- He did not know where he was. Presumably he was in the
Ministry of Love, but there was no way of making certain.
He was in a high-ceilinged windowless cell with walls of
glittering white porcelain. Concealed lamps flooded it
with cold light, and there was a low, steady humming
sound which he supposed had something to do with the air
supply. A bench, or shelf, just wide enough to sit on ran
round the wall, broken only by the door and, at the end
opposite the door, a lavatory pan with no wooden seat.
There were four telescreens, one in each wall.
- There was a dull aching in his belly. It had been there
ever since they had bundled him into the closed van and
driven him away. But he was also hungry, with a gnawing,
unwholesome kind of hunger. It might be twenty-four hours
since he had eaten, it might be thirty-six. He still did
not know, probably never would know, whether it had been
morning or evening when they arrested him. Since he was
arrested he had not been fed.
- He sat as still as he could on the narrow bench, with his
hands crossed on his knee. He had already learned to sit
still. If you made unexpected movements they yelled at
you from the telescreen. But the craving for food was
growing upon him. What he longed for above all was a
piece of bread. He had an idea that there were a few
breadcrumbs in the pocket of his overalls. It was even
possible -- he thought this because from time to time
something seemed to tickle his leg -- that there might be
a sizeable bit of crust there. In the end the temptation
to find out overcame his fear; he slipped a hand into his
pocket.
- 'Smith!' yelled a voice from the telescreen. '6079 Smith
W.! Hands out of pockets in the cells!'
- He sat still again, his hands crossed on his knee. Before
being brought here he had been taken to another place
which must have been an ordinary prison or a temporary
lock-up used by the patrols. He did not know how long he
had been there; some hours at any rate; with no clocks
and no daylight it was hard to gauge the time. It was a
noisy, evil-smelling place. They had put him into a cell
similar to the one he was now in, but filthily dirty and
at all times crowded by ten or fifteen people. The
majority of them were common criminals, but there were a
few political prisoners among them. He had sat silent
against the wall, jostled by dirty bodies, too
preoccupied by fear and the pain in his belly to take
much interest in his surroundings, but still noticing the
astonishing difference in demeanour between the Party
prisoners and the others. The Party prisoners were always
silent and terrified, but the ordinary criminals seemed
to care nothing for anybody. They yelled insults at the
guards, fought back fiercely when their belongings were
impounded, wrote obscene words on the floor, ate smuggled
food which they produced from mysterious hiding-places in
their clothes, and even shouted down the telescreen when
it tried to restore order. On the other hand some of them
seemed to be on good terms with the guards, called them
by nicknames, and tried to wheedle cigarettes through the
spyhole in the door. The guards, too, treated the common
criminals with a certain forbearance, even when they had
to handle them roughly. There was much talk about the
forced-labour camps to which most of the prisoners
expected to be sent. It was 'all right' in the camps, he
gathered, so long as you had good contacts and knew the
ropes. There was bribery, favouritism, and racketeering
of every kind, there was homosexuality and prostitution,
there was even illicit alcohol distilled from potatoes.
The positions of trust were given only to the common
criminals, especially the gangsters and the murderers,
who formed a sort of aristocracy. All the dirty jobs were
done by the politicals.
- There was a constant come-and-go of prisoners of every
description: drug-peddlers, thieves, bandits, black-
marketeers, drunks, prostitutes. Some of the drunks were
so violent that the other prisoners had to combine to
suppress them. An enormous wreck of a woman, aged about
sixty, with great tumbling breasts and thick coils of
white hair which had come down in her struggles, was
carried in, kicking and shouting, by four guards, who had
hold of her one at each corner. They wrenched off the
boots with which she had been trying to kick them, and
dumped her down across Winston's lap, almost breaking his
thigh-bones. The woman hoisted herself upright and
followed them out with a yell of 'F -- bastards!' Then,
noticing that she was sitting on something uneven, she
slid off Winston's knees on to the bench.
