<h2><SPAN name="chap87"></SPAN>Chapter VIII.<br/> A Treatise On Smerdyakov</h2>
<p>“To begin with, what was the source of this suspicion?” (Ippolit
Kirillovitch began.) “The first person who cried out that Smerdyakov had
committed the murder was the prisoner himself at the moment of his arrest, yet
from that time to this he had not brought forward a single fact to confirm the
charge, nor the faintest suggestion of a fact. The charge is confirmed by three
persons only—the two brothers of the prisoner and Madame Svyetlov. The
elder of these brothers expressed his suspicions only to‐day, when he was
undoubtedly suffering from brain fever. But we know that for the last two
months he has completely shared our conviction of his brother’s guilt and
did not attempt to combat that idea. But of that later. The younger brother has
admitted that he has not the slightest fact to support his notion of
Smerdyakov’s guilt, and has only been led to that conclusion from the
prisoner’s own words and the expression of his face. Yes, that astounding
piece of evidence has been brought forward twice to‐ day by him. Madame
Svyetlov was even more astounding. ‘What the prisoner tells you, you must
believe; he is not a man to tell a lie.’ That is all the evidence against
Smerdyakov produced by these three persons, who are all deeply concerned in the
prisoner’s fate. And yet the theory of Smerdyakov’s guilt has been
noised about, has been and is still maintained. Is it credible? Is it
conceivable?”</p>
<p>Here Ippolit Kirillovitch thought it necessary to describe the personality of
Smerdyakov, “who had cut short his life in a fit of insanity.” He
depicted him as a man of weak intellect, with a smattering of education, who
had been thrown off his balance by philosophical ideas above his level and
certain modern theories of duty, which he learnt in practice from the reckless
life of his master, who was also perhaps his father—Fyodor Pavlovitch;
and, theoretically, from various strange philosophical conversations with his
master’s elder son, Ivan Fyodorovitch, who readily indulged in this
diversion, probably feeling dull or wishing to amuse himself at the
valet’s expense. “He spoke to me himself of his spiritual condition
during the last few days at his father’s house,” Ippolit
Kirillovitch explained; “but others too have borne witness to
it—the prisoner himself, his brother, and the servant Grigory—that
is, all who knew him well.</p>
<p>“Moreover, Smerdyakov, whose health was shaken by his attacks of
epilepsy, had not the courage of a chicken. ‘He fell at my feet and
kissed them,’ the prisoner himself has told us, before he realized how
damaging such a statement was to himself. ‘He is an epileptic
chicken,’ he declared about him in his characteristic language. And the
prisoner chose him for his confidant (we have his own word for it) and he
frightened him into consenting at last to act as a spy for him. In that
capacity he deceived his master, revealing to the prisoner the existence of the
envelope with the notes in it and the signals by means of which he could get
into the house. How could he help telling him, indeed? ‘He would have
killed me, I could see that he would have killed me,’ he said at the
inquiry, trembling and shaking even before us, though his tormentor was by that
time arrested and could do him no harm. ‘He suspected me at every
instant. In fear and trembling I hastened to tell him every secret to pacify
him, that he might see that I had not deceived him and let me off alive.’
Those are his own words. I wrote them down and I remember them. ‘When he
began shouting at me, I would fall on my knees.’</p>
<p>“He was naturally very honest and enjoyed the complete confidence of his
master, ever since he had restored him some money he had lost. So it may be
supposed that the poor fellow suffered pangs of remorse at having deceived his
master, whom he loved as his benefactor. Persons severely afflicted with
epilepsy are, so the most skillful doctors tell us, always prone to continual
and morbid self‐reproach. They worry over their ‘wickedness,’ they
are tormented by pangs of conscience, often entirely without cause; they
exaggerate and often invent all sorts of faults and crimes. And here we have a
man of that type who had really been driven to wrong‐doing by terror and
intimidation.</p>
<p>“He had, besides, a strong presentiment that something terrible would be
the outcome of the situation that was developing before his eyes. When Ivan
Fyodorovitch was leaving for Moscow, just before the catastrophe, Smerdyakov
besought him to remain, though he was too timid to tell him plainly what he
feared. He confined himself to hints, but his hints were not understood.</p>
<p>“It must be observed that he looked on Ivan Fyodorovitch as a protector,
whose presence in the house was a guarantee that no harm would come to pass.
