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Behind the Door — Crime and Punishment

Crime and Punishment - Behind the Door

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Crime and Punishment

Behind the Door

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated November 28, 2025

Summary

Behind the Door

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

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Zossimov examines Raskolnikov in the sickroom while Razumihin fusses over fresh linen and a house-warming party that night. The doctor is slow, fashionable, and tedious; Raskolnikov snaps that he is perfectly well and turns to the wall. Razumihin names the guests: his uncle, the investigator Porfiry Petrovitch, students, and Zametov from the police office. Zossimov wonders what a convalescent murder suspect could want with a clerk who takes bribes, but Razumihin defends Zametov as a nice boy worth drawing in, not repelling.

Nastasya blurts that Lizaveta was murdered too. Raskolnikov whispers her name and counts petals on a dirty wall flower while his limbs feel cut off. Razumihin launches into the painter Nikolay, accused after Dushkin the dram-shop keeper brought in gold ear-rings Nikolay pawned for a rouble. The peasant's tale, Nikolay's near-hanging, and his confession that he found the box in the flat while painting sound absurd to Zossimov, but Razumihin is on fire. Officials worship their own lying, he says, yet lying is a delightful thing because it leads to truth. What offends him is petrified routine when psychology could find the real man.

Razumihin reconstructs the crime: Koch and Pestryakov at the locked door, the real murderer upstairs, ear-rings dropped behind the door when Nikolay and Dmitri ran out. Raskolnikov cries, Behind the door? Lying behind the door? and sits up in blank terror before sinking back. Zossimov thinks it a dream; Razumihin presses on about warm bodies and childish scuffling incompatible with axe murder. The chapter ends as a stranger enters, unknown to everyone present.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Surviving Overheard Investigations

Notice when people discuss your situation within earshot while you perform normalcy. Dostoevsky puts Razumihin's full reconstruction, Porfiry's invitation, and behind the door in the sickroom. That skill matters in hospitals, workplaces, and any room where help and exposure share the same air.

Coming Up in Chapter 12

The stranger is Luzhin, Raskolnikov's mother's fiancé, come to the sickroom with plans and paperwork while Raskolnikov can barely play the convalescent.

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Original text
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Chapter 11

Behind the Door

Zossimov was a tall, fat man with a puffy, colourless, clean-shaven face and straight flaxen hair. He wore spectacles, and a big gold ring on his fat finger. He was twenty-seven. He had on a light grey fashionable loose coat, light summer trousers, and everything about him loose, fashionable and spick and span; his linen was irreproachable, his watch-chain was massive. In manner he was slow and, as it were, nonchalant, and at the same time studiously free and easy; he made efforts to conceal his self-importance, but it was apparent at every instant. All his acquaintances found him tedious,…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"I am well, I am perfectly well!"

— Raskolnikov

Context: To Zossimov after linen change, insisting he is fit

Performance of health while the room fills with murder talk. His irritable denial sets up how fast the mask will crack.

In Today's Words:

He snaps that he is fine while friends discuss the case at his bedside. That is the classic cover: insist you are recovered so no one looks too closely. Anyone who has said I am okay at a family dinner while a secret burns knows the strain. The louder the denial, the closer the exposure.

"Lizaveta was murdered, too"

— Nastasya

Context: Interrupting talk of the pawnbroker murder

Domestic bluntness names the second victim Raskolnikov cannot face. She mended his shirt; guilt turns a servant into a witness.

In Today's Words:

The housekeeper drops the sister's name like laundry gossip. For Raskolnikov it is a second blade. People who knew your victim in daily life are the ones you cannot argue away. When someone casual names what you did, counting wall flowers is all you have left.

"Evidence, indeed! Evidence that was no evidence"

— Razumihin

Context: Mocking how Koch and Pestryakov were first blamed

Names the gap between facts and interpretation. The line previews his fight for Nikolay and the real killer theory.

