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Fyodor Dostoevsky

Notes From the Underground

  • b4063241149has quoted2 years ago
    They laughed cynically at my face, at my clumsy figure; and yet what stupid faces they had themselves.
  • dream sunnyhas quotedlast year
    As the children grow up you feel that you are an example, a support for them; that even after you die your children will always keep your thoughts and feelings, because they have received them from you, they will take on your semblance and likeness.
  • se0enahas quotedlast year
    Why, do you suppose he really loves you, that lover of yours? I don’t believe it. How can he love you when he knows you may be called away from him any minute? He would be a low fellow if he did! Will he have a grain of respect for you? What have you in common with him? He laughs at you and robs you—that is all his love amounts to! You are lucky if he does not beat you. Very likely he does beat you, too. Ask him, if you have got one, whether he will marry you. He will laugh in your face, if he doesn’t spit in it or give you a blow—though maybe he is not worth a bad halfpenny himself. And for what have you ruined your life, if you come to think of it?
  • Alissonhas quotedlast year
    bring me a doll to play with, give me a cup of tea with sugar in it, and maybe I should be appeased
  • Rina Madihas quotedlast year
    did not know how to become anything; neither spiteful nor kind, neither a rascal nor an honest man, neither a hero nor an insect.
  • Roxana Racovițăhas quotedyesterday
    was my ruin, for when I was in the mud I comforted myself with the thought that at other times I was a hero, and the hero was a cloak for the mud: for an ordinary man it was shameful to defile himself, but a hero was too lofty to be utterly defiled, and so he might defile himself.
  • Roxana Racovițăhas quoted3 days ago
    The point was that I had attained my object, I had kept up my dignity, I had not yielded a step, and had put myself publicly on an equal social footing with him.
  • Roxana Racovițăhas quoted3 days ago
    "Why must you invariably be the first to move aside?" I kept asking myself in hysterical rage, waking up sometimes at three o'clock in the morning. "Why is it you and not he? There's no regulation about it; there's no written law. Let the making way be equal as it usually is when refined people meet; he moves half-way and you move half-way; you pass with mutual respect
  • Roxana Racovițăhas quoted3 days ago
    that I was a mere fly in the eyes of all this world, a nasty, disgusting fly--more intelligent, more highly developed, more refined in feeling than any of them, of course--but a fly that was continually making way for everyone, insulted and injured by everyone.
  • Roxana Racovițăhas quoted3 days ago
    I never have been a coward at heart, though I have always been a coward in action.
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