| PART 5
Chapter 20
 The next day the sick man received the sacrament and extreme
 unction.  During the ceremony Nikolay Levin prayed fervently. 
 His great eyes, fastened on the holy image that was set out on a
 card table covered with a colored napkin, expressed such
 passionate prayer and hope that it was awful to Levin to see it.
 Levin knew that this passionate prayer and hope would only make
 him feel more bitterly parting from the life he so loved.  Levin
 knew his brother and the workings of his intellect: he knew that
 his unbelief came not from life being easier for him without
 faith, but had grown up because step by step the contemporary
 scientific interpretation of natural phenomena crushed out the
 possibility of faith; and so he knew that his present return was
 not a legitimate one, brought about by way of the same working of
 his intellect, but simply a temporary, interested return to faith
 in a desperate hope of recovery.  Levin knew too that Kitty had
 strengthened his hope by accounts of the marvelous recoveries she
 had heard of.  Levin knew all this; and it was agonizingly
 painful to him to behold the supplicating, hopeful eyes and the
 emaciated wrist, lifted with difficulty, making the sign of the
 cross on the tense brow, and the prominent shoulders and hollow,
 gasping chest, which one could not feel consistent with the life
 the sick man was praying for.  During the sacrament Levin did
 what he, an unbeliever, had done a thousand times.  He said,
 addressing God, "If Thou dost exist, make this man to recover"
 (of course this same thing has been repeated many times), "and
 Thou wilt save him and me." After extreme unction the sick man became suddenly much better.
 He did not cough once in the course of an hour, smiled, kissed
 Kitty's hand, thanking her with tears, and said he was
 comfortable, free from pain, and that he felt strong and had an
 appetite.  He even raised himself when his soup was brought, and
 asked for a cutlet as well.  Hopelessly ill as he was, obvious as
 it was at the first glance that he could not recover, Levin and
 Kitty were for that hour both in the same state of excitement,
 happy, though fearful of being mistaken. "Is he better?" "Yes, much." "It's wonderful." |