Page 1136 - the-brothers-karamazov
P. 1136

The Moscow doctor, being questioned in his turn, def-
       initely  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.
          But  apart  from  temporary  aberration,  the  doctor  di-
       agnosed mania, which promised, 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

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