Remember the phrase in Dmitri Karamazov’s drunken letter, ‘I shall
kill the old man, if only Ivan goes away.’ So Ivan Fyodorovitch’s
presence seemed to every one a guarantee of peace and order in the house.</p>
<p>“But he went away, and within an hour of his young master’s
departure Smerdyakov was taken with an epileptic fit. But that’s
perfectly intelligible. Here I must mention that Smerdyakov, oppressed by
terror and despair of a sort, had felt during those last few days that one of
the fits from which he had suffered before at moments of strain, might be
coming upon him again. The day and hour of such an attack cannot, of course, be
foreseen, but every epileptic can feel beforehand that he is likely to have
one. So the doctors tell us. And so, as soon as Ivan Fyodorovitch had driven
out of the yard, Smerdyakov, depressed by his lonely and unprotected position,
went to the cellar. He went down the stairs wondering if he would have a fit or
not, and what if it were to come upon him at once. And that very apprehension,
that very wonder, brought on the spasm in his throat that always precedes such
attacks, and he fell unconscious into the cellar. And in this perfectly natural
occurrence people try to detect a suspicion, a hint that he was shamming an
attack <i>on purpose</i>. But, if it were on purpose, the question arises at
once, what was his motive? What was he reckoning on? What was he aiming at? I
say nothing about medicine: science, I am told, may go astray: the doctors were
not able to discriminate between the counterfeit and the real. That may be so,
but answer me one question: what motive had he for such a counterfeit? Could
he, had he been plotting the murder, have desired to attract the attention of
the household by having a fit just before?</p>
<p>“You see, gentlemen of the jury, on the night of the murder, there were
five persons in Fyodor Pavlovitch’s—Fyodor Pavlovitch himself (but
he did not kill himself, that’s evident); then his servant, Grigory, but
he was almost killed himself; the third person was Grigory’s wife, Marfa
Ignatyevna, but it would be simply shameful to imagine her murdering her
master. Two persons are left—the prisoner and Smerdyakov. But, if we are
to believe the prisoner’s statement that he is not the murderer, then
Smerdyakov must have been, for there is no other alternative, no one else can
be found. That is what accounts for the artful, astounding accusation against
the unhappy idiot who committed suicide yesterday. Had a shadow of suspicion
rested on any one else, had there been any sixth person, I am persuaded that
even the prisoner would have been ashamed to accuse Smerdyakov, and would have
accused that sixth person, for to charge Smerdyakov with that murder is
perfectly absurd.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, let us lay aside psychology, let us lay aside medicine, let
us even lay aside logic, let us turn only to the facts and see what the facts
tell us. If Smerdyakov killed him, how did he do it? Alone or with the
assistance of the prisoner? Let us consider the first alternative—that he
did it alone. If he had killed him it must have been with some object, for some
advantage to himself. But not having a shadow of the motive that the prisoner
had for the murder—hatred, jealousy, and so on—Smerdyakov could
only have murdered him for the sake of gain, in order to appropriate the three
thousand roubles he had seen his master put in the envelope. And yet he tells
another person—and a person most closely interested, that is, the
prisoner—everything about the money and the signals, where the envelope
lay, what was written on it, what it was tied up with, and, above all, told him
of those signals by which he could enter the house. Did he do this simply to
betray himself, or to invite to the same enterprise one who would be anxious to
get that envelope for himself? ‘Yes,’ I shall be told, ‘but
he betrayed it from fear.’ But how do you explain this? A man who could