In Today's Words:

His friend mocks investigators who call weak links proof. That is how cases close on the wrong person while someone guilty listens from the couch. When you are that listener, every confident label of evidence feels like a sentence already written. The room laughs; you count wall flowers.

"Behind the door? Lying behind the door? Behind the door?"

— Raskolnikov

Context: When Razumihin says the real murderer dropped the ear-rings behind the door

One detail from an innocent reconstruction matches the crime scene exactly. Terror replaces philosophy.

In Today's Words:

His friend casually describes where the earrings fell, and Raskolnikov repeats the phrase like a siren. You can survive general suspicion until someone maps your exact steps without knowing they are talking about you. That is the panic of hearing your secret told as someone else's theory. One noun can end the performance.

Thematic Threads

Investigation

In This Chapter

Nikolay, Dushkin, ear-rings, and Porfiry named at the party

Development

Moves from police office gossip to sickroom reconstruction

Misdirection

In This Chapter

Official focus on Nikolay versus Razumihin's real-killer theory

Development

Introduced here as competing narratives around the same evidence

Eavesdropping

In This Chapter

Raskolnikov silent while Razumihin retells the case

Development

Deepened from delirium hints to conscious overhearing

Performance

In This Chapter

I am perfectly well; dream excuse after behind the door

Development

Illness as cover cracking under one phrase

Guilt

In This Chapter

Lizaveta's name, flower counting, behind-the-door panic

Development

Escalated from internal dread to physical betrayal

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    Why does Razumihin launch into the Nikolay painter story while Raskolnikov lies on the sofa pretending to be well?

    ▶One way to read it

    Razumihin is excited by the case and wants to prove the police are fools, while Rodya needs to hear how close the investigation comes to the truth. The sickroom becomes an accidental briefing on the ear-rings, the confession, and the theory that the real killer dropped evidence behind the door.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    What happens to Raskolnikov when Nastasya says Lizaveta was murdered, and again when Razumihin repeats behind the door?

    ▶One way to read it

    He whispers Lizaveta's name and fixates on a wall flower as his limbs go dead. The second phrase triggers a visible terror because it matches exactly where he stood with the axe, which his friends then dismiss as a dream.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Razumihin says lying is delightful because it leads to truth, yet he hates official routine. What does that paradox say about investigation in this chapter?

    ▶One way to read it

    He trusts psychological sense over petrified procedure, but also romanticizes deception as a path to clarity. The police cling to circumstantial jewels while Razumihin reconstructs timing, warm bodies, and childish scuffling that do not fit axe murder.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    Razumihin reconstructs the murderer hiding upstairs while Nikolay and Dmitri fought on the stairs. How does that theory threaten Raskolnikov?

    ▶One way to read it

    It is almost correct: the killer was in the flat, escaped while painters ran out, and dropped the box near the door. Rodya survives only because friends treat the outburst as illness and because officials prefer Nikolay's hanging confession to inconvenient psychology.

    analysis • deep
  5. 5

    Porfiry and Zametov are invited to Razumihin's party. What does gathering suspect, doctor, and investigator around the convalescent foreshadow?

    ▶One way to read it

    The net is forming socially before it closes legally. Rodya will soon face people who have talked about him, read his pledges, and heard delirium stories in the same rooms where he once fainted at the word murder.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

Track the Bedside Reconstruction

List each fact Razumihin states about the murder case (suspects, timing, ear-rings, door, stairs). Mark which facts are public, which are circumstantial, and which match only what a guilty insider would know. Then write one sentence you could say that would reveal you were listening too carefully.

Consider:

  • •Separate friend enthusiasm from forensic accuracy
  • •Notice which detail triggers a physical reaction before words
  • •Ask who else will hear this story at the party tonight

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 12: Luzhin Visits

The stranger is Luzhin, Raskolnikov's mother's fiancé, come to the sickroom with plans and paperwork while Raskolnikov can barely play the convalescent.

Continue to Chapter 12
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Razumihin Returns
Contents
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Luzhin Visits
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read Crime and Punishment: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

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