- 'Beg pardon, dearie,' she said. 'I wouldn't 'a sat on
you, only the buggers put me there. They dono 'ow to
treat a lady, do they?' She paused, patted her breast,
and belched. 'Pardon,' she said, 'I ain't meself, quite.'
- She leant forward and vomited copiously on the floor.
- 'Thass better,' she said, leaning back with closed eyes.
'Never keep it down, thass what I say. Get it up while
it's fresh on your stomach, like.'
- She revived, turned to have another look at Winston and
seemed immediately to take a fancy to him. She put a vast
arm round his shoulder and drew him towards her,
breathing beer and vomit into his face.
- 'Wass your name, dearie?' she said.
- 'Smith,' said Winston.
- 'Smith?' said the woman. 'Thass funny. My name's Smith
too. Why,' she added sentimentally, 'I might be your
mother!'
- She might, thought Winston, be his mother. She was about
the right age and physique, and it was probable that
people changed somewhat after twenty years in a
forced-labour camp.
- No one else had spoken to him. To a surprising extent the
ordinary criminals ignored the Party prisoners. 'The
polits,' they called them, with a sort of uninterested
contempt. The Party prisoners seemed terrified of
speaking to anybody, and above all of speaking to one
another. Only once, when two Party members, both women,
were pressed close together on the bench, he overheard
amid the din of voices a few hurriedly-whispered words;
and in particular a reference to something called 'room
one-ohone', which he did not understand.
- It might be two or three hours ago that they had brought
him here. The dull pain in his belly never went away, but
sometimes it grew better and sometimes worse, and his
thoughts expanded or contracted accordingly. When it grew
worse he thought only of the pain itself, and of his
desire for food. When it grew better, panic took hold of
him. There were moments when he foresaw the things that
would happen to him with such actuality that his heart
galloped and his breath stopped. He felt the smash of
truncheons on his elbows and iron-shod boots on his
shins; he saw himself grovelling on the floor, screaming
for mercy through broken teeth. He hardly thought of
Julia. He could not fix his mind on her. He loved her and
would not betray her; but that was only a fact, known as
he knew the rules of arithmetic. He felt no love for her,
and he hardly even wondered what was happening to her. He
thought oftener of O'Brien, with a flickering hope.
O'Brien might know that he had been arrested. The
Brotherhood, he had said, never tried to save its
members. But there was the razor blade; they would send
the razor blade if they could. There would be perhaps
five seconds before the guard could rush into the cell.
The blade would bite into him with a sort of burning
coldness, and even the fingers that held it would be cut
to the bone. Everything came back to his sick body, which
shrank trembling from the smallest pain. He was not
certain that he would use the razor blade even if he got
the chance. It was more natural to exist from moment to
moment, accepting another ten minutes' life even with the
certainty that there was torture at the end of it.
- Sometimes he tried to calculate the number of porcelain
bricks in the walls of the cell. It should have been
easy, but he always lost count at some point or another.
More often he wondered where he was, and what time of day
it was. At one moment he felt certain that it was broad
daylight outside, and at the next equally certain that it
was pitch darkness. In this place, he knew instinctively,
the lights would never be turned out. It was the place
with no darkness: he saw now why O'Brien had seemed to
recognize the allusion. In the Ministry of Love there
were no windows. His cell might be at the heart of the
building or against its outer wall; it might be ten
floors below ground, or thirty above it. He moved himself
mentally from place to place, and tried to determine by
the feeling of his body whether he was perched high in
the air or buried deep underground.
- There was a sound of marching boots outside. The steel
door opened with a clang. A young officer, a trim black-
uniformed figure who seemed to glitter all over with
polished leather, and whose pale, straight-featured face
was like a wax mask, stepped smartly through the doorway.
He motioned to the guards outside to bring in the
prisoner they were leading. The poet Ampleforth shambled
into the cell. The door clanged shut again.
