<h2><SPAN name="chap82"></SPAN>Chapter III.<br/> The Medical Experts And A Pound Of Nuts</h2>
<p>The evidence of the medical experts, too, was of little use to the prisoner.
And it appeared later that Fetyukovitch had not reckoned much upon it. The
medical line of defense had only been taken up through the insistence of
Katerina Ivanovna, who had sent for a celebrated doctor from Moscow on purpose.
The case for the defense could, of course, lose nothing by it and might, with
luck, gain something from it. There was, however, an element of comedy about
it, through the difference of opinion of the doctors. The medical experts were
the famous doctor from Moscow, our doctor, Herzenstube, and the young doctor,
Varvinsky. The two latter appeared also as witnesses for the prosecution.</p>
<p>The first to be called in the capacity of expert was Doctor Herzenstube. He was
a gray and bald old man of seventy, of middle height and sturdy build. He was
much esteemed and respected by every one in the town. He was a conscientious
doctor and an excellent and pious man, a Hernguter or Moravian brother, I am
not quite sure which. He had been living amongst us for many years and behaved
with wonderful dignity. He was a kind‐hearted and humane man. He treated the
sick poor and peasants for nothing, visited them in their slums and huts, and
left money for medicine, but he was as obstinate as a mule. If once he had
taken an idea into his head, there was no shaking it. Almost every one in the
town was aware, by the way, that the famous doctor had, within the first two or
three days of his presence among us, uttered some extremely offensive allusions
to Doctor Herzenstube’s qualifications. Though the Moscow doctor asked
twenty‐five roubles for a visit, several people in the town were glad to take
advantage of his arrival, and rushed to consult him regardless of expense. All
these had, of course, been previously patients of Doctor Herzenstube, and the
celebrated doctor had criticized his treatment with extreme harshness. Finally,
he had asked the patients as soon as he saw them, “Well, who has been
cramming you with nostrums? Herzenstube? He, he!” Doctor Herzenstube, of
course, heard all this, and now all the three doctors made their appearance,
one after another, to be examined.</p>
<p>Doctor Herzenstube roundly declared that the abnormality of the
prisoner’s mental faculties was self‐evident. Then giving his grounds for
this opinion, which I omit here, he added that the abnormality was not only
evident in many of the prisoner’s actions in the past, but was apparent
even now at this very moment. When he was asked to explain how it was apparent
now at this moment, the old doctor, with simple‐hearted directness, pointed out
that the prisoner on entering the court had “an extraordinary air,
remarkable in the circumstances”; that he had “marched in like a
soldier, looking straight before him, though it would have been more natural
for him to look to the left where, among the public, the ladies were sitting,
seeing that he was a great admirer of the fair sex and must be thinking much of
what the ladies are saying of him now,” the old man concluded in his
peculiar language.</p>
<p>I must add that he spoke Russian readily, but every phrase was formed in German
style, which did not, however, trouble him, for it had always been a weakness
of his to believe that he spoke Russian perfectly, better indeed than Russians.
And he was very fond of using Russian proverbs, always declaring that the
Russian proverbs were the best and most expressive sayings in the whole world.
I may remark, too, that in conversation, through absent‐mindedness he often
forgot the most ordinary words, which sometimes went out of his head, though he
knew them perfectly. The same thing happened, though, when he spoke German, and
at such times he always waved his hand before his face as though trying to
catch the lost word, and no one could induce him to go on speaking till he had
found the missing word. His remark that the prisoner ought to have looked at
the ladies on entering roused a whisper of amusement in the audience. All our
ladies were very fond of our old doctor; they knew, too, that having been all
his life a bachelor and a religious man of exemplary conduct, he looked upon
women as lofty creatures. And so his unexpected observation struck every one as
very queer.</p>
<p>The Moscow doctor, being questioned in his turn, definitely and emphatically
repeated that he considered the prisoner’s mental condition abnormal in
the highest degree. He talked at length and with erudition of
“aberration” and “mania,” and argued that, from all the
facts collected, the prisoner had undoubtedly been in a condition of aberration
for several days before his arrest, and, if the crime had been committed by
him, it must, even if he were conscious of it, have been almost involuntary, as
he had not the power to control the morbid impulse that possessed him.</p>
<p>But apart from temporary aberration, the doctor diagnosed mania, which
premised, in his words, to lead to complete insanity in the future. (It must be
noted that I report this in my own words, the doctor made use of very learned
and professional language.) “All his actions are in contravention of
common sense and logic,” he continued. “Not to refer to what I have
not seen, that is, the crime itself and the whole catastrophe, the day before
yesterday, while he was talking to me, he had an unaccountably fixed look in
his eye. He laughed unexpectedly when there was nothing to laugh at. He showed
continual and inexplicable irritability, using strange words,
‘Bernard!’ ‘Ethics!’ and others equally
inappropriate.” But the doctor detected mania, above all, in the fact
that the prisoner could not even speak of the three thousand roubles, of which
he considered himself to have been cheated, without extraordinary irritation,
though he could speak comparatively lightly of other misfortunes and
grievances. According to all accounts, he had even in the past, whenever the
subject of the three thousand roubles was touched on, flown into a perfect
frenzy, and yet he was reported to be a disinterested and not grasping man.</p>
<p>“As to the opinion of my learned colleague,” the Moscow doctor
added ironically in conclusion, “that the prisoner would, on entering the
court, have naturally looked at the ladies and not straight before him, I will
only say that, apart from the playfulness of this theory, it is radically
unsound. For though I fully agree that the prisoner, on entering the court
where his fate will be decided, would not naturally look straight before him in
that fixed way, and that that may really be a sign of his abnormal mental
condition, at the same time I maintain that he would naturally not look to the
left at the ladies, but, on the contrary, to the right to find his legal
adviser, on whose help all his hopes rest and on whose defense all his future
depends.” The doctor expressed his opinion positively and emphatically.</p>
<p>But the unexpected pronouncement of Doctor Varvinsky gave the last touch of
comedy to the difference of opinion between the experts. In his opinion the
prisoner was now, and had been all along, in a perfectly normal condition, and,
although he certainly must have been in a nervous and exceedingly excited state
before his arrest, this might have been due to several perfectly obvious
causes, jealousy, anger, continual drunkenness, and so on. But this nervous
condition would not involve the mental aberration of which mention had just
been made. As to the question whether the prisoner should have looked to the
left or to the right on entering the court, “in his modest
opinion,” the prisoner would naturally look straight before him on
entering the court, as he had in fact done, as that was where the judges, on
whom his fate depended, were sitting. So that it was just by looking straight
before him that he showed his perfectly normal state of mind at the present.
