Page 1110 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 1110

from being favourably disposed to the prisoner, should en-
       ter the court bitterly prejudiced against him. In fact, one
       may  say  pretty  certainly  that  the  masculine,  as  distin-
       guished from the feminine, part of the audience was biased
       against the prisoner. There were numbers of severe, frown-
       ing, 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.
          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 cas-
       es 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  al-
       ways considered that he had been aggrieved by someone
       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 anxi-
       ety. But these rumours were not quite just. Our prosecutor

                                                    110
   1105   1106   1107   1108   1109   1110   1111   1112   1113   1114   1115