Heart of a Dog

by Mikhail Bulgakov

Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky Character Analysis

Preobrazhensky is the eccentric surgeon, professor, and aristocrat whose experiment on Sharik drives the plot of Heart of a Dog. He is a world-renowned expert on the brain, and his expensive rejuvenation operations are in high demand among wealthy Moscow residents. But he’s more interested in science than medicine, as he thinks his side treatments can help transform people and improve the human species as a whole. This is what leads him to experiment on Sharik—with disastrous effects. He lives a lonely but admirable and cultivated life: while he spends most of his time seeing patients and researching, he also feasts lavishly with his assistant, Dr. Bormenthal, and frequently goes to the theatre. An unapologetic anti-communist, he struggles to hold onto his privileges under the new Soviet government, which wants to allocate part of his seven-room apartment to people who need the space. Over the course of the novel, he fights with the building management committee head, Shvonder, to hold onto his seven rooms and with Sharikov, the humanoid monster he created, to maintain order and sanity. He represents the refinement, the noble values, and the excesses of the Russian aristocracy, as well as of science: he takes the noble pursuit of knowledge and progress too far and creates a monster instead. Of course, the trope of the mad scientist (most famously Dr. Frankenstein) and early 20th century surgeons who actually transplanted animal organs into people are all inspirations for Philip’s unusual profession. Preobrazhensky means “of the transfiguration,” making it an ironic reference to Philip’s aspirations to play God and transform humanity—aspirations which get ruined when he creates the monstrous Sharikov instead.

Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky Quotes in Heart of a Dog

The Heart of a Dog quotes below are all either spoken by Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky or refer to Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Revolution and Regression  Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

What’s that? Sausage? Sir, if you could see what this sausage is made of, you’d never come near that store. Better give it to me.
The dog gathered his last remnant of strength and crawled in a frenzy from under the gateway to the sidewalk. The blizzard clattered over his head like gunshots, and swept up the huge letters on a canvas placard, IS REJUVENATION POSSIBLE?
Naturally, it’s possible. The smell rejuvenated me, lifted me from my belly, contracted my stomach, empty for the last two days, with fiery spasms. The smell that conquered the hospital smells, the heavenly smell of chopped horsemeat with garlic and pepper.

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 2 Quotes

“How did you manage to get such a nervous dog to follow you?” asked a pleasant masculine voice, and the trouser leg was rolled down. There was a smell of tobacco, and the glass jars tinkled in one of the cases.
“By kindness. The only method possible in dealing with living creatures. By terror you cannot get anywhere with an animal, no matter what its stage of development. I’ve always asserted this, I assert it today, and I shall go on asserting it. They are wrong thinking that terror will help them. No—no, it won’t, whatever its color: white, red, or even brown! Terror completely paralyzes the nervous system.”

Related Characters: Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Zinaida (Zina) ProkofievnaBunina
Page Number and Citation: 16
Explanation and Analysis:

What an obscene place, the dog thought, but how pleasant! And what the devil did he need me for? Will he really let me stay here? Such an eccentric! Why, he need only blink an eye and he could have the finest dog in town! But maybe I am handsome? I guess I’m lucky!

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 23
Explanation and Analysis:

“Eat in the bedroom,” he said in a slightly choked voice, “read in the examination room, dress in the waiting room, operate in the maid’s room, and examine patients in the dining room.”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Shvonder
Page Number and Citation: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are a hater of the proletariat!” the woman declared proudly.
“You are right, I do not like the proletariat,” Philip Philippovich agreed sadly and pressed a button. A bell rang somewhere within, and the door into the corridor swung open.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Vyazemskaya (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 30
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 3 Quotes

“If you care about your digestion, my good advice is—do not talk about Bolshevism or medicine at dinner. And—heaven preserve!—don’t read any Soviet newspapers before dinner.”
“Hm … But there are no others.”
“That’s just it, don’t read any. You know, I carried out thirty tests at my hospital. And what do you think? Patients who read no newspapers feel excellent. But those whom I deliberately compelled to read Pravda lost weight.”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 33
Explanation and Analysis:

