
Originally Posted by
JCamilo
Look, the romantic traits of many of the characters of Dostoievisky are not a reflex of Dostoievisky ideas and aesthetical, Mishikin life is really tragic, but Dostoievisky is using them to express his own experience and disapointment with the ideals. He is a reflex of a world were the romantic ideals are already under criticism. He is after the romantics, not one of them, the contrast (the so called sadness) is what is relevant.
And while it is nice calling his writing beauty, he is not a great aestheticist like Tolstoy, I find the use of this word a bit outplaced.