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Notes from Underground - The Moment of Truth Arrives

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Notes from Underground

The Moment of Truth Arrives

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The Moment of Truth Arrives

Notes from Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky

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The chapter opens on the exact scene he had imagined in a fit of depression — and it is worse. He stands before Liza crushed, crestfallen, revoltingly confused, trying to wrap himself in the skirts of his ragged dressing-gown. After standing over them for a couple of minutes, Apollon withdraws. She is overwhelmed with confusion too — more than he expected — and it makes it worse, because she ought to have tried not to notice. Instead she gazes at him open-eyed, naïvely expectant. That naïveté drives him to fury. He dimly feels he should make her pay dearly for all this. He stammers an opener: "You have found me in a strange position, Liza. No, no, don't imagine anything — I am not ashamed of my poverty. On the contrary, I look with pride on my poverty. I am poor but honourable...." Then: "Would you like tea?" He leaps up, runs to Apollon, and flings down the seven roubles — the same money that had been in his clenched fist through the entire confrontation. He whispers in feverish haste: here are your wages, but you must come to my rescue; bring tea and rusks from the restaurant; you don't know what this woman is — this is everything. He stands before Apollon with arms crossed à la Napoléon while Apollon sits without speaking, without putting down his needle, without the slightest attention, then deliberately threads the needle, deliberately counts the money, asks over his shoulder "Shall I get a whole portion?" and deliberately walks out. On the way back to Liza: shouldn't he just run away in his dressing-gown, no matter where, and let happen what would? He sits back down. Silence. Then he suddenly strikes the table so the ink spurts from the inkstand: "I will kill him! kill him!" — fully understanding, in the same moment, how stupid it is to be in such a frenzy. And then he bursts into tears. A hysterical attack. He is ashamed in the midst of sobs; he cannot restrain them. He mutters for water in a faint voice, inwardly conscious that he could have got on perfectly well without water and without muttering — he is, what is called, putting it on, to save appearances, though the attack itself is genuine. Apollon brings the tea. The commonplace, prosaic tea strikes him as horribly undignified and paltry after all that has happened. He blushes crimson. He asks Liza if she despises him. She doesn't know what to answer. He tells her angrily to drink her tea. A horrible spite surges up — he believes he could have killed her. "She is the cause of it all." He purposely refrains from speaking for five more minutes to embarrass her further, fully conscious of the disgusting meanness of his spiteful stupidity and yet unable to restrain himself. She finally speaks, to break the silence: "I want to... get away... from there altogether." This is the worst thing she could have said, at the worst moment, to the worst man. His heart positively aches with pity for her tactless straightforwardness — and then something hideous stifles all compassion at once. Another five minutes pass. She says timidly, barely audibly: "Perhaps I am in your way." As soon as he sees the first impulse of wounded dignity, he trembles with spite and bursts out. Everything at once, without logical connection, gasping for breath. She came because of his sentimental talk. She is soft as butter, longing for fine sentiments again. Well then: he was laughing at her then. He is laughing at her now. He had been insulted at the dinner, came to thrash one of them — an officer — didn't find him, needed to avenge the insult on someone. She turned up. He vented his spleen on her. "I had been humiliated, so I wanted to humiliate; I had been treated like a rag, so I wanted to show my power. That's what it was." He keeps going. Save her? Perhaps he is worse than she is. Power was what he wanted. Sport was what he wanted. He wanted to wring out her tears, her humiliation, her hysteria — that was what he wanted. He gives you my words, only likes playing with words, only dreaming, but what he really wants is for everyone to go to hell. He wants peace. The world may go to pot so long as he always gets his tea. He is a blackguard, a scoundrel, an egoist, a sluggard. He has been shuddering for three days at the thought of her coming. And what worried him most: that he had posed as such a hero to her, and now she would see him in a wretched torn dressing-gown. He is ashamed of his poverty more than anything, more afraid of it than of being found out as a thief — "because I am as vain as though I had been skinned and the very air blowing on me hurt." She must know that he will never forgive her for finding him like this, for the tears he shed before her like some silly woman put to shame, and for what he is confessing now. She must answer for it all — because he is the nastiest, stupidest, absurdest and most envious of all the worms on earth. And then a strange thing happens. Liza understood far more than he imagined. "She understood from all this what a woman understands first of all, if she feels genuine love, that is, that I was myself unhappy." The frightened and wounded expression was followed by sorrowful perplexity. When he called himself a scoundrel and his tears flowed (the tirade was accompanied throughout by tears), her whole face worked convulsively. When he finished she took no notice of his "why don't you go away?" — she realised only that it must have been very bitter for him to say all this. She leapt up from her chair with an irresistible impulse, held out her hands, yearning towards him — still timid, not daring to stir. At that point there was a revulsion in his heart too. She rushed to him, threw her arms around him, and burst into tears. He sobbed as he never had before. "They won't let me... I can't be good!" He managed to articulate this, then went to the sofa and fell on it face downwards, sobbing for a quarter of an hour in genuine hysterics. She put her arms around him and stayed motionless. But — and here he writes "the loathsome truth" — lying face downward on the sofa with his face in the leather pillow, he begins by degrees to be aware of an involuntary, irresistible feeling: it would be awkward now to raise his head and look Liza straight in the face. He is ashamed. And the thought comes into his overwrought brain that their parts are now completely changed — she is now the heroine, while he is the crushed and humiliated creature as she had been before him four days ago. "My God! Surely I was not envious of her then." He cannot decide, to this day. He cannot get on without domineering and tyrannising over someone. There is no explaining it by reasoning. He raises his head — he had to, sooner or later. And it is precisely because he is ashamed to look at her that another feeling is suddenly kindled and flares up: mastery and possession. His eyes gleam with passion. He grips her hands tightly. "How I hated her and how I was drawn to her at that minute! The one feeling intensified the other. It was almost like an act of vengeance."