conceive such an audacious, savage act, and carry it out, tells facts which are
known to no one else in the world, and which, if he held his tongue, no one
would ever have guessed!</p>
<p>“No, however cowardly he might be, if he had plotted such a crime,
nothing would have induced him to tell any one about the envelope and the
signals, for that was as good as betraying himself beforehand. He would have
invented something, he would have told some lie if he had been forced to give
information, but he would have been silent about that. For, on the other hand,
if he had said nothing about the money, but had committed the murder and stolen
the money, no one in the world could have charged him with murder for the sake
of robbery, since no one but he had seen the money, no one but he knew of its
existence in the house. Even if he had been accused of the murder, it could
only have been thought that he had committed it from some other motive. But
since no one had observed any such motive in him beforehand, and every one saw,
on the contrary, that his master was fond of him and honored him with his
confidence, he would, of course, have been the last to be suspected. People
would have suspected first the man who had a motive, a man who had himself
declared he had such motives, who had made no secret of it; they would, in
fact, have suspected the son of the murdered man, Dmitri Fyodorovitch. Had
Smerdyakov killed and robbed him, and the son been accused of it, that would,
of course, have suited Smerdyakov. Yet are we to believe that, though plotting
the murder, he told that son, Dmitri, about the money, the envelope, and the
signals? Is that logical? Is that clear?</p>
<p>“When the day of the murder planned by Smerdyakov came, we have him
falling downstairs in a <i>feigned</i> fit—with what object? In the first
place that Grigory, who had been intending to take his medicine, might put it
off and remain on guard, seeing there was no one to look after the house, and,
in the second place, I suppose, that his master seeing that there was no one to
guard him, and in terror of a visit from his son, might redouble his vigilance
and precaution. And, most of all, I suppose that he, Smerdyakov, disabled by
the fit, might be carried from the kitchen, where he always slept, apart from
all the rest, and where he could go in and out as he liked, to Grigory’s
room at the other end of the lodge, where he was always put, shut off by a
screen three paces from their own bed. This was the immemorial custom
established by his master and the kind‐hearted Marfa Ignatyevna, whenever he
had a fit. There, lying behind the screen, he would most likely, to keep up the
sham, have begun groaning, and so keeping them awake all night (as Grigory and
his wife testified). And all this, we are to believe, that he might more
conveniently get up and murder his master!</p>
<p>“But I shall be told that he shammed illness on purpose that he might not
be suspected and that he told the prisoner of the money and the signals to
tempt him to commit the murder, and when he had murdered him and had gone away
with the money, making a noise, most likely, and waking people, Smerdyakov got
up, am I to believe, and went in—what for? To murder his master a second
time and carry off the money that had already been stolen? Gentlemen, are you
laughing? I am ashamed to put forward such suggestions, but, incredible as it
seems, that’s just what the prisoner alleges. When he had left the house,
had knocked Grigory down and raised an alarm, he tells us Smerdyakov got up,
went in and murdered his master and stole the money! I won’t press the
point that Smerdyakov could hardly have reckoned on this beforehand, and have
foreseen that the furious and exasperated son would simply come to peep in
respectfully, though he knew the signals, and beat a retreat, leaving
Smerdyakov his booty. Gentlemen of the jury, I put this question to you in
earnest; when was the moment when Smerdyakov could have committed his crime?
