Page 1134 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 1134

Moravian brother, I am not quite sure which. He had been
       living amongst us for many years and behaved with won-
       derful 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  everyone
       in the town was aware, by the way, that the famous doc-
       tor 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 criticised 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.
          Doctor  Herzenstube  roundly  declared  that  the  abnor-
       mality  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 ap-
       parent 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

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