Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Dostoyevsky: The Complete Novels


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      Table of Contents

       Poor Folk

       Notes From The Underground

       Crime and Punishment

       The Gambler

       The Idiot

       The Possessed (The Devils)

       A Raw Youth

       The Dream of a Ridiculous Man

       The Brothers Karamazov

      Table of Contents

       Poor Folk Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky

       April 8th

       April 9th

       April 12th

       April 25th

       May 20th

       June 1st

       June 11th

       June 12th

       June 20th

       June 21st

       June 22nd

       June 25th

       June 26th

       June 27th

       June 28th

       July 1st

       July 7th

       July 8th

       July 27th

       July 28th

       July 29th

       August 1st

       August 2nd

       August 3rd

       August 4th

       August 5th

       August 11th

       August 13th

       August 14th

       August 19th

       August 21th

       September 3rd

       September 5th

       September 9th

       September 10th

       September 11th

       September 15th

       September 18th

       September 19th

       September 23rd

       September 27th

       September 28th

       September 29th

       September 30th

      Poor Folk

      Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky

      (Translator: CJ Hogarth)

       Published: 1846 Categorie(s): Fiction

      April 8th

      MY DEAREST BARBARA ALEXIEVNA,—How happy I was last night—how immeasurably, how impossibly happy! That was because for once in your life you had relented so far as to obey my wishes. At about eight o'clock I awoke from sleep (you know, my beloved one, that I always like to sleep for a short hour after my work is done)—I awoke, I say, and, lighting a candle, prepared my paper to write, and trimmed my pen. Then suddenly, for some reason or another, I raised my eyes—and felt my very heart leap within me! For you had understood what I wanted, you had understood what my heart was craving for. Yes, I perceived that a corner of the curtain in your window had been looped up and fastened to the cornice as I had suggested should be done;