The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (i love reading books .txt) ๐
Description
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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โIt must be lovely, a duel,โ Marya Kondratyevna observed suddenly.
โHow so?โ
โIt must be so dreadful and so brave, especially when young officers with pistols in their hands pop at one another for the sake of some lady. A perfect picture! Ah, if only girls were allowed to look on, Iโd give anything to see one!โ
โItโs all very well when you are firing at someone, but when he is firing straight in your mug, you must feel pretty silly. Youโd be glad to run away, Marya Kondratyevna.โ
โYou donโt mean you would run away?โ But Smerdyakov did not deign to reply. After a momentโs silence the guitar tinkled again, and he sang again in the same falsetto:
Whatever you may say,
I shall go far away.
Life will be bright and gay
In the city far away.
I shall not grieve,
I shall not grieve at all,
I donโt intend to grieve at all.
Then something unexpected happened. Alyosha suddenly sneezed. They were silent. Alyosha got up and walked towards them. He found Smerdyakov dressed up and wearing polished boots, his hair pomaded, and perhaps curled. The guitar lay on the garden-seat. His companion was the daughter of the house, wearing a light-blue dress with a train two yards long. She was young and would not have been bad-looking, but that her face was so round and terribly freckled.
โWill my brother Dmitri soon be back?โ asked Alyosha with as much composure as he could.
Smerdyakov got up slowly; Marya Kondratyevna rose too.
โHow am I to know about Dmitri Fyodorovitch? Itโs not as if I were his keeper,โ answered Smerdyakov quietly, distinctly, and superciliously.
โBut I simply asked whether you do know?โ Alyosha explained.
โI know nothing of his whereabouts and donโt want to.โ
โBut my brother told me that you let him know all that goes on in the house, and promised to let him know when Agrafena Alexandrovna comes.โ
Smerdyakov turned a deliberate, unmoved glance upon him.
โAnd how did you get in this time, since the gate was bolted an hour ago?โ he asked, looking at Alyosha.
โI came in from the back-alley, over the fence, and went straight to the summerhouse. I hope youโll forgive me,โ he added, addressing Marya Kondratyevna. โI was in a hurry to find my brother.โ
โAch, as though we could take it amiss in you!โ drawled Marya Kondratyevna, flattered by Alyoshaโs apology. โFor Dmitri Fyodorovitch often goes to the summerhouse in that way. We donโt know he is here and he is sitting in the summerhouse.โ
โI am very anxious to find him, or to learn from you where he is now. Believe me, itโs on business of great importance to him.โ
โHe never tells us,โ lisped Marya Kondratyevna.
โThough I used to come here as a friend,โ Smerdyakov began again, โDmitri Fyodorovitch has pestered me in a merciless way even here by his incessant questions about the master. โWhat news?โ heโll ask. โWhatโs going on in there now? Whoโs coming and going?โ and canโt I tell him something more. Twice already heโs threatened me with death.โ
โWith death?โ Alyosha exclaimed in surprise.
โDo you suppose heโd think much of that, with his temper, which you had a chance of observing yourself yesterday? He says if I let Agrafena Alexandrovna in and she passes the night there, Iโll be the first to suffer for it. I am terribly afraid of him, and if I were not even more afraid of doing so, I ought to let the police know. God only knows what he might not do!โ
โHis honor said to him the other day, โIโll pound you in a mortar!โโโ added Marya Kondratyevna.
โOh, if itโs pounding in a mortar, it may be only talk,โ observed Alyosha. โIf I could meet him, I might speak to him about that too.โ
โWell, the only thing I can tell you is this,โ said Smerdyakov, as though thinking better of it; โI am here as an old friend and neighbor, and it would be odd if I didnโt come. On the other hand, Ivan Fyodorovitch sent me first thing this morning to your brotherโs lodging in Lake Street, without a letter, but with a message to Dmitri Fyodorovitch to go to dine with him at the restaurant here, in the marketplace. I went, but didnโt find Dmitri Fyodorovitch at home, though it was eight oโclock. โHeโs been here, but he is quite gone,โ those were the very words of his landlady. Itโs as though there was an understanding between them. Perhaps at this moment he is in the restaurant with Ivan Fyodorovitch, for Ivan Fyodorovitch has not been home to dinner and Fyodor Pavlovitch dined alone an hour ago, and is gone to lie down. But I beg you most particularly not to speak of me and of what I have told you, for heโd kill me for nothing at all.โ
โBrother Ivan invited Dmitri to the restaurant today?โ repeated Alyosha quickly.
โThatโs so.โ
โThe Metropolis tavern in the marketplace?โ
โThe very same.โ
โThatโs quite likely,โ cried Alyosha, much excited. โThank you, Smerdyakov; thatโs important. Iโll go there at once.โ
โDonโt betray me,โ Smerdyakov called after him.
โOh, no, Iโll go to the tavern as though by chance. Donโt be anxious.โ
โBut wait a minute, Iโll open the gate to you,โ cried Marya Kondratyevna.
โNo; itโs a shortcut, Iโll get over the fence again.โ
What he had heard threw Alyosha into great agitation. He ran to the tavern. It was impossible for him to go into the tavern in his
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