“One fine day in March of 1917, all the galoshes disappeared, including two pair of mine. Also three canes, a coat, and the porter’s samovar. And from that day on the stand for galoshes ceased to exist. […] I ask you why, when this whole business started, did everyone begin to go up the marble staircase in muddy galoshes and felt boots? […] Why was the rug removed from the front stairway? Does Karl Marx forbid rugs on the stairs? Does he say anywhere in his writings that the second entrance of the Kalabukhov house on Prechistenka must be boarded up, and people must go around the house and enter through the backyard? Who needs this? Why can’t the proletarian leave his galoshes downstairs instead of tracking up the marble?”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

“It’s the general rack and ruin, Philip Philippovich. Economic collapse.”
“No,” Philip Philippovich argued with utmost assurance. “No. You ought to be the first, Ivan Arnoldovich, to refrain from using these terms. They are a mirage, a puff of smoke, a fiction.” Philip Philippovich spread out his short fingers, and two shadows like turtles stirred on the tablecloth. “What is this general ruin of yours? An old crone with a crutch? A witch who has knocked out all the windows and extinguished all the lights? Why, there’s no such thing! It doesn’t exist. What do you mean by these words?”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

Philip Philippovich threw him a vicious glance, mumbled something, and cut still deeper. Bormenthal cracked a glass ampule, sucked out the contents with a syringe and treacherously stuck the needle somewhere near Sharik’s heart.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky, Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal
Page Number and Citation: 54
Explanation and Analysis:

“The devil take it. He didn’t die. Oh, well, he’ll die anyway. Ah, Doctor Bormenthal, I’m sorry for the mutt. He was sly, but affectionate.”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal
Page Number and Citation: 55
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 5 Quotes

January 8. Diagnosis established late in the evening. Philip Philippovich, like a true scientist, acknowledged his mistake: a change of hypophysis produces, not rejuvenation, but complete humanization (underlined three times). This does not detract in the slightest from the staggering importance of his amazing discovery.

Related Characters: Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky, Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 60
Explanation and Analysis:

Prof. Preobrazhensky’s amazing experiment has revealed one of the secrets of the human brain. From now on, the mysterious function of the hypophysis—the brain appendage—is explained. The hypophysis determines human characteristics. Its hormones may be described as the most important ones in the organism—they are the hormones of the human shape. A new realm is opening in science: a homunculus was created without any of Faust’s retorts. The surgeon’s scalpel has brought into being a new human entity. Professor Preobrazhensky, you are a creator. (Blot)

Related Characters: Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 62-63
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

There is no doubt whatsoever that this is his illegitimate son (as they used to say in the corrupt bourgeois society). This is how our pseudo-scientific bourgeoisie amuses itself. Anyone can occupy seven rooms—until the gleaming sword of justice flashes its scarlet ray over his head.
Shv…r.

Related Characters: Shvonder (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky, Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 67
Explanation and Analysis:

“Why are you nagging all the time? … Don’t spit. Don’t smoke. Don’t go here. Don’t go there … What sort of business is it anyway? Just like in the streetcar. Why’nt you let me live? And as for ‘dad,’ you’ve no call to … Did I ask you for the operation?” The man barked indignantly. “A fine thing! Grabbed an animal beast, slashed up his head with a knife, and now they’re squeamish. Maybe I never gave you no permission to operate? And likewise (the man rolled up his eyes to the ceiling, as though trying to remember a certain formula), and likewise my relatives. I have the right to sue you, maybe.”

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky, Klim Grigorievich Chugunkin
Page Number and Citation: 70
Explanation and Analysis:

“And what do you wish to call yourself?”
The man adjusted his tie and answered:
“Polygraph Polygraphovich.”

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 73
Explanation and Analysis:

“Excuse me, Professor, but citizen Sharikov is entirely right. It is certainly his right to participate in the discussion of his own fate, especially insofar as it has to do with documents. A document is the most important thing in the world.”

