Doodles doodles doodles
Yes the rat is Smerdyakov and please pardon my awful handwritten Russian
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Dimitri Fyodorovich Karamazov, you are truly one of literature's greatest failboys.
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Anyone who imagines dimitri karamazov as skinny or just even normal size is WRONG! That man is a unit! You hear me? He is thick! He is wide and he is tall and he has muscle!! He can't fit in the door he laughs too loud!! He can carry grushenka with one hand!! Grushenka alsoo isn't skinny!! She is full and round!! And her belly is soft and her thighs are alsoo big!!
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elder zosima in book two after meeting all the karamazovs
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Dimitri: impulsive, passionate and proud, loves to party and fuck around, always says the wrong thing at the wrong time
Ivan: brilliant but tortured, romantic at heart, has a personal vendetta with God, will definitely go nuts one day
Alyosha: kind and innocent, the eternal virgin, would rather hang out with kids, stanned his fav teacher
Smerdiakov: intelligent but weak and cowardly, always underestimated, most likely to get away with murder
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you know, what struck me most about mitya's personality was how child-like he was despite being the oldest of the brothers. and, after finishing the book, i can't stop thinking about how that fits perfectly with the narrative and his role in the story. there's this guilelessness to mitya, this innocence that very easily turns into naivety. we watch how honest and open he is throughout the novel about the way he feels, no matter if he's extremely emotional and distressed or not, no matter if his fate is on the line or not; he never hid his emotions even if doing so would have been in his best interest. he's impulsive and feels things so intensely, almost lacking in the ability to control and regulate himself, just like a child does. his role in the story and his doom functioning as a sacrifice for the truth paired to ilyusha's death as a sacrifice for innocence just fit so perfectly with the exploration of innocence and guilt as a theme, leading to the analysis on what humans value more, truth or justice. and i just think this discussion hits so much harder with mitya being the representation of truth not only plot-wise but also being the personification of it. i really really enjoyed his characterisation.
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I think Dimitri getting clocked as a 'good person' by a monk right away is the funniest thing in the hindsight
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