Myshkin loves her with a pity so total it becomes a kind of holy love—he wants to save her soul, to erase her shame. Rogozhin loves her with an obsession that demands possession and, failing that, destruction.
Dostoevsky’s terrifying conclusion is that the world is not ready for absolute goodness. It is a place of competing egos, where everyone is a potential Rogozhin, driven by pride and lust, and everyone is a potential Nastasya, too broken to accept forgiveness. Myshkin’s tragedy is that his love was not a solution; it was a catalyst. By refusing to participate in the world’s lies, he inadvertently exposed its raw, seething contradictions, leading directly to the explosion he tried to prevent. The Idiot is not a comforting book. It offers no easy salvation. It is a furious, anguished rebuttal to the naive optimism of the Enlightenment, which believed that reason and natural goodness could perfect humanity. Dostoevsky shows us that a purely good man in a fallen world is not a savior. He is an idiot. He is a saint whose halo becomes his noose. fiodor dostoievski el idiota
The answer, Dostoevsky concludes, is tragedy. The world does not merely reject the good; it systematically crushes it, and in a final, devastating irony, the good man’s very compassion becomes the engine of his destruction. Dostoevsky explicitly framed Myshkin as an attempt to depict a “positively good and beautiful man.” In a literary landscape dominated by cynical anti-heroes and superfluous men, Myshkin is a shock of fresh air. He returns to Russia from a Swiss sanitarium, where he was treated for epilepsy, with no social ambition, no hidden malice, and no desire for power. His defining trait is radical compassion . He sees the humiliation of the destitute General Ivolgin, the desperate nihilism of the suicidal Hippolite, and the seething pride of the merchant Rogozhin not as problems to be solved, but as wounds to be soothed. Myshkin loves her with a pity so total