The young doctor concluded his “modest” testimony with some heat.</p>
<p>“Bravo, doctor!” cried Mitya, from his seat, “just so!”</p>
<p>Mitya, of course, was checked, but the young doctor’s opinion had a
decisive influence on the judges and on the public, and, as appeared
afterwards, every one agreed with him. But Doctor Herzenstube, when called as a
witness, was quite unexpectedly of use to Mitya. As an old resident in the town
who had known the Karamazov family for years, he furnished some facts of great
value for the prosecution, and suddenly, as though recalling something, he
added:</p>
<p>“But the poor young man might have had a very different life, for he had
a good heart both in childhood and after childhood, that I know. But the
Russian proverb says, ‘If a man has one head, it’s good, but if
another clever man comes to visit him, it would be better still, for then there
will be two heads and not only one.’ ”</p>
<p>“One head is good, but two are better,” the prosecutor put in
impatiently. He knew the old man’s habit of talking slowly and
deliberately, regardless of the impression he was making and of the delay he
was causing, and highly prizing his flat, dull and always gleefully complacent
German wit. The old man was fond of making jokes.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, that’s what I say,” he went on stubbornly.
“One head is good, but two are much better, but he did not meet another
head with wits, and his wits went. Where did they go? I’ve forgotten the
word.” He went on, passing his hand before his eyes, “Oh, yes,
<i>spazieren</i>.”</p>
<p>“Wandering?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, wandering, that’s what I say. Well, his wits went
wandering and fell in such a deep hole that he lost himself. And yet he was a
grateful and sensitive boy. Oh, I remember him very well, a little chap so
high, left neglected by his father in the back yard, when he ran about without
boots on his feet, and his little breeches hanging by one button.”</p>
<p>A note of feeling and tenderness suddenly came into the honest old man’s
voice. Fetyukovitch positively started, as though scenting something, and
caught at it instantly.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, I was a young man then.... I was ... well, I was forty‐five
then, and had only just come here. And I was so sorry for the boy then; I asked
myself why shouldn’t I buy him a pound of ... a pound of what? I’ve
forgotten what it’s called. A pound of what children are very fond of,
what is it, what is it?” The doctor began waving his hands again.
“It grows on a tree and is gathered and given to every one....”</p>
<p>“Apples?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, no. You have a dozen of apples, not a pound.... No, there are a
lot of them, and all little. You put them in the mouth and crack.”</p>
<p>“Nuts?”</p>
<p>“Quite so, nuts, I say so.” The doctor repeated in the calmest way
as though he had been at no loss for a word. “And I bought him a pound of
nuts, for no one had ever bought the boy a pound of nuts before. And I lifted
my finger and said to him, ‘Boy, <i>Gott der Vater</i>.’ He laughed
and said, ‘<i>Gott der Vater</i>.’... ‘<i>Gott der
Sohn</i>.’ He laughed again and lisped, ‘<i>Gott der
Sohn</i>.’ ‘<i>Gott der heilige Geist</i>.’ Then he laughed
and said as best he could, ‘<i>Gott der heilige Geist</i>.’ I went
away, and two days after I happened to be passing, and he shouted to me of
himself, ‘Uncle, <i>Gott der Vater, Gott der Sohn</i>,’ and he had
only forgotten ‘<i>Gott der heilige Geist</i>.’ But I reminded him
of it and I felt very sorry for him again. But he was taken away, and I did not
see him again. Twenty‐ three years passed. I am sitting one morning in my
study, a white‐haired old man, when there walks into the room a blooming young
man, whom I should never have recognized, but he held up his finger and said,
laughing, ‘<i>Gott der Vater, Gott der Sohn</i>, and <i>Gott der heilige
Geist</i>. I have just arrived and have come to thank you for that pound of
nuts, for no one else ever bought me a pound of nuts; you are the only one that
ever did.’ And then I remembered my happy youth and the poor child in the
yard, without boots on his feet, and my heart was touched and I said,
‘You are a grateful young man, for you have remembered all your life the
pound of nuts I bought you in your childhood.’ And I embraced him and
blessed him. And I shed tears. He laughed, but he shed tears, too ... for the
Russian often laughs when he ought to be weeping. But he did weep; I saw it.
And now, alas!...”</p>
<p>“And I am weeping now, German, I am weeping now, too, you saintly
man,” Mitya cried suddenly.</p>
<p>In any case the anecdote made a certain favorable impression on the public. But
the chief sensation in Mitya’s favor was created by the evidence of
Katerina Ivanovna, which I will describe directly. Indeed, when the witnesses
<i>à décharge</i>, that is, called by the defense, began giving evidence,
fortune seemed all at once markedly more favorable to Mitya, and what was
particularly striking, this was a surprise even to the counsel for the defense.
But before Katerina Ivanovna was called, Alyosha was examined, and he recalled
a fact which seemed to furnish positive evidence against one important point
made by the prosecution.</p>
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