- Ampleforth made one or two uncertain movements from side
to side, as though having some idea that there was
another door to go out of, and then began to wander up
and down the cell. He had not yet noticed Winston's
presence. His troubled eyes were gazing at the wall about
a metre above the level of Winston's head. He was
shoeless; large, dirty toes were sticking out of the
holes in his socks. He was also several days away from a
shave. A scrubby beard covered his face to the
cheekbones, giving him an air of ruffianism that went
oddly with his large weak frame and nervous movements.
- Winston roused hirnself a little from his lethargy. He
must speak to Ampleforth, and risk the yell from the
telescreen. It was even conceivable that Ampleforth was
the bearer of the razor blade.
- 'Ampleforth,' he said.
- There was no yell from the telescreen. Ampleforth paused,
mildly startled. His eyes focused themselves slowly on
Winston.
- 'Ah, Smith!' he said. 'You too!'
- 'What are you in for?'
- 'To tell you the truth -- ' He sat down awkwardly on the
bench opposite Winston. 'There is only one offence, is
there not?' he said.
- 'And have you committed it?'
- 'Apparently I have.'
- He put a hand to his forehead and pressed his temples for
a moment, as though trying to remember something.
- 'These things happen,' he began vaguely. 'I have been
able to recall one instance -- a possible instance. It
was an indiscretion, undoubtedly. We were producing a
definitive edition of the poems of Kipling. I allowed the
word "God" to remain at the end of a line. I
could not help it!' he added almost indignantly, raising
his face to look at Winston. 'It was impossible to change
the line. The rhyme was "rod". Do you realize
that there are only twelve rhymes to "rod" in
the entire language? For days I had racked my brains.
There was no other rhyme.'
- The expression on his face changed. The annoyance passed
out of it and for a moment he looked almost pleased. A
sort of intellectual warmth, the joy of the pedant who
has found out some useless fact, shone through the dirt
and scrubby hair.
- 'Has it ever occurred to you,' he said, 'that the whole
history of English poetry has been determined by the fact
that the English language lacks rhymes?'
- No, that particular thought had never occurred to
Winston. Nor, in the circumstances, did it strike him as
very important or interesting.
- 'Do you know what time of day it is?' he said.
- Ampleforth looked startled again. 'I had hardly thought
about it. They arrested me -- it could be two days ago --
perhaps three.' His eyes flitted round the walls, as
though he half expected to find a window somewhere.
'There is no difference between night and day in this
place. I do not see how one can calculate the time.'
- They talked desultorily for some minutes, then, without
apparent reason, a yell from the telescreen bade them be
silent. Winston sat quietly, his hands crossed.
Ampleforth, too large to sit in comfort on the narrow
bench, fidgeted from side to side, clasping his lank
hands first round one knee, then round the other. The
telescreen barked at him to keep still. Time passed.
Twenty minutes, an hour -- it was difficult to judge.
Once more there was a sound of boots outside. Winston's
entrails contracted. Soon, very soon, perhaps in five
minutes, perhaps now, the tramp of boots would mean that
his own turn had come.
- The door opened. The cold-faced young officer stepped
into the cell. With a brief movement of the hand he
indicated Ampleforth.
- 'Room 101,' he said.
- Ampleforth marched clumsily out between the guards, his
face vaguely perturbed, but uncomprehending.
- What seemed like a long time passed. The pain in
Winston's belly had revived. His mind sagged round and
round on the same trick, like a ball falling again and
again into the same series of slots. He had only six
thoughts. The pain in his belly; a piece of bread; the
blood and the screaming; O'Brien ; Julia; the razor
blade. There was another spasm in his entrails, the heavy
boots were approaching. As the door opened, the wave of
air that it created brought in a powerful smell of cold
sweat. Parsons walked into the cell. He was wearing khaki
shorts and a sports-shirt.
- This time Winston was startled into self-forgetfulness.
- 'You here!' he said.