Name that moment, or you can’t accuse him.</p>
<p>“But, perhaps, the fit was a real one, the sick man suddenly recovered,
heard a shout, and went out. Well—what then? He looked about him and
said, ‘Why not go and kill the master?’ And how did he know what
had happened, since he had been lying unconscious till that moment? But
there’s a limit to these flights of fancy.</p>
<p>“ ‘Quite so,’ some astute people will tell me, ‘but
what if they were in agreement? What if they murdered him together and shared
the money—what then?’ A weighty question, truly! And the facts to
confirm it are astounding. One commits the murder and takes all the trouble
while his accomplice lies on one side shamming a fit, apparently to arouse
suspicion in every one, alarm in his master and alarm in Grigory. It would be
interesting to know what motives could have induced the two accomplices to form
such an insane plan.</p>
<p>“But perhaps it was not a case of active complicity on Smerdyakov’s
part, but only of passive acquiescence; perhaps Smerdyakov was intimidated and
agreed not to prevent the murder, and foreseeing that he would be blamed for
letting his master be murdered, without screaming for help or resisting, he may
have obtained permission from Dmitri Karamazov to get out of the way by
shamming a fit—‘you may murder him as you like; it’s nothing
to me.’ But as this attack of Smerdyakov’s was bound to throw the
household into confusion, Dmitri Karamazov could never have agreed to such a
plan. I will waive that point however. Supposing that he did agree, it would
still follow that Dmitri Karamazov is the murderer and the instigator, and
Smerdyakov is only a passive accomplice, and not even an accomplice, but merely
acquiesced against his will through terror.</p>
<p>“But what do we see? As soon as he is arrested the prisoner instantly
throws all the blame on Smerdyakov, not accusing him of being his accomplice,
but of being himself the murderer. ‘He did it alone,’ he says.
‘He murdered and robbed him. It was the work of his hands.’ Strange
sort of accomplices who begin to accuse one another at once! And think of the
risk for Karamazov. After committing the murder while his accomplice lay in
bed, he throws the blame on the invalid, who might well have resented it and in
self‐preservation might well have confessed the truth. For he might well have
seen that the court would at once judge how far he was responsible, and so he
might well have reckoned that if he were punished, it would be far less
severely than the real murderer. But in that case he would have been certain to
make a confession, yet he has not done so. Smerdyakov never hinted at their
complicity, though the actual murderer persisted in accusing him and declaring
that he had committed the crime alone.</p>
<p>“What’s more, Smerdyakov at the inquiry volunteered the statement
that it was <i>he</i> who had told the prisoner of the envelope of notes and of
the signals, and that, but for him, he would have known nothing about them. If
he had really been a guilty accomplice, would he so readily have made this
statement at the inquiry? On the contrary, he would have tried to conceal it,
to distort the facts or minimize them. But he was far from distorting or
minimizing them. No one but an innocent man, who had no fear of being charged
with complicity, could have acted as he did. And in a fit of melancholy arising
from his disease and this catastrophe he hanged himself yesterday. He left a
note written in his peculiar language, ‘I destroy myself of my own will
and inclination so as to throw no blame on any one.’ What would it have
cost him to add: ‘I am the murderer, not Karamazov’? But that he
did not add. Did his conscience lead him to suicide and not to avowing his
guilt?</p>
<p>“And what followed? Notes for three thousand roubles were brought into
the court just now, and we were told that they were the same that lay in the
envelope now on the table before us, and that the witness had received them
from Smerdyakov the day before. But I need not recall the painful scene, though
I will make one or two comments, selecting such trivial ones as might not be
obvious at first sight to every one, and so may be overlooked. In the first
place, Smerdyakov must have given back the money and hanged himself yesterday
from remorse. And only yesterday he confessed his guilt to Ivan Karamazov, as
the latter informs us. If it were not so, indeed, why should Ivan Fyodorovitch
have kept silence till now? And so, if he has confessed, then why, I ask again,
did he not avow the whole truth in the last letter he left behind, knowing that
the innocent prisoner had to face this terrible ordeal the next day?</p>
<p>“The money alone is no proof. A week ago, quite by chance, the fact came
to the knowledge of myself and two other persons in this court that Ivan
Fyodorovitch had sent two five per cent. coupons of five thousand
each—that is, ten thousand in all—to the chief town of the province
to be changed. I only mention this to point out that any one may have money,
and that it can’t be proved that these notes are the same as were in
