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Notes from Underground

Chapter VI 

Word Count: 498    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

uld at least have been one quality, as it were, positive in me, in which I could have believed myself. Question: What is he? Answer: A sluggard; how very pleasant it would have been to hear that of

or everything sublime and beautiful. How do you like that? I have long had visions of it. That "sublime and beautiful" weighs heavily on my mind at forty But that is at forty; then - oh, then it would have been different! I should have found for myself a form of activity in keeping with it, to be precise, drinking to the health of everything "sublime and beautiful." I should have snatched at every opportunity to drop a tear into my glass and then to drain it to all that is "sublime and beautiful." I should then have t

And what a good round belly I should have grown, what a treble chin I should have established, what a ruby nose I should have coloured for myself, so that everyone would have said, lo

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Notes from Underground
Notes from Underground
“"I am a sick man . . . I am a spiteful man," the irascible voice of a nameless narrator cries out. And so, from underground, emerge the passionate confessions of a suffering man; the brutal self-examination of a tormented soul; the bristling scorn and iconoclasm of alienated individual who has become one of the greatest antiheroes in all literature. Notes From Underground , published in 1864, marks a tuming point in Dostoevsky's writing: it announces the moral political, and social ideas he will treat on a monumental scale in Crime And Punishment , The Idiot , and The Brothers Karamazov . And it remains to this day one of the most searingly honest and universal testaments to human despair ever penned. “The political cataclysms and cultural revolutions of our century…confirm the status of Notes from Underground as one of the most sheerly astonishing and subversive creations of European fiction.” –from the Introduction by Donald Fanger”
1 Part I Underground2 Chapter I3 Chapter II4 Chapter III5 Chapter IV6 Chapter V7 Chapter VI8 Chapter VII9 Chapter VIII10 Chapter IX11 Chapter X12 Chapter XI13 Part II A Propos of the Wet Snow14 Chapter I15 Chapter II16 Chapter III17 Chapter IV18 Chapter V19 Chapter VI20 Chapter VII21 Chapter VIII22 Chapter IX23 Chapter X