- Parsons gave Winston a glance in which there was neither
interest nor surprise, but only misery. He began walking
jerkily up and down, evidently unable to keep still. Each
time he straightened his pudgy knees it was apparent that
they were trembling. His eyes had a wide-open, staring
look, as though he could not prevent himself from gazing
at something in the middle distance.
- 'What are you in for?' said Winston.
- 'Thoughtcrime!' said Parsons, almost blubbering. The tone
of his voice implied at once a complete admission of his
guilt and a sort of incredulous horror that such a word
could be applied to himself. He paused opposite Winston
and began eagerly appealing to him: 'You don't think
they'll shoot me, do you, old chap? They don't shoot you
if you haven't actually done anything -- only thoughts,
which you can't help? I know they give you a fair
hearing. Oh, I trust them for that! They'll know my
record, won't they? You know what kind of chap I was. Not
a bad chap in my way. Not brainy, of course, but keen. I
tried to do my best for the Party, didn't I? I'll get off
with five years, don't you think? Or even ten years? A
chap like me could make himself pretty useful in a
labour-camp. They wouldn't shoot me for going off the
rails just once?'
- 'Are you guilty?' said Winston.
- 'Of course I'm guilty !' cried Parsons with a servile
glance at the telescreen. 'You don't think the Party
would arrest an innocent man, do you?' His frog-like face
grew calmer, and even took on a slightly sanctimonious
expression. 'Thoughtcrime is a dreadful thing, old man,'
he said sententiously. 'It's insidious. It can get hold
of you without your even knowing it. Do you know how it
got hold of me? In my sleep! Yes, that's a fact. There I
was, working away, trying to do my bit -- never knew I
had any bad stuff in my mind at all. And then I started
talking in my sleep. Do you know what they heard me
saying?'
- He sank his voice, like someone who is obliged for
medical reasons to utter an obscenity.
- "Down with Big Brother!" Yes, I said that! Said
it over and over again, it seems. Between you and me, old
man, I'm glad they got me before it went any further. Do
you know what I'm going to say to them when I go up
before the tribunal? "Thank you," I'm going to
say, "thank you for saving me before it was too
late."
- 'Who denounced you?' said Winston.
- 'It was my little daughter,' said Parsons with a sort of
doleful pride. 'She listened at the keyhole. Heard what I
was saying, and nipped off to the patrols the very next
day. Pretty smart for a nipper of seven, eh? I don't bear
her any grudge for it. In fact I'm proud of her. It shows
I brought her up in the right spirit, anyway.'
- He made a few more jerky movements up and down, several
times, casting a longing glance at the lavatory pan. Then
he suddenly ripped down his shorts.
- 'Excuse me, old man,' he said. 'I can't help it. It's the
waiting.'
- He plumped his large posterior into the lavatory pan.
Winston covered his face with his hands.
- 'Smith!' yelled the voice from the telescreen. '6079
Smith W! Uncover your face. No faces covered in the
cells.'
- Winston uncovered his face. Parsons used the lavatory,
loudly and abundantly. It then turned out that the plug
was defective and the cell stank abominably for hours
afterwards.
- Parsons was removed. More prisoners came and went,
mysteriously. One, a woman, was consigned to 'Room 101',
and, Winston noticed, seemed to shrivel and turn a
different colour when she heard the words. A time came
when, if it had been morning when he was brought here, it
would be afternoon; or if it had been afternoon, then it
would be midnight. There were six prisoners in the cell,
men and women. All sat very still. Opposite Winston there
sat a man with a chinless, toothy face exactly like that
of some large, harmless rodent. His fat, mottled cheeks
were so pouched at the bottom that it was difficult not
to believe that he had little stores of food tucked away
there. His pale-grey eyes flitted timorously from face to
face and turned quickly away again when he caught
anyone's eye.
- The door opened, and another prisoner was brought in
whose appearance sent a momentary chill through Winston.
