Chapter 22

Chapter 221,688 wordsCompleted

Winston, drained after a ninety‑hour work binge, hauls his heavy briefcase toward Mr. Charrington’s shop, aware that it contains a book he has not yet opened. He joins a massive Hate Week rally in a central square; an Inner‑Party orator delivers a vitriolic speech when a messenger slips him a note announcing that Oceania’s enemy has switched from Eurasia to Eastasia. The speaker reads the new line without pausing, and the crowd instantly redirects its hatred, tearing down the wrong posters before resuming the chant within minutes. During the brief chaos a man whose face Winston does not see taps his shoulder and returns the briefcase, claiming it was dropped.

The rally ends and Winston rushes back to the Ministry of Truth. Although no formal decree is issued, the Party has covertly ordered all staff to eradicate every reference to the war with Eurasia within a week. Winston and his colleagues in the Records Department work eighteen‑hour days, shuffling endless cylinders of paper, substituting names, dates, and locations to rewrite history so that Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia. The task requires not only mechanical substitution but also imaginative geographic re‑mapping. By the sixth day the flow of new cylinders slows, signaling completion; a silent, secret sigh passes through the department as the falsified record becomes airtight.

At noon a surprise announcement grants all Ministry workers a day off until the next morning. Winston, still carrying the briefcase, returns to his flat, shaves, makes tea, and finally opens the case. Inside lies a heavy, amateurishly bound black volume with no title on the cover; the title page bears the inscription “THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF”. The chapter ends with Winston holding this forbidden book, the first tangible evidence of the underground resistance literature.