The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (i love reading books .txt) ๐
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Dmitri Karamazov and his father Fyodor are at war over both Dmitriโs inheritance and the affections of the beautiful Grushenka. Into this feud arrive the middle brother Ivan, recently returned from Moscow, and the youngest sibling Alyosha, who has been released into the wider world from the local monastery by the elder monk Zossima. Through a series of accidents of fate and wilful misunderstandings the Karamazovs edge closer to tragedy, while the local townspeople watch on.
The Brothers Karamazov was Fyodor Dostoevskyโs final novel, and was originally serialised in The Russian Messenger before being published as a complete novel in 1880. This edition is the well-received 1912 English translation by Constance Garnett. As well as earning wide-spread critical acclaim, the novel has been widely influential in literary and philosophical circles; Franz Kafka and James Joyce admired the emotions that verge on madness in the Karamazovs, while Sigmund Freud and Jean-Paul Satre found inspiration in the themes of patricide and existentialism.
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- Author: Fyodor Dostoevsky
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Ivan concluded his long tirade with marked and unexpected feeling.
โAnd why did you begin โas stupidly as you couldโ?โ asked Alyosha, looking dreamily at him.
โTo begin with, for the sake of being Russian. Russian conversations on such subjects are always carried on inconceivably stupidly. And secondly, the stupider one is, the closer one is to reality. The stupider one is, the clearer one is. Stupidity is brief and artless, while intelligence wriggles and hides itself. Intelligence is a knave, but stupidity is honest and straightforward. Iโve led the conversation to my despair, and the more stupidly I have presented it, the better for me.โ
โYou will explain why you donโt accept the world?โ said Alyosha.
โTo be sure I will, itโs not a secret, thatโs what Iโve been leading up to. Dear little brother, I donโt want to corrupt you or to turn you from your stronghold, perhaps I want to be healed by you.โ Ivan smiled suddenly quite like a little gentle child. Alyosha had never seen such a smile on his face before.
IV RebellionโI must make you one confession,โ Ivan began. โI could never understand how one can love oneโs neighbors. Itโs just oneโs neighbors, to my mind, that one canโt love, though one might love those at a distance. I once read somewhere of John the Merciful, a saint, that when a hungry, frozen beggar came to him, he took him into his bed, held him in his arms, and began breathing into his mouth, which was putrid and loathsome from some awful disease. I am convinced that he did that from โself-laceration,โ from the self-laceration of falsity, for the sake of the charity imposed by duty, as a penance laid on him. For anyone to love a man, he must be hidden, for as soon as he shows his face, love is
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