Related Characters: Shvonder (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 75-76
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 7 Quotes

“And what is your opinion of it, if I may ask?”
Sharikov shrugged.
“I don’t agree.”
“With whom? With Engels, or with Kautsky?”
“With neither,” answered Sharikov.
“That’s marvelous, I swear. Everyone who says the other … And what would you propose yourself?”
“What’s there to propose? … They write and write … congress, Germans … who knows them … makes your head spin. Just take everything and divide it up…”
“I thought so,” exclaimed Philip Philippovich, slamming his hand on the tablecloth. “Exactly what I thought.”
“Do you know how to do it, too?” asked Bormenthal with curiosity.
“How, how,” Sharikov began, growing voluble after the vodka. “It’s plain enough. What do you think? One man spreads himself out in seven rooms and has forty pair of pants, and another hangs around garbage dumps, looking for something to eat.”

Related Characters: Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 90
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are on the lowest rung of development,” Philip Philippovich shouted still more loudly. “You are a creature just in the process of formation, with a feeble intellect. All your actions are the actions of an animal. Yet you permit yourself to speak with utterly insufferable impudence in the presence of two people with a university education—to offer advice on a cosmic scale and of equally cosmic stupidity on how to divide everything … And right after gobbling up a boxful of toothpowder too…”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 90-91
Explanation and Analysis:

“Doctor, would you please take him to the circus? But, for God’s sake, take a look at the program first—make sure they have no cats.”
“How do they let such trash into the circus?” Sharikov wondered morosely, shaking his head.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal
Page Number and Citation: 92
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

Dr. Bormenthal, pale, with resolute eyes, raised a glass with a stem as slender as a dragonfly.
“Philip Philippovich,” he exclaimed in a voice full of emotion, “I shall never forget how I came to you as a half-starved student, and you gave me a place in the department. Believe me, Philip Philippovich, you are much more to me than a professor, a teacher … My immense regard for you … Permit me to kiss you, my dear Philip Philippovich.”
“Surely, my dear friend…” Philip Philippovich mumbled with embarrassment and rose toward him. Bormenthal embraced him and planted a kiss on his fluffy, smoke-browned mustache.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 99-100
Explanation and Analysis:

“Philip Philippovich, I say to you…” Bormenthal exclaimed passionately. He rushed to the door leading into the hallway, closed it more firmly, and returned, continuing in a whisper, “it is the only solution. Of course, I would not presume to advise you, but, Philip Philippovich, look at yourself, you are utterly worn out, it is impossible to go on working under such conditions!”
“Absolutely impossible,” Philip Philippovich agreed, sighing.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Zinaida (Zina) ProkofievnaBunina , Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal
Page Number and Citation: 101
Explanation and Analysis:

“Philip Philippovich, but what if it were Spinoza’s brain?”
“Yes!” barked Philip Philippovich. […] “Certainly, it might be possible to graft the hypophysis of Spinoza or some such devil, and turn a dog into a highly advanced human. But what in hell for? Tell me, please, why is it necessary to manufacture Spinozas artificially when any peasant woman can produce them at any time? […] Doctor, the human race takes care of this by itself, and every year, in the course of its evolution, it creates dozens of outstanding geniuses who adorn the earth, stubbornly selecting them out of the mass of scum.”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

“Look at that business with the cats! A man with the heart of a dog.”
“Oh, no, no,” Philip Philippovich sang out. “You are mistaken, Doctor. In heaven’s name, don’t malign the dog. […] The whole horror, you see, is that his heart is no longer a dog’s heart but a human one. And the vilest you could find!”

Related Characters: Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Klim Grigorievich Chugunkin, Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 105
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 9 Quotes

The document read: “This will certify that the bearer of same, Comrade Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, is the director of the sub-section for purging the city of Moscow of stray animals (cats, etc.) of the Moscow Communal Property Administration.”

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 110
Explanation and Analysis:

Philip Philippovich saddled his nose with pince-nez over his glasses and began to read. He muttered to himself for a long time, changing color every second. “… and also threatening to kill the house committee chairman, from which it can be seen that he owns firearms. And he makes counterrevolutionary speeches, and even ordered his social servant Zinaida Prokofievna Bunina to throw Engels into the stove, as an open Menshevik with his assistant Bormenthal, Ivan Arnoldovich, who secretly lives in his apartment without registration. Signed, Director of the purge sub-section P. P. Sharikov—attested to by Chairman of the House Committee, Shvonder, and Secretary Pestrukhin.”

