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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โYouโd better tell me some anecdote!โ said Ivan miserably.
โThere is an anecdote precisely on our subject, or rather a legend, not an anecdote. You reproach me with unbelief, you see, you say, yet you donโt believe. But, my dear fellow, I am not the only one like that. We are all in a muddle over there now and all through your science. Once there used to be atoms, five senses, four elements, and then everything hung together somehow. There were atoms in the ancient world even, but since weโve learned that youโve discovered the chemical molecule and protoplasm and the devil knows what, we had to lower our crest. Thereโs a regular muddle, and, above all, superstition, scandal; thereโs as much scandal among us as among you, you know; a little more in fact, and spying, indeed, for we have our secret police department where private information is received. Well, this wild legend belongs to our middle agesโ โnot yours, but oursโ โand no one believes it even among us, except the old ladies of eighteen stone, not your old ladies I mean, but ours. Weโve everything you have, I am revealing one of our secrets out of friendship for you; though itโs forbidden. This legend is about Paradise. There was, they say, here on earth a thinker and philosopher. He rejected everything, โlaws, conscience, faith,โ and, above all, the future life. He died; he expected to go straight to darkness and death and he found a future life before him. He was astounded and indignant. โThis is against my principles!โ he said. And he was punished for thatโ โโ โฆ that is, you must excuse me, I am just repeating what I heard myself, itโs only a legendโ โโ โฆ he was sentenced to walk a quadrillion kilometers in the dark (weโve adopted the metric system, you know) and when he has finished that quadrillion, the gates of heaven would be opened to him and heโll be forgivenโ โโ
โAnd what tortures have you in the other world besides the quadrillion kilometers?โ asked Ivan, with a strange eagerness.
โWhat tortures? Ah, donโt ask. In old days we had all sorts, but now they have taken chiefly to moral punishmentsโ โโthe stings of conscienceโ and all that nonsense. We got that, too, from you, from the softening of your manners. And whoโs the better for it? Only those who have got no conscience, for how can they be tortured by conscience when they have none? But decent people who have conscience and a sense of honor suffer for it. Reforms, when the ground has not been prepared for them, especially if they are institutions copied from abroad, do nothing but mischief! The ancient fire was better. Well, this man, who was condemned to the quadrillion kilometers, stood still, looked round and lay down across the road. โI wonโt go, I refuse on principle!โ Take the soul of an enlightened Russian atheist and mix it with the soul of the prophet Jonah, who sulked for three days and nights in the belly of the whale, and you get the character of that thinker who lay across the road.โ
โWhat did he lie on there?โ
โWell, I suppose there was something to lie on. You are not laughing?โ
โBravo!โ cried Ivan, still with the same strange eagerness. Now he was listening with an unexpected curiosity. โWell, is he lying there now?โ
โThatโs the point, that he isnโt. He lay there almost a thousand years and then he got up and went on.โ
โWhat an ass!โ cried Ivan, laughing nervously and still seeming to be pondering something intently. โDoes it make any difference whether he lies there forever or walks the quadrillion kilometers? It would take a billion years to walk it?โ
โMuch more than that. I havenโt got a pencil and paper or I could work it out. But he got there long ago, and thatโs where the story begins.โ
โWhat, he got there? But how did he get the billion years to do it?โ
โWhy, you keep thinking of our present earth! But our present earth may have been repeated a billion times. Why, itโs become extinct, been frozen; cracked, broken to bits, disintegrated into its elements, again โthe water above the firmament,โ then again a comet, again a sun, again from the sun it becomes earthโ โand the same sequence may have been repeated endlessly and exactly the same to every detail, most unseemly and insufferably tediousโ โโ
โWell, well, what happened when he arrived?โ
โWhy, the moment the gates of Paradise were open and he walked in, before he had been there two seconds, by his watch (though to my thinking his watch must have long dissolved into its elements on the way), he cried out that those two seconds were worth walking not a quadrillion kilometers but a quadrillion of quadrillions, raised to the quadrillionth power! In fact, he sang โhosannahโ and overdid it so, that some persons there of lofty ideas wouldnโt shake hands with him at firstโ โheโd become too rapidly reactionary, they said. The Russian temperament. I repeat, itโs a legend. I give it for what itโs worth. So thatโs the sort of ideas we have on such subjects even now.โ
โIโve caught you!โ Ivan cried, with an almost childish delight, as though he had succeeded in remembering something at last. โThat anecdote about the quadrillion years, I made up myself! I was seventeen then, I was at the high school. I made up that anecdote and told it to a schoolfellow called Korovkin, it was at Moscow.โ โโ โฆ The anecdote is so characteristic that I couldnโt have taken it from anywhere. I thought Iโd forgotten itโ โโ โฆ
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