Chapter 10
When Panic Sets In
On assembling at the residence indicated, the tchinovniks had occasion to remark that, owing to all these cares and excitements, every one of their number had grown thinner. Yes, the appointment of a new Governor-General, coupled with the rumours described and the reception of the two serious documents above-mentioned, had left manifest traces upon the features of every one present. More than one frockcoat had come to look too large for its wearer, and more than one frame had fallen away, including the frames of the President of the Council, the Director of the Medical Department, and the Public Prosecutor.…
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Now let's explore the literary elements.
Key Quotes & Analysis
"total absence of what is vulgarly known as"
Context: Describing the officials' panicked meeting
Gogol names the missing ingredient before the wildest theories arrive.
In Today's Words:
The room has fear, rank, and snacks but no sober judgment. When a group loses common sense together, the loudest story wins because nobody wants to look cautious. Watch who controls the room, who needs the deal, and whether politeness is being used to keep you from asking the obvious next question.
"Captain Kopeikin."
Context: He announces his theory of Chichikov's identity
Experience becomes a long tale that almost fits until limbs do not match.
In Today's Words:
He delivers a saga from 1812 because a familiar outlaw story feels more manageable than an unknown clerk. People reach for the best anecdote in memory when they cannot tolerate not knowing. Watch who controls the room, who needs the deal, and whether politeness is being used to keep you from asking the obvious next
"I am forbidden to admit you."
Context: Chichikov is turned away at the Governor's door
Social death arrives as a polite sentence from a servant.
In Today's Words:
The doorman cites orders without malice, which makes the exile feel official. When institutions shut you out quietly, the message is louder than an argument. Watch who controls the room, who needs the deal, and whether politeness is being used to keep you from asking the obvious next question.
"You say that I am believed to be a forger?"
Context: He reacts to Nozdrev's report at the inn
He learns the town's verdict from the least reliable messenger.
In Today's Words:
He hears the worst label from a man who lies for sport, yet the words still land because doors already proved them. When reputation collapses, even clowns bring news you cannot ignore. Watch who controls the room, who needs the deal, and whether politeness is being used to keep you from asking the obvious next
Thematic Threads
Identity
In This Chapter
Chichikov's identity becomes whatever the town's fears project onto him—spy, criminal, Napoleon
Development
Evolved from his carefully crafted gentleman persona to complete loss of control over how others see him
In Your Life:
You might find your reputation at work or in your community suddenly shifts based on rumors rather than your actual actions.
Class
In This Chapter
Officials' panic reveals their insecurity about their own positions and authority when challenged by mystery
Development
Continued exploration of how social position depends on others' recognition and approval
In Your Life:
You might notice how quickly people in authority positions become defensive when they feel their status is questioned.
Social Expectations
In This Chapter
The town expected Chichikov to be who he appeared to be; when that breaks down, they can't process the contradiction
Development
Shows the fragility of social roles when underlying assumptions are challenged
In Your Life:
You might experience this when someone you trusted turns out to be different than you thought, and everyone struggles to readjust their expectations.
Human Relationships
In This Chapter
Former social connections instantly evaporate as doors literally close in Chichikov's face
Development
Reveals how quickly social relationships can disappear when based on superficial foundations
In Your Life:
You might see how some friendships or professional relationships only exist as long as your reputation remains intact.
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
Why does the Postmaster's Kopeikin story almost convince the room?
analysis • surfaceOne way to read it
It is detailed, patriotic, and turns confusion into a known outlaw narrative.
- 2
What breaks the Kopeikin theory?
analysis • mediumOne way to read it
Chichikov has all his limbs; the anecdote does not match the man in front of them.
- 3
Why do officials still summon Nozdrev?
application • mediumOne way to read it
He first named dead souls and claims intimacy, so panic makes them clutch any witness.
- 4
How does Chichikov learn he is socially ruined?
application • deepOne way to read it
Doors close, hosts mumble, and Nozdrev reports labels others already act upon.
- 5
When have you seen fear pick a villain before facts arrived?
reflection • deepOne way to read it
Recall a meeting or online storm where the theory raced ahead of proof.
Critical Thinking Exercise
Track the Rumor Mill
Think of a time when rumors or theories spread through your workplace, family, or community. Map out how the story changed as it passed from person to person. What details got added? What facts got lost? Who believed it and who questioned it? Compare this to how the officials' theories about Chichikov evolved.
Consider:
- •Notice who added the most dramatic details and why they might have done so
- •Identify the moment when people stopped checking facts and started believing the story
- •Consider how fear or stress influenced what people were willing to believe
Journaling Prompt
Write about a time when you were either the target of rumors or participated in spreading them. What would you do differently now that you understand this pattern?
Coming Up Next...
Chapter 11: The Origin of a Scheme
Chichikov orders a dawn departure, packs in the dark, and trusts Selifan to have the britchka ready by six. Instead the coachman oversleeps, the horses stand unharnessed, and escape grows harder than the fraud that made leaving necessary.