Fyodor Pavlovitch’s envelope.</p>
<p>“Ivan Karamazov, after receiving yesterday a communication of such
importance from the real murderer, did not stir. Why didn’t he report it
at once? Why did he put it all off till morning? I think I have a right to
conjecture why. His health had been giving way for a week past: he had admitted
to a doctor and to his most intimate friends that he was suffering from
hallucinations and seeing phantoms of the dead: he was on the eve of the attack
of brain fever by which he has been stricken down to‐day. In this condition he
suddenly heard of Smerdyakov’s death, and at once reflected, ‘The
man is dead, I can throw the blame on him and save my brother. I have money. I
will take a roll of notes and say that Smerdyakov gave them me before his
death.’ You will say that was dishonorable: it’s dishonorable to
slander even the dead, and even to save a brother. True, but what if he
slandered him unconsciously? What if, finally unhinged by the sudden news of
the valet’s death, he imagined it really was so? You saw the recent
scene: you have seen the witness’s condition. He was standing up and was
speaking, but where was his mind?</p>
<p>“Then followed the document, the prisoner’s letter written two days
before the crime, and containing a complete program of the murder. Why, then,
are we looking for any other program? The crime was committed precisely
according to this program, and by no other than the writer of it. Yes,
gentlemen of the jury, it went off without a hitch! He did not run respectfully
and timidly away from his father’s window, though he was firmly convinced
that the object of his affections was with him. No, that is absurd and
unlikely! He went in and murdered him. Most likely he killed him in anger,
burning with resentment, as soon as he looked on his hated rival. But having
killed him, probably with one blow of the brass pestle, and having convinced
himself, after careful search, that she was not there, he did not, however,
forget to put his hand under the pillow and take out the envelope, the torn
cover of which lies now on the table before us.</p>
<p>“I mention this fact that you may note one, to my thinking, very
characteristic circumstance. Had he been an experienced murderer and had he
committed the murder for the sake of gain only, would he have left the torn
envelope on the floor as it was found, beside the corpse? Had it been
Smerdyakov, for instance, murdering his master to rob him, he would have simply
carried away the envelope with him, without troubling himself to open it over
his victim’s corpse, for he would have known for certain that the notes
were in the envelope—they had been put in and sealed up in his
presence—and had he taken the envelope with him, no one would ever have
known of the robbery. I ask you, gentlemen, would Smerdyakov have behaved in
that way? Would he have left the envelope on the floor?</p>
<p>“No, this was the action of a frantic murderer, a murderer who was not a
thief and had never stolen before that day, who snatched the notes from under
the pillow, not like a thief stealing them, but as though seizing his own
property from the thief who had stolen it. For that was the idea which had
become almost an insane obsession in Dmitri Karamazov in regard to that money.
And pouncing upon the envelope, which he had never seen before, he tore it open
to make sure whether the money was in it, and ran away with the money in his
pocket, even forgetting to consider that he had left an astounding piece of
evidence against himself in that torn envelope on the floor. All because it was
Karamazov, not Smerdyakov, he didn’t think, he didn’t reflect, and
how should he? He ran away; he heard behind him the servant cry out; the old
man caught him, stopped him and was felled to the ground by the brass pestle.</p>
<p>“The prisoner, moved by pity, leapt down to look at him. Would you
believe it, he tells us that he leapt down out of pity, out of compassion, to
see whether he could do anything for him. Was that a moment to show compassion?
No; he jumped down simply to make certain whether the only witness of his crime
were dead or alive. Any other feeling, any other motive would be unnatural.
Note that he took trouble over Grigory, wiped his head with his handkerchief
and, convincing himself he was dead, he ran to the house of his mistress, dazed
and covered with blood. How was it he never thought that he was covered with
blood and would be at once detected? But the prisoner himself assures us that
he did not even notice that he was covered with blood. That may be believed,
that is very possible, that always happens at such moments with criminals. On
one point they will show diabolical cunning, while another will escape them
altogether. But he was thinking at that moment of one thing only—where
was <i>she</i>? He wanted to find out at once where she was, so he ran to her
lodging and learnt an unexpected and astounding piece of news—she had
gone off to Mokroe to meet her first lover.”</p>
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