Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821–1881) was born to a despot possibly killed by his own serfs. Childhood epilepsy informs characters in both The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov. In 1849, as a liberal intellectual, Dostoyevsky was imprisoned in Siberia and forced into the army. A different writer emerged: devoted to Russian culture, psychologically rigorous, and politically conservative, he conceived tortured characters and existential themes. He died from a seizure.

The Gambler, Part 1

A Novella in Three Parts

by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Chapter 1

At last I have come back from my fortnight’s absence. Our friends have already been two days in Roulettenburg. I imagined that they were expecting me with the greatest eagerness; I was mistaken, however. The General had an extremely independent air, he talked to me condescendingly and sent me away to his sister. I even fancied that the General was a little ashamed to look at me. Marya Filippovna was tremendously busy and scarcely spoke to me; she took the money, however, counted it, and listened to my whole report. They were expecting Mezentsov, the little Frenchman, and some Englishman; as usual, as soon as there was money there was a dinner-party; in the Moscow style. Polina Alexandrovna, seeing me, asked why I had been away so long, and without waiting for an answer went off somewhere. Of course, she did that on purpose. We must have an explanation, though. Things have accumulated.

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