He was a commonplace, mean-looking man who might have
been an engineer or technician of some kind. But what was
startling was the emaciation of his face. It was like a
skull. Because of its thinness the mouth and eyes looked
disproportionately large, and the eyes seemed filled with
a murderous, unappeasable hatred of somebody or
something.
- The man sat down on the bench at a little distance from
Winston. Winston did not look at him again, but the
tormented, skull-like face was as vivid in his mind as
though it had been straight in front of his eyes.
Suddenly he realized what was the matter. The man was
dying of starvation. The same thought seemed to occur
almost simultaneously to everyone in the cell. There was
a very faint stirring all the way round the bench. The
eyes of the chinless man kept flitting towards the
skull-faced man, then turning guiltily away, then being
dragged back by an irresistible attraction. Presently he
began to fidget on his seat. At last he stood up, waddled
clumsily across the cell, dug down into the pocket of his
overalls, and, with an abashed air, held out a grimy
piece of bread to the skull- faced man.
- There was a furious, deafening roar from the telescreen.
The chinless man jumped in his tracks. The skull-faced
man had quickly thrust his hands behind his back, as
though demonstrating to all the world that he refused the
gift.
- 'Bumstead!' roared the voice. '2713 Bumstead J.! Let fall
that piece of bread!'
- The chinless man dropped the piece of bread on the floor.
- 'Remain standing where you are,' said the voice. 'Face
the door. Make no movement.'
- The chinless man obeyed. His large pouchy cheeks were
quivering uncontrollably. The door clanged open. As the
young officer entered and stepped aside, there emerged
from behind him a short stumpy guard with enormous arms
and shoulders. He took his stand opposite the chinless
man, and then, at a signal from the officer, let free a
frightful blow, with all the weight of his body behind
it, full in the chinless man's mouth. The force of it
seemed almost to knock him clear of the floor. His body
was flung across the cell and fetched up against the base
of the lavatory seat. For a moment he lay as though
stunned, with dark blood oozing from his mouth and nose.
A very faint whimpering or squeaking, which seemed
unconscious, came out of him. Then he rolled over and
raised himself unsteadily on hands and knees. Amid a
stream of blood and saliva, the two halves of a dental
plate fell out of his mouth.
- The prisoners sat very still, their hands crossed on
their knees. The chinless man climbed back into his
place. Down one side of his face the flesh was darkening.
His mouth had swollen into a shapeless cherry-coloured
mass with a black hole in the middle of it.
- From time to time a little blood dripped on to the breast
of his overalls. His grey eyes still flitted from face to
face, more guiltily than ever, as though he were trying
to discover how much the others despised him for his
humiliation.
- The door opened. With a small gesture the officer
indicated the skull-faced man.
- 'Room 101,' he said.
- There was a gasp and a flurry at Winston's side. The man
had actually flung himself on his knees on the floor,
with his hand clasped together.
- 'Comrade! Officer!' he cried. 'You don't have to take me
to that place! Haven't I told you everything already?
What else is it you want to know? There's nothing I
wouldn't confess, nothing! Just tell me what it is and
I'll confess straight off. Write it down and I'll sign it
-- anything! Not room 101 !'
- 'Room 101,' said the officer.
- The man's face, already very pale, turned a colour
Winston would not have believed possible. It was
definitely, unmistakably, a shade of green.
- 'Do anything to me!' he yelled. 'You've been starving me
for weeks. Finish it off and let me die. Shoot me. Hang
me. Sentence me to twenty-five years. Is there somebody
else you want me to give away? Just say who it is and
I'll tell you anything you want. I don't care who it is
or what you do to them. I've got a wife and three
children. The biggest of them isn't six years old. You
can take the whole lot of them and cut their throats in
front of my eyes, and I'll stand by and watch it. But not
Room 101!'
- 'Room 101,' said the officer.
- The man looked frantically round at the other prisoners,
as though with some idea that he could put another victim
in his own place. His eyes settled on the smashed face of
the chinless man. He flung out a lean arm.