Coming Up in Chapter 21

In the aftermath of this raw emotional breakthrough, the Underground Man faces a choice that will define both their futures. Will he embrace this moment of genuine connection, or will his need for control destroy the one person who truly sees him?

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Original text
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P

ART II — À Propos of the Wet Snow
Chapter IX

“Into my house come bold and free,
Its rightful mistress there to be.”

I stood before her crushed, crestfallen, revoltingly confused, and I believe I smiled as I did my utmost to wrap myself in the skirts of my ragged wadded dressing-gown—exactly as I had imagined the scene not long before in a fit of depression. After standing over us for a couple of minutes Apollon went away, but that did not make me more at ease. What made it worse was that she, too, was overwhelmed with confusion, more so, in fact, than I should have expected. At the sight of me, of course.

“Sit down,” I said mechanically, moving a chair up to the table, and I sat down on the sofa. She obediently sat down at once and gazed at me open-eyed, evidently expecting something from me at once. This naïveté of expectation drove me to fury, but I restrained myself.

She ought to have tried not to notice, as though everything had been as usual, while instead of that, she ... and I dimly felt that I should make her pay dearly for all this.

1 / 14

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Detecting Defensive Cruelty

This chapter teaches how to recognize when someone's meanness is actually a shield protecting their wounded pride.

Practice This Today

This week, notice when someone lashes out after being embarrassed or criticized—look for the shame beneath their anger.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"I dimly felt that I should make her pay dearly for all this."

— Narrator

Context: Seeing Liza embarrassed and expectant in his room, after she witnessed the Apollon scene

The logic is immediate and unconscious: her presence at his humiliation creates a debt she must pay. He has not decided to punish her — he has felt it, dimly, before any decision. The cruelty that follows is less a choice than an instinct.

In Today's Words:

She'd seen him at his worst. Someone was going to pay for that.

"I had been humiliated, so I wanted to humiliate; I had been treated like a rag, so I wanted to show my power. That's what it was, and you imagined I had come there on purpose to save you."

— Narrator

Context: The centre of the tirade — the true account of why he went to the brothel

This is the most honest thing he has said in the entire book. There is no self-aggrandisement here, no philosophising, no literary flourishes. He states the mechanism plainly: humiliation in, humiliation out. He needed a target and she was available. The cruelty of telling her this to her face is also, paradoxically, the most respect he has shown her — he is treating her as someone capable of hearing the truth.

In Today's Words:

I was humiliated at dinner. You were convenient. That's the whole story.

"I am as vain as though I had been skinned and the very air blowing on me hurt."

— Narrator

Context: Confessing to Liza why her witnessing his poverty is the worst thing that could have happened

The skinned-alive image is exact. Vanity at this intensity is not arrogance — it is a complete absence of protective layer, where every slight penetrates to the nerve. He is not proud; he is raw. The poverty is unbearable because he has nothing else.

