168 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
168 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
||
|
### ###
|
||
|
### ###
|
||
|
### #### ### ### ### ####
|
||
|
### ### ##### ### ###
|
||
|
### ### ### ### ###
|
||
|
### ### ##### ### ###
|
||
|
########## ### ### ##########
|
||
|
### ###
|
||
|
### ###
|
||
|
|
||
|
Underground eXperts United
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presents...
|
||
|
|
||
|
####### ## ## ####### # # ####### ## ## #######
|
||
|
## ## ## ## ##### ## ## ## ## ##
|
||
|
#### ## ## #### # # ####### ####### ## ##
|
||
|
## ## ## ## ##### ## ## ## ##
|
||
|
## ## ####### ####### # # ####### ## #######
|
||
|
|
||
|
[ Dostoyevsky And The Brothers Karamazov ] [ By Eric Chaet ]
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
____________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
DOSTOYEVSKY AND THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV
|
||
|
|
||
|
by Eric Chaet
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV is, among other things, a murder-mystery novel. Tho
|
||
|
it is not much of a mystery to us, the readers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are four brothers: Ivan, in his late 20's, a very clever fellow,
|
||
|
'too sophisticated' for faith in the old ways of Russian thinking,
|
||
|
including belief in God and virtue; Dmitri, in his mid 20's, a swaggering
|
||
|
ex-lieutenant, a drinker, undisciplined, loud, passionate, ruled by his
|
||
|
heart, not his mind, whose ineffective moral compass is a commitment to
|
||
|
'honor'; Alyosha, 20 - in the early part of the book a monk - pure of heart,
|
||
|
kind, caring, not bothered that others consider him simple-minded;
|
||
|
Smerdyakov (Stinker), whom none of the other three realize is their brother,
|
||
|
son of their dissipated father Fyodor and an idiot-girl who used to wander
|
||
|
around "our provincial town" in only a smock and bare-footed, thru the
|
||
|
winter, even.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ivan is the son of one mother, Dmitri and Alyosha of another, Smerdykov
|
||
|
of the idiot girl. Their father, Fyodor, neglected them all, to what would
|
||
|
now certainly be judged a criminal extent. If the two servants had not taken
|
||
|
care of them, they would have starved, frozen, been devoured by lice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This Fyodor was a nobleman without assets in his youth, who gained wealth
|
||
|
by toadying among the more prosperous nobility, until he got enough money to
|
||
|
earn money as a money-lender and trader, and to indulge himself in
|
||
|
womanizing and drink. He also liked to quote the fashionable ideas of the
|
||
|
time, from Schiller's "The Robbers" for instance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Smerdyakov, vain and insolent, is his cook.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ivan and Dmitri have recently returned to "our provincial town". Dmitri
|
||
|
is sure that his father owes him money, the inheritance from his mother's
|
||
|
wealth. He gets drunk a lot, and makes a lot of noise about how, if his
|
||
|
father won't give him his due, he will kill his father. (When the father IS
|
||
|
murdered, all the evidence seems to point to Dmitri, and he is convicted.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dmitri falls for Grushenka, and so does his father, Fyodor. She toys
|
||
|
with them both, caring for neither. Fyodor offers her 3,000 roubles if she
|
||
|
will come to him. Which, of course, drives Dmitri wild, because he is
|
||
|
obsessed with Grushenka, and, also, because he considers the 3,000 roubles
|
||
|
his.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ivan indulges in 'intellectual' discussions with his father, Smerdyakov,
|
||
|
a variety of ladies and gentlemen of the town, and even the monks, and,
|
||
|
toward the end, with Dmitri in his prison cell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He plants ideas in Smerdyakov's mind that lead, eventually, to Smerdyakov
|
||
|
considering himself a very clever person, cleverer than those around him,
|
||
|
and to his deciding that murder can sometimes be justified, and to his
|
||
|
murdering Fyodor, the dissipated and abusive father of the four sons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Ivan realizes how he has 'programmed' Smerdyakov - at the same time
|
||
|
Ivan begins to realize that his own ideas lead to a dead end - he loses
|
||
|
control to a greater and greater extent, and lapses into, first,
|
||
|
hallucinations (the devil visits him, and is fond of intellectual
|
||
|
discussion), then 'brain-fever'.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alyosha, instructed by his mentor - just before this mentor's death - in
|
||
|
the monastary to return to 'the world' serves everyone with whom he comes
