When food was brought him he lay with open eyes, but unconscious, on the floor. The doctor came, laid him on the bed, and gave him rum and morphia, and he fell asleep.
When he awoke next morning, the doctor was standing by him, shaking his head. And suddenly Mezhenétsky was seized by the stimulating sensation of anger, which he had long not felt.
“How is it you are not ashamed to serve here?” he said, as the doctor, with bowed head, counted his pulse. “Why are you doctoring me, only to torment me again? Why, it is just the same as standing at a flogging and giving permission to repeat the operation!”
“Be so good as to turn round on your back,” the doctor said, quite unruffled, and, without looking at him, took out of his side-pocket the instruments for sounding him.
“They used to heal the wounds, in order that the remaining five thousand strokes could be given! … Go to the devil! Go to hell!” he suddenly exclaimed, taking his legs off the bed. “Be off! … I’ll die without you!”
“That’s not right, young man. … We know an answer for rudeness. …”
“To the devil, to the devil!” and Mezhenétsky was so terrible that the doctor hurried away.