To the ordinary man —the “plain man” or the “man of action” (269) —vice is just another stone wall before which he invariably yields. As the Underground Man had described, to such a man of action “a stone wall is not a challenge as it is, for instance, to us thinking men... and it is not an excuse for turning aside.... No, [the ordinary man] capitulates in all sincerity” (269). In other words, such a man yields to his debauched desire and lets himself be calmed by its effectual wall.
The Underground Man, a thinking man, sees debauchery here as “inane... revolting... coarse... shameless;” in another translation, “hideous... gross... absurd” (339). In his mind he seems to turn away, repulsed —and yet he, too, is a living part of it. The spider of vice even makes him feel “creepy” (339), as if he were the spider himself. Indeed, he has spent two hours “capitulating” with this as yet nameless prostitute, and still he continues to ‘lie next to her and look into her eyes. But he is not calmed by her in any way. The ordinary man is not revolted and pretends that there is a kind of consummated love in the prostitute’s bedroom; he becomes sincerely soothed by this lie. But the Underground Man is cursed by a continually sensitive conscience; he is painfully aware of this reality of absent love; and if he has paused at this wall, it has not been for “cheap happiness,” but rather “exalted suffering” (376).
from March to December, Dostoevsky Final (Russian 141, 11/30/90, Prof. Rubchak)
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