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Shvonder (speaker), Zinaida (Zina) ProkofievnaBunina , Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal, Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 115
Explanation and Analysis:

Sharikov invited his own death. He raised his left arm toward Philip Philippovich and made an obscene gesture with his scratched fist which reeked intolerably of cats. Then with his right hand, he took a revolver from his pocket and aimed it at the dangerous Bormenthal. Bormenthal’s cigarette dropped like a falling star, and a few seconds later Philip Philippovich was rushing beck and forth in mortal terror from instrument case to sofa, jumping over broken glass. On the sofa, the director of the purge section lay supine and gurgling, with the surgeon Bormenthal astride his chest and choking him with a small white pillow.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky, Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov, Dr. Ivan Arnoldovich Bormenthal
Page Number and Citation: 117
Explanation and Analysis:

Epilogue Quotes

“I don’t understand anything,” answered Philip Philippovich, raising his shoulders with a royal air. “What Sharikov? Ah, sorry, you mean my dog … on whom I operated? […] Sharik is still alive, and no one has killed him.”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov
Page Number and Citation: 120
Explanation and Analysis:

Philip Philippovich shrugged his shoulders.
“Science has not yet discovered methods of transforming animals into humans. I tried, but unsuccessfully, as you can see. He spoke for a while, and then began to revert to his original state. Atavism.”
“No indecent language here!” the dog barked suddenly from his chair and stood up.

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker), Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker)
Page Number and Citation: 121
Explanation and Analysis:

The superior being, the dignified benefactor of dogs, sat in his armchair, and the dog Sharik lay sprawled on the rug near the leather sofa. […]
I’ve been so lucky, so lucky, he thought, dozing off. Just incredibly lucky. I’m set for life in this apartment. I am absolutely convinced that there was something shady in my ancestry. There must have been a Newfoundland. She was a whore, my grandmother, may she rest in the Heavenly Kingdom, the old lady. True, they’ve slashed up my whole head for some strange reason, but it’ll heal before my wedding. It’s not worth mentioning.

Related Characters: Sharik / Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov (speaker), Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky
Page Number and Citation: 122
Explanation and Analysis:

“Toward the sacred banks of the Nile…”

Related Characters: Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky (speaker)
Related Symbols: Philip’s Songs
Page Number and Citation: 123
Explanation and Analysis:
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Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky Character Timeline in Heart of a Dog

