Chapter 25

Chapter 257,052 wordsCompleted

Winston awakens restrained on a high camp‑like bed, O’Brien standing beside him with a man in a white coat holding a syringe. O’Brien repeatedly presses a lever on a dial that inflicts waves of excruciating pain. He forces Winston to answer simple questions—how many fingers he is holding up, what the current war is, whether two plus two equals four—while the dial rises, each wrong answer bringing more pain. O’Brien interrogates Winston about the Party slogan “Who controls the past controls the future,” demanding Winston repeat it and then probing Winston’s belief about the existence of the past. He confronts Winston with a fabricated photograph of the three traitors Jones, Aaronson and Rutherford, claiming the photograph never existed and burning it, illustrating the Party’s control over memory.

The torture continues with O’Brien demanding Winston’s confession that he once saw the photograph, that he remembers a dream of Big Brother, and that he believes the Party’s version of events. O’Brien tells Winston that the Ministry’s aim is not merely to punish but to “cure” him, to reshape his mind so that he genuinely believes Party truths. He describes the Party’s historical method of eradicating martyrs, insisting that true liberation comes from total mental conversion. O’Brien explains that Winston will be annihilated, erased from both past and future, and that even after death the Party will ensure he never existed.

Throughout, a white‑coated doctor monitors Winston’s pulse, inserts needles, and manipulates equipment. O’Brien repeatedly asks Winston to count fingers, first four, then five, then to accept whatever number O’Brien says, using the pain‑dial to force compliance. He also subjects Winston to a philosophical test on reality, asking whether the past exists as an object, in records, or in memory, and forces Winston to acknowledge the Party’s ownership of all records and memories.

O’Brien later reveals the existence of Room 101, describing it as a place of ultimate terror, and warns Winston that it will be used if he continues to resist. He reiterates that Winston is a “flaw in the pattern” that must be wiped out, and that the Party will not merely kill him but will reshape his mind before death.

Finally, after a prolonged session of pain, questioning, and ideological indoctrination, O’Brien lifts a truncheon, strikes Winston brutally, and departs, leaving Winston immobilized, bruised, and helpless on the bed, illustrating the total domination of the Ministry of Love over the individual.