- 'That's the one you ought to be taking, not me!' he
shouted. 'You didn't hear what he was saying after they
bashed his face. Give me a chance and I'll tell you every
word of it. He's the one that's against the Party,
not me.' The guards stepped forward. The man's voice rose
to a shriek. 'You didn't hear him!' he repeated.
'Something went wrong with the telescreen. He's
the one you want. Take him, not me!'
- The two sturdy guards had stooped to take him by the
arms. But just at this moment he flung himself across the
floor of the cell and grabbed one of the iron legs that
supported the bench. He had set up a wordless howling,
like an animal. The guards took hold of him to wrench him
loose, but he clung on with astonishing strength. For
perhaps twenty seconds they were hauling at him. The
prisoners sat quiet, their hands crossed on their knees,
looking straight in front of them. The howling stopped;
the man had no breath left for anything except hanging
on. Then there was a different kind of cry. A kick from a
guard's boot had broken the fingers of one of his hands.
They dragged him to his feet.
- 'Room 101,' said the officer.
- The man was led out, walking unsteadily, with head
sunken, nursing his crushed hand, all the fight had gone
out of him.
- A long time passed. If it had been midnight when the
skull-faced man was taken away, it was morning: if
morning, it was afternoon. Winston was alone, and had
been alone for hours. The pain of sitting on the narrow
bench was such that often he got up and walked about,
unreproved by the telescreen. The piece of bread still
lay where the chinless man had dropped it. At the
beginning it needed a hard effort not to look at it, but
presently hunger gave way to thirst. His mouth was sticky
and evil-tasting. The humming sound and the unvarying
white light induced a sort of faintness, an empty feeling
inside his head. He would get up because the ache in his
bones was no longer bearable, and then would sit down
again almost at once because he was too dizzy to make
sure of staying on his feet. Whenever his physical
sensations were a little under control the terror
returned. Sometimes with a fading hope he thought of
O'Brien and the razor blade. It was thinkable that the
razor blade might arrive concealed in his food, if he
were ever fed. More dimly he thought of Julia. Somewhere
or other she was suffering perhaps far worse than he. She
might be screaming with pain at this moment. He thought:
'If I could save Julia by doubling my own pain, would I
do it? Yes, I would.' But that was merely an intellectual
decision, taken because he knew that he ought to take it.
He did not feel it. In this place you could not feel
anything, except pain and foreknowledge of pain. Besides,
was it possible, when you were actually suffering it, to
wish for any reason that your own pain should increase?
But that question was not answerable yet.
- The boots were approaching again. The door opened.
O'Brien came in.
- Winston started to his feet. The shock of the sight had
driven all caution out of him. For the first time in many
years he forgot the presence of the telescreen.
- 'They've got you too!' he cried.
- 'They got me a long time ago,' said O'Brien with a mild,
almost regretful irony. He stepped aside. from behind him
there emerged a broad-chested guard with a long black
truncheon in his hand.
- 'You know him, Winston,' said O'Brien. 'Don't deceive
yourself. You did know it -- you have always known it.'
- Yes, he saw now, he had always known it. But there was no
time to think of that. All he had eyes for was the
truncheon in the guard's hand. It might fall anywhere; on
the crown, on the tip of the ear, on the upper arm, on
the elbow-
- The elbow! He had slumped to his knees, almost paralysed,
clasping the stricken elbow with his other hand.
Everything had exploded into yellow light. Inconceivable,
inconceivable that one blow could cause such pain! The
light cleared and he could see the other two looking down
at him. The guard was laughing at his contortions. One
question at any rate was answered. Never, for any reason
on earth, could you wish for an increase of pain. Of pain
you could wish only one thing: that it should stop.
Nothing in the world was so bad as physical pain. In the
face of pain there are no heroes, no heroes, he thought
over and over as he writhed on the floor, clutching
uselessly at his disabled left arm.