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Childhood, Boyhood, Youth

Page 22

by Leo Tolstoy


  a future life, and on the immortality of the soul, and, with all the

  ardour of inexperience, strove to make my youthful intellect solve those

  questions--the questions which constitute the highest level of thought

  to which the human intellect can tend, but a final decision of which the

  human intellect can never succeed in attaining.

  I believe the intellect to take the same course of development in the

  individual as in the mass, as also that the thoughts which serve as

  a basis for philosophical theories are an inseparable part of that

  intellect, and that every man must be more or less conscious of those

  thoughts before he can know anything of the existence of philosophical

  theories. To my own mind those thoughts presented themselves with such

  clarity and force that I tried to apply them to life, in the fond belief

  that I was the first to have discovered such splendid and invaluable

  truths.

  Sometimes I would suppose that happiness depends, not upon external

  causes themselves, but only upon our relation to them, and that,

  provided a man can accustom himself to bearing suffering, he need

  never be unhappy. To prove the latter hypothesis, I would (despite the

  horrible pain) hold out a Tatistchev's dictionary at arm's length for

  five minutes at a time, or else go into the store-room and scourge my

  back with cords until the tears involuntarily came to my eyes!

  Another time, suddenly bethinking me that death might find me at any

  hour or any minute, I came to the conclusion that man could only be

  happy by using the present to the full and taking no thought for the

  future. Indeed, I wondered how people had never found that out before.

  Acting under the influence of the new idea, I laid my lesson-books

  aside for two or three days, and, reposing on my bed, gave myself up to

  novel-reading and the eating of gingerbread-and-honey which I had bought

  with my last remaining coins.

  Again, standing one day before the blackboard and smearing figures on it

  with honey, I was struck with the thought, "Why is symmetry so agreeable

  to the eye? What is symmetry? Of course it is an innate sense," I

  continued; "yet what is its basis? Perhaps everything in life is

  symmetry? But no. On the contrary, this is life"--and I drew an oblong

  figure on the board--"and after life the soul passes to eternity"--here

  I drew a line from one end of the oblong figure