TOLSTOY: THE SUPREME
GENIUS
D. V. S. R. M U R T Y
Count Leo Tolstoy Nikolayevich is a literary genius. He is commended and “habitually read” all over the world. The War and Peace is his magnum opus, and Anna Karenina, his masterpiece. His world-wide popularity and greatness mainly rests on the two novels. The War and Peace is “a picture of life” which extends over time and space. Anna Karenina is “a work of art. We are to take it as a piece of life.....The author saw it as happening so. What his novel in this way loses in art it gains in reality.” Tolstoy is a realist, and his two novels are the highest watermark in the tradition of the modern realistic novel. He is a great artist too, for he can change his personal experiences into emotions of our own as everything is seen through the lives of his living characters. War and Peace and Anna Karenina place him among the top novelists and artists.
His life
Count
Leo Tolstoy was born on Sept. 9, 1828. at Yasnaya Polyana. His father was
Count Nicholas Ilyich, and his mother, Princess Marie
Volkonsky. Leo was their last but one child. He lost
his mother when he was four years old, and his father
at the age of ten. He was brought up by his elderly female relatives. His early
education was under French tutors, and so he was more French in his outlook
than Russian. He spent his boyhood in the countryside, and it left vivid
impressions on his mind: His calm, happy life of the country was, perhaps,
responsible for his appreciation of Rousseau, when he was a student of
His literary work
Tolstoy is “the supreme genius among the novelists.” His literary career started when he was a junker. His first literary attempt, The Story of Yesterday (1851) is reflective as it sums up his feelings and reactions during a day. His next work, Childhood (1852) is a story, and it was immediately published in a literary review.
Rousseau influenced his literary work later. So Tolstoy glorified natural man in The Cossacks (1854). Two Hussars (1856), Lucrene (1857), Three Deaths (1859) and Kholstomer (1861) are Rousseauan in their themes. A reflecting character represents Tolstoy in them, and they contain satire on the life of the upper classes.
At this time he developed a philosophy of his own based on Rousseau’s teachings, and therefore believed that “one should live so as to have the best for oneself and one’s family.” It is to live happily according to the laws of natural life seeking guidance from nature. Man shall not try to be wiser than nature, and so his happiness lies in remaining nature-wise. The War and Peace and Anna Karenina highlight his philosophy of nature-wise mankind.
The War and Peace is “a great and brilliant novel, a
well-known novel, and at the same time a large and crowded and unmangeable novel.” Its theme is war, but it is a background
against which “a succession of phases in the lives of certain generations” are depicted. It is “a novel of ample scope, covering wide
spaces and many years, long and populous and eventful.” The novel extends over
time and space, and it is said that it is the story of a nation like the Aeneid and a story of certain men like the Iliad.
The War and Peace is the story of
The
Russian troops retreated to the lower ground about
The War and Peace is “an idyll of the Russian landed gentry.” It is the important story in the novel as it “emphasises the waxing and waning of a generation.” There is march of life over time and space. The novel is “essentially the story of five families.” The three brilliant families Rostovs, Bolkonskies and Besukovs play an important role. Numerous other characters from emperors to peasants too crowd the pages.
Women characters dominate in War and Peace. Natasha is at the centre, for she is “the embodiment of its philosophy, the quintessence of spontaneous, nature-wise makind.” She is the “delightful girl of her time and of all time,” and is involved in love affairs. She is so beautiful that everyone loves her, and she too loves everyone dearly. She loves Prince Andre first, but he dies being wounded in the battlefield. After the war she marries Peter, and lives for herself and for her family. . Nicholas, Sonya, Helen, Princess Mary, Peter and Prince Andre are well-drawn characters. War and Peace is “a panoramic vision of people and places, he makes it an image of beauty and truth that is final, complete and unqualified.”
Anna Karenina (1873) is a dramatic novel with the
gripping story of woman’s moral fall and her suicide. The novel appeared in
installments from 1875 to 1877. Tolstoy begins it with a pregnant statement, “Happy
families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way:” The
novel is a superb analysis of family lives, above all,
it is “a powerful study of an unhappy woman.”
Anna is a beautiful woman, and people are crazy of her. Princess Myaky cryptically says, “How can she help it if they’re in love with her, and follow her about like shadows?” Even Anna is conscious of the machinations of people and observes, “I often wonder why people are in league to spoil me. What have I done, and what could I do?” She runs away from Vornsky to her cosy family life, but he follows her and succeeds in seducing her. Then love springs up in her heart for him, and turns indifferent to the exhortations of her husband. She goes away with Vornsky and lives with him like his wife braying insults and humiliations. Vornsky loves her truly, and tries to commit suicide when he was rejected by Anna on her sick-bed. They are lovers of a different kind altogether. She becomes angry with Vornsky, and falls under a running train and dies to punish Vornsky. Anna is modern, and she heralds the birth of modern women whose sex values are, different. Anna Karenina is a page from life with aesthetic and psychological overtones. She is a warning to all women who try to be wiser than nature and who do not live for their families.
Tolstoyism
Tolstoy renounced the church, and found his philosophy in non-resistance. To him the whole message of Christ is in the words, “that ye resist not evil.” The philosophy which is founded on non-resistance, is known as Tolstoyism. He pleaded for a simple life which is free from greed, lust, hate and selfishness, and lived simple life dressing himself as a peasant. He taught austerity to people and abstained from intoxicants and tobacco, and was a, vegetarian. He did much manual work like boot-making also, and gave his property to a trust, and died on November 8, 1910.
Tolstoy
recognised the class war, and noticed the corrupt and
artificial civilization built up by the rich. He declared that such a
civilization had a demoralising effect on the poor
who were kept in bondage and who still preserved their good nature. His disgust
with corruption in every walk of life was manifest in War and Peace, Peter
decried corruption and prophesised a revolution as
everything was rotten. Indeed Tolstoy was prophetic in his utterance. But he
was against revolution, for it would involve violence. To him all forms of violence were wicked, and so he
denounced, all revolutionary activity. He exhorted people to avoid revolutions
by practising love and compassion, and pointed out
that social order would become better when all men learned to love one another.
He preached love and compassion to all living beings, and such a universal love
and compassion alone can save the world from a future holocaust. Tolstoy’s life
and philosophy can be a panacea for the ills of the present-day