The timeline below shows where the character Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky appears in Heart of a Dog. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1
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Suddenly, a well-dressed man (Philip) crosses the street. From Philip’s eyes, the dog can tell that he’s a true gentleman.... (full context)
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Sharik the dog eagerly follows Philip up Prechistenka street, kissing his shoe and clearing him a path through the snow to... (full context)
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When they reach Philip’s building, the gentleman offers Sharik another piece of sausage. At first, Sharik is afraid of... (full context)
Chapter 2
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...distinguish the butchers—and many other shops—by their signs’ letters and other distinctive features. So at Philip’s front door, Sharik makes out “Pro” on the nameplate. This confuses him: “Pro” can’t possibly... (full context)
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...an extravagantly-decorated entryway. Sharik glimpses himself in the mirror, and the woman calls him “mangy.” Philip disagrees, but then notices the huge burn on Sharik’s side. Sharik yelps out that it’s... (full context)
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Philip has Zina lead Sharik down a hallway to a medical examination room. Sharik realizes they’re... (full context)
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Sharik wakes up, covered in bandages but surprisingly free of pain. Philip hums a song, “From Seville and to Granada…,” and criticizes Sharik for biting Bormenthal and... (full context)
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Philip leads Sharik into his extravagant office, which Sharik realizes isn’t just any hospital or clinic.... (full context)
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Next, a nervous woman visits and tells Philip that her life is a “tragedy.” She lies about her age, complains about her husband,... (full context)
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Sharik awakens to hear a man tell Philip about his affair with a 14-year-old girl. Sharik is scandalized by Philip’s strange appointments and... (full context)
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Four young men visit Philip, who angrily tells them they’ve chosen the wrong footwear for the weather. One of the... (full context)
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The committee threatens to report Philip Philippovich to the authorities. In response, Philip calls one of his patients, Pyotr Alexandrovich, and... (full context)
Chapter 3
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...fish, cheese, and caviar; several different kinds of liquor; and a sizzling lobster plate for Philip Philippovich and Dr. Bormenthal (the doctor Sharik bit). Philip and Bormenthal drink vodka but complain... (full context)
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Sharik awakens to hear Zina tell Philip that the building committee is calling another meeting. Philip Philippovich complains that they’ll ruin the... (full context)
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Dr. Bormenthal says that things are falling into a “general rack and ruin,” but Philip says the problem isn’t general: it’s “in the heads” of specific people, who have risen... (full context)
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Philip Philippovich puts down his napkin, then pays Dr. Bormenthal 40 rubles and sends him home... (full context)
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Sharik is surprised that Philip cares about him—he wonders if he might be dreaming, but quickly realizes that he isn’t.... (full context)
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...chews up some expensive decorations, most notably the stuffed owl. Zina suggests whipping him, but Philip refuses and sticks Sharik’s nose in the torn-up owl instead. He sends Zina to re-taxidermy... (full context)
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...gotten the rejuvenation treatment, but he brags that he didn’t need it. Later that night, Philip sits at his desk, dissecting human brains with a small knife, while Sharik lazes on... (full context)
Chapter 4
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...a sense of dread, but goes about his daily routine as usual. In the evening, Philip gets a call, and soon Dr. Bormenthal arrives with a suitcase. He reports that someone... (full context)
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Stuck in the bathroom, Sharik angrily plots revenge: he’ll chew up Philip’s boots in the morning. Then, he starts reminiscing about playing in a courtyard with other... (full context)
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...room, a bright white light blinds the confused Sharik. Wearing a cap, gloves, and apron, Philip hums his song, “toward the sacred banks of the Nile.” He orders Zina to remove... (full context)
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Dr. Bormenthal shaves Sharik’s belly and head while Philip Philippovich looks on and explains that sewing on the pituitary gland will be the most... (full context)
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Next, Philip hurriedly cuts into Sharik’s scalp and starts drilling into his skull. He cuts the skull... (full context)
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Philip yells at Dr. Bormenthal to stitch Sharik’s head back together, then calls for Zina and... (full context)
Chapter 5
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...Sharik, the shaggy stray dog. Then, on December 23rd, he describes the surgery that Professor Philip Philippovich Preobrazhensky performed to replace Sharik’s testicles and pituitary gland with a recently-deceased human man’s.... (full context)
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On January 2nd, Sharik stands up on his hind legs like a human. Professor Preobrazhensky faints and hits his head on a chair. On January 6th, the patient’s tail falls... (full context)
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...around on his hind legs like a man, laughing and swearing at random, which infuriates Philip. Dr. Bormenthal is surprised to see Philip off-balance, even as he hums his usual song. (full context)
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...increasingly resembles a human’s. And most importantly, he is finally communicating directly with people: when Philip tells him not to throw around his food, Sharik tells Philip to leave him alone.... (full context)
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On January 12th, Dr. Bormenthal comments that Professor Preobrazhensky appears to have made a major medical breakthrough: hypophysis (pituitary) hormones determine whether people take... (full context)
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Philip’s experiments are still raising a scandal. People are claiming that the end of the world... (full context)