In Today's Words:

My vanity isn't strength — it's that I have no skin. Everything gets through.

"She understood from all this what a woman understands first of all, if she feels genuine love, that is, that I was myself unhappy."

— Narrator

Context: Explaining what Liza grasped from the tirade that he had not intended to communicate

Dostoevsky's direct statement of what love perceives. She heard the cruelty and understood the wound underneath it. He had aimed at her and hit himself. This is the reversal that changes everything — and that he cannot accept, because being understood by her puts her above him.

In Today's Words:

She heard everything he threw at her and understood only one thing: he was in pain.

"They won't let me ... I can't be good!"

— Narrator

Context: The words he articulates before collapsing face-down on the sofa in hysterics

The most naked line in the book. Who are "they"? His nature, his habits, his underground, his intelligence — everything that intervenes between the impulse and the act. He knows what good would look like. Something prevents it every time. The cry is genuine and he knows it is genuine, which makes it no less humiliating.

In Today's Words:

I want to be different. I can't. I don't know why.

"My God! surely I was not envious of her then."

— Narrator

Context: Face-down on the sofa, realising that the roles have reversed — she is now the one offering comfort

He cannot finish the thought because he cannot bear where it goes. If he is envious of her compassion and her dignity in this moment, then she has something he does not. That would make her his superior. The half-question is the closest he comes to acknowledging it.

In Today's Words:

Was I actually jealous of her? Of her ability to just... reach out?

Thematic Threads

Shame

In This Chapter

The Underground Man's mortification at being seen in poverty drives him to devastating cruelty toward Liza

Development

Evolved from earlier hints of self-loathing into full exposure of how shame corrupts human connection

In Your Life:

You might recognize this when embarrassment makes you lash out at whoever witnessed your moment of weakness

Power

In This Chapter

Feeling powerless in his shabby apartment, he seeks to dominate Liza through emotional cruelty and confession

Development

Continues the pattern of seeking control over others when feeling internally powerless

In Your Life:

You might see this when feeling small at work makes you come home and pick fights with your family

Compassion

In This Chapter

Liza sees through his cruelty to his pain and responds with embrace rather than retaliation

Development

Introduced here as the unexpected force that can break through defensive cruelty

In Your Life:

You might experience this when someone's kindness catches you off guard in your worst moment

Self-sabotage

In This Chapter

Even as Liza offers genuine connection, he feels the urge to possess and destroy what he most needs

Development

Culmination of his pattern of destroying anything good that enters his life

In Your Life:

You might recognize this when you find yourself picking fights with people who genuinely care about you

Vulnerability

In This Chapter

His breakdown when faced with unconditional acceptance reveals the terrified person beneath his cruelty

Development

First moment where his defenses completely collapse and his true self emerges

In Your Life:

You might feel this when someone loves you despite seeing you at your absolute worst

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

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    Why does the Underground Man attack Liza when she arrives at his apartment, and what does he reveal about his true motives?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    How does shame drive the Underground Man's cruelty, and what does he hope to accomplish by hurting Liza?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see this pattern of 'hurt people hurting people' in workplaces, families, or social media today?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    What makes Liza's response so powerful, and how might you apply her approach when someone lashes out at you?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does this chapter reveal about the relationship between vulnerability and violence in human nature?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Track Your Shame-to-Cruelty Pipeline

Think of a recent time when you felt embarrassed, exposed, or powerless. Map out what happened next: Did you snap at someone? Become sarcastic? Withdraw and punish with silence? Trace the path from your shame to your reaction, then identify the moment where you could have paused instead.

Consider:

  • •Notice how quickly shame transforms into the need to regain control
  • •Identify your personal 'tells' - the physical sensations or thoughts that signal you're about to lash out
  • •Consider how your reaction affected the other person and whether it actually made you feel better

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when someone's cruelty toward you revealed their own pain. How did recognizing their wound change your response? What would it look like to be more like Liza - seeing the hurt beneath the attack?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 21: The Final Cruelty and Underground Retreat

In the aftermath of this raw emotional breakthrough, the Underground Man faces a choice that will define both their futures. Will he embrace this moment of genuine connection, or will his need for control destroy the one person who truly sees him?

Continue to Chapter 21
Previous
The Masks We Wear When Cornered
Contents
Next
The Final Cruelty and Underground Retreat

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