Skip to main content

Love Quote by Fyodor Dostoevsky

"Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man"

About this Quote

Beauty, for Dostoevsky, is never décor. It’s an ambush. The line turns the usual flattering idea of beauty into a moral stress test: what enchants you can also undo you, and the place where that struggle plays out isn’t society or art criticism but the interior life. Calling beauty “mysterious” keeps it just out of rational custody; calling it “terrible” refuses the comforting notion that the beautiful is automatically the good. That tension is the engine of his fiction, where characters don’t simply choose between virtue and vice, but fall in love with their own ruin.

The theological framing is doing sly psychological work. “God and devil” reads like metaphysics, yet the “battlefield” is the “heart of man,” a phrase that pulls the cosmic down into intimate craving, shame, and self-justification. Beauty becomes the site where desire masquerades as salvation, where aesthetic rapture can be mistaken for moral clarity. That’s the subtext: people don’t only sin for pleasure; they sin for something that feels transcendent.

Context matters. Dostoevsky writes after prison and exile, with a heightened suspicion of neat Enlightenment answers and a fascination with the contradictions of freedom. In his novels, beauty shows up as saintliness and as seduction, as icons and as faces you can’t stop thinking about. The intent isn’t to condemn beauty but to warn that it intensifies whatever is already in you. It’s a force multiplier for the soul, which is precisely why it terrifies him.

Quote Details

TopicDeep
Source
Verified source: The Brothers Karamazov (Fyodor Dostoevsky, 1879)
Text match: 97.38%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Did you know that secret? The awful thing is that beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and the devil are fighting there and the battlefield is the heart of man. (Book III, Chapter 4 (“The Confession of a Passionate Heart, In Anecdote”)). Primary source is Dostoevsky’s novel The Brothers Karamazov (Russian: Brat’ya Karamazovy). The line appears in the Dmitri (Mitya) Karamazov confession passage; in the Project Gutenberg English text (Constance Garnett translation) it occurs immediately before the heading “Chapter IV. The Confession Of A Passionate Heart, In Anecdote.” While many modern attributions cite the standalone novel year (1880/1881), the work was first published in serialized installments in Russkiy Vestnik from January 1879 to November 1880, so the quote’s first publication would be in that serial run (1879–1880), not as a speech/interview. The Gutenberg HTML does not give stable print-page numbers; the closest reliable locator in a primary text is the book/chapter.
Other candidates (1)
The Modern Divine Comedy Book 6: Purgatorio 2 Departure (Andrew J. Farrara, 2022) compilation95.0%
Andrew J. Farrara. FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY : “ Hmm , Young Man , in my 1862 The House of the Dead work I did write that ......
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Dostoevsky, Fyodor. (2026, February 8). Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/beauty-is-mysterious-as-well-as-terrible-god-and-31281/

Chicago Style
Dostoevsky, Fyodor. "Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/beauty-is-mysterious-as-well-as-terrible-god-and-31281/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and devil are fighting there, and the battlefield is the heart of man." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/beauty-is-mysterious-as-well-as-terrible-god-and-31281/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Fyodor Add to List
Beauty: Mystery and Terror in Dostoevsky's Quote
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Dostoevsky (November 11, 1821 - February 9, 1881) was a Novelist from Russia.

25 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Robert Mapplethorpe, Photographer
Robert Mapplethorpe
Socrates, Philosopher
Socrates