Chapter 19

Chapter 19991 wordsCompleted

Winston walks down the long corridor of the Ministry, recalling Julia’s earlier note, when he feels someone behind him. He turns and sees O’Brien, who greets him with a friendly hand on the arm and a calm, grave tone. O’Brien asks Winston about his recent Newspeak article, pretending curiosity while subtly referencing Syme, a dead Party member, as a code‑word to signal shared dissent. O’Brien tells Winston he has noticed two obsolete words in the article and asks if Winston has seen the forthcoming tenth edition of the Newspeak Dictionary. Winston replies that the ninth edition is still in use and the tenth has not been issued. O’Brien explains that a few advance copies have been circulated, that he possesses one, and offers to send it. He then proposes that Winston pick it up at his flat, producing a small leather notebook and gold‑ink pencil. Under the gaze of a nearby telescreen, O’Brien writes his address on a scrap of paper, tears it off, and hands it to Winston, stating that he is usually at home in the evenings and that his servant can deliver the dictionary if he is not present. Winston memorises the address, later discarding the scrap into a memory‑hole along with other papers. The brief encounter lasts only a few minutes, but its meaning is clear: O’Brien is providing Winston with a covert point of contact and confirming that the resistance network Winston has dreamed of does in fact exist, setting the stage for a later summons that may lead him to the Ministry of Love.