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Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years, 1865-1871 by
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Stian
is on page 500 of 523
But Dostoevsky had always tried to maintain a balance between his opposition to revolutionary agitation and his recognition of the moral idealism that often inspired those who stirred up its flames. He saw his role in relation to the radical youth as that of a sympathetic critic rather than an immitigably hostile opponent.
— Jun 08, 2025 07:48AM
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Stian
is on page 425 of 523
It was in the spring of 1871, just before embarking on the return trip to Russia, that Dostoevsky took his final stab at gambling. This was the last time he ever approached a roulette table -- surely an event worthy of notice -- but so much attention has been lavished on the pathology of his gambling mania that no scrutiny at all has been given to its disappearance.
— Jun 08, 2025 07:44AM
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Stian
is on page 418 of 523
As proof, Dostoevsky recalls his own reaction during the Crimean War, when "even though I still had a strong ferment of the mangy Russian liberalism preached by shitheads like the dung beetle Belinsky and the like, I did not consider myself inconsistent in feeling myself to be a Russian."
— Jun 08, 2025 07:42AM
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Stian
is on page 380 of 523
In late March, Dostoevsky speaks of five novels to Maikov, instead of three (the size of War and Peace, he remarks, again disclosing the competition with Tolstoy), and defines his "main question" as being "the same one that I have been tormented by consciously and unconsciously all my life — the existence of God."
— Jun 01, 2025 12:36PM
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Stian
is on page 316 of 523
Writing to a correspondent more than ten years after finishing The Idiot, Dostoevsky remarks that he is always particularly gratified to receive letters from people who consider this novel his finest creation. "All those who have spoken of it as my best work have something special in their mental formation," he writes, "that has always struck and pleased me."
— May 25, 2025 12:35PM
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