Chapter 6
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By late January, there’s a sheet of paper with various handwritten notes hanging on Philip’s door. Inside, Philip is bent over a broken glass table, reading the newspaper. He sees... (full context)
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...badly-shaven. He comes to the door wearing a tattered, brightly-colored suit and smoking a cigarette. Philip asks him not to sleep in the kitchen and inquires where he found his ugly... (full context)
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Philip tells Sharik to stop throwing his cigarette butts around, swearing and spitting, messing up the... (full context)
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...cigarette in the ashtray, then catches and kills a flea on his arm. He tells Philip that he needs papers, because people are “strictly forbidden to exist without documents” under the... (full context)
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Shvonder comes to register Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov as a citizen “originating” from Philip’s apartment. Philip reluctantly writes a note requesting the relevant documents, which he considers pointless. But... (full context)
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Philip tells Bormenthal that he’s exhausted. Just then they hear glass breaking, a woman yelling, and... (full context)
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An old woman peeks into the kitchen and asks to see “the talking dog,” but Philip kicks her out and scolds Darya for letting her in. Darya complains that there are... (full context)
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...to let the water out of the bathroom. Sharikov, refusing to come out, facetiously asks Philip, “Will you hit me, dad?” (full context)
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...and Fyodor clean the floors while Bormenthal sends the patients home under the pretext that Philip has fallen sick. While the apartment floods, Philip and Bormenthal complain about Sharikov, and Sharikov... (full context)
Chapter 7
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Philip, Dr. Bormenthal, and Sharikov are at dinner. Bormenthal refuses to let Sharikov eat until he... (full context)
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Philip abruptly says, “Long experience.” Bormenthal is confused, so Philip repeats the line, and then adds,... (full context)
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The men eat turkey and drink a lot more. This calms Philip down but energizes Bormenthal, who asks Sharikov about their evening plans. Sharikov chooses the circus,... (full context)
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Philip replies that, if they’re going to divide things up, Sharikov owes him 130 rubles, a... (full context)
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Philip asks who gave Sharikov the Engels book and isn’t surprised when Sharikov admits that it... (full context)
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...dessert, but Sharikov tells everyone that he won’t have any and smokes a cigarette instead. Philip starts reading the newspaper and asks Bormenthal to take Sharikov to the circus, as long... (full context)
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Bormenthal and Sharikov leave for the circus, and Philip goes into his office and paces around. He hums “toward the sacred banks of the... (full context)
Chapter 8
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Nobody knows what Philip has decided to do, and the next week is unremarkable but tense. Vyazemskaya brings Sharikov... (full context)
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Fed up, Philip declares that he won’t stand Sharikov any longer: he’s finding him a new place to... (full context)
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The next evening in Philip’s office, Philip and Bormenthal discuss Sharikov’s latest scandal: he stole money, went out all day,... (full context)
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Now it’s two hours later. Dr. Bormenthal tells Philip how much he appreciates his guidance and kisses him as a gesture of gratitude. Touched... (full context)
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Philip reminds Bormenthal that he’s a world-class expert on the brain, but admits that he made... (full context)
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...wonders how the operation would turn out if they used a brilliant person’s brain, but Philip says that it would be pointless to create “highly advanced human[s]” through science when people... (full context)
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Bormenthal offers to poison Sharikov with arsenic, but Philip refuses—he doesn’t want to become a criminal. Bormenthal notes that Shvonder is manipulating Sharikov to... (full context)
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When they open the door, Philip and Bormenthal see Darya Petrovna in her nightgown, angrily dragging the drunk, naked Sharikov behind... (full context)
Chapter 9
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...of alcohol. Darya and Zina say they hope he never comes back. Three days later, Philip sends the militia to search for him—and he immediately turns up at the apartment, wearing... (full context)
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...Bormenthal to release Sharikov, who goes on to explain that he’s moving back into his home—Philip’s apartment. Philip asks what happens to the cats Sharikov kills. Sharikov explains that they get... (full context)
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...she’s his typist and will be moving in with him. Bormenthal leads Sharikov away and Philip tells the young woman that Sharikov was a failed lab experiment. The woman cries. Sharikov... (full context)
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Philip brings Vasnetsova out to the waiting room and asks Sharikov to tell her the truth... (full context)
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The next afternoon, Philip gets a surprise visit from one of his patients, a military officer. The officer pulls... (full context)
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When Sharikov returns to the apartment, Philip and Bormenthal call him into the examination room and order him to move out of... (full context)
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 A few minutes later, Bormenthal posts a note on the front door saying that Philip is sick and visiting hours are cancelled. Covered in blood, Bormenthal asks Zina and Darya... (full context)
Epilogue
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Ten days later, the police visit Philip to search his apartment. An embarrassed policeman admits that Philip, Bormenthal, Zina, and Darya are... (full context)
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At night, “the superior being” Philip sits in his chair while Sharik lays on the rug, feeling calm and pleasant. He... (full context)