|
||
|
into contact, mostly by listening to them rant, with respectful and caring
|
||
|
attention, and helping them when they fall into despair or sickness. He is,
|
||
|
when not carrying around too much of the others' suffering, happy - and
|
||
|
makes friends with a group of pre-teens. At the very end of the book,
|
||
|
Alyosha delivers a brief speech to them, to which they listen attentively,
|
||
|
tho they tend to scoff at what adults say in general - because they have
|
||
|
learned that he cares for and respects them, and because they also care for
|
||
|
and respect him. The speech is about how such caring, and kindness, will
|
||
|
serve as antidotes, thruout life, for the evil one encounters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
DOSTOYEVSKY WAS A MAN of great intellect, whose fate it was to live,
|
||
|
primarily, among non-intellectuals, and to see thru the errors and
|
||
|
pretensions of the prominent intellectuals and would-be intellectuals of
|
||
|
his time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dostoyevsky was doing his work mostly in the third-quarter of the
|
||
|
nineteenth century, in Russia, when faith in God and in the doctrines of
|
||
|
Orthodox Christianity (as opposed to either Catholicism or Protestantism)
|
||
|
were beginning to be widely scoffed at, especially in the upper classes, and
|
||
|
there was wide-spread admiration for the ideas of the French Revolution,
|
||
|
with a good deal of nihilism - that is, belief in having no beliefs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When a person without acute and comprehensive intellect operates with
|
||
|
cynicism regarding the beliefs of those he or she lives among, and a faith
|
||
|
that people, if liberated from such beliefs, can do better making up their
|
||
|
own thoughts and moves - there is frequently great mental suffering, posing,
|
||
|
and violence performed to convince oneself that one is free.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is frequently seen in our own time, in western civilization, too.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dostoyevsky was such a nihilist (and a revolutionary) as a youth - but
|
||
|
spent time among (non-political) criminals in Siberia, then, on probation,
|
||
|
in a provincial town, with people mostly not his intellectual equals. Some,
|
||
|
tho, were quite brilliant, some extraordinarily passionate, and some were
|
||
|
extraordinarily kind and helpful - and some combined all these qualities.
|
||
|
(Some were extraordinarily cruel and insensitive, too. Most, of course, were
|
||
|
as conventional as they were able to be.) When he returned to Petersburg,
|
||
|
Dostoyevsky's companions were his fellow petty bureaucrats - i.e., clerks
|
||
|
below middle-management - in a thoroughly corrupt and failing system - where
|
||
|
courage, for instance, was considered a character flaw, and compassion
|
||
|
laughable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The struggles of such people - and Dostoyevsky's own struggle, trying to
|
||
|
survive and to make a come-back (he had had big success with a juvenile
|
||
|
novel, POOR FOLK, early) as a convicted felon and a man with suspect
|
||
|
political leanings in times of fierce reaction and fitting in for the
|
||
|
purpose of thriving - became the material of his great novels, which he
|
||
|
wrote, mostly, in St. Petersburg, rapidly - so that they are by no means
|
||
|
elegant - for money he desperately needed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Each novel became more competently written and comprehensive in examining
|
||
|
the social situation, passionate relationships, psychological and spiritual
|
||
|
conditions and catastrophes, and occasional triumphant transcendence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE BROTHERS KARAMZOV was the last - and the wisest - completed just before
|
||
|
Dostoyevsky's death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Recalling it frequently serves me as a kind of beacon, a lighthouse -
|
||
|
when I seem to be navigating primarily in the dark: when others seem to be
|
||
|
acting toward or reacting with me and among one another almost entirely in a
|
||
|
destructive manner - believing what is not so, and inadvertantly causing
|
||
|
destructive results - placing apparently insurmountable obstacles in the
|
||
|
path of that which would benefit those who are suffering thru no fault of
|
||
|
their own - and which would relieve the very conditions they themselves
|
||
|
complain of most vociferously - or suffer from in proud secrecy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
uXu #540 Underground eXperts United 2000 uXu #540
|
||
|
Call Terraniux Underground -> +46-8-7777388
|
||
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|