about his name, his
calling, and so on. Mitya answered sharply, and his voice was so unexpectedly
loud that it made the President start and look at the prisoner with surprise.
Then followed a list of persons who were to take part in the
proceedings—that is, of the witnesses and experts. It was a long list.
Four of the witnesses were not present—Miüsov, who had given evidence at
the preliminary inquiry, but was now in Paris; Madame Hohlakov and Maximov, who
were absent through illness; and Smerdyakov, through his sudden death, of which
an official statement from the police was presented. The news of
Smerdyakov’s death produced a sudden stir and whisper in the court. Many
of the audience, of course, had not heard of the sudden suicide. What struck
people most was Mitya’s sudden outburst. As soon as the statement of
Smerdyakov’s death was made, he cried out aloud from his place:</p>
<p>“He was a dog and died like a dog!”</p>
<p>I remember how his counsel rushed to him, and how the President addressed him,
threatening to take stern measures, if such an irregularity were repeated.
Mitya nodded and in a subdued voice repeated several times abruptly to his
counsel, with no show of regret:</p>
<p>“I won’t again, I won’t. It escaped me. I won’t do it
again.”</p>
<p>And, of course, this brief episode did him no good with the jury or the public.
His character was displayed, and it spoke for itself. It was under the
influence of this incident that the opening statement was read. It was rather
short, but circumstantial. It only stated the chief reasons why he had been
arrested, why he must be tried, and so on. Yet it made a great impression on
me. The clerk read it loudly and distinctly. The whole tragedy was suddenly
unfolded before us, concentrated, in bold relief, in a fatal and pitiless
light. I remember how, immediately after it had been read, the President asked
Mitya in a loud impressive voice:</p>
<p>“Prisoner, do you plead guilty?”</p>
<p>Mitya suddenly rose from his seat.</p>
<p>“I plead guilty to drunkenness and dissipation,” he exclaimed,
again in a startling, almost frenzied, voice, “to idleness and
debauchery. I meant to become an honest man for good, just at the moment when I
was struck down by fate. But I am not guilty of the death of that old man, my
enemy and my father. No, no, I am not guilty of robbing him! I could not be.
Dmitri Karamazov is a scoundrel, but not a thief.”</p>
<p>He sat down again, visibly trembling all over. The President again briefly, but
impressively, admonished him to answer only what was asked, and not to go off
into irrelevant exclamations. Then he ordered the case to proceed. All the
witnesses were led up to take the oath. Then I saw them all together. The
brothers of the prisoner were, however, allowed to give evidence without taking
the oath. After an exhortation from the priest and the President, the witnesses
were led away and were made to sit as far as possible apart from one another.
Then they began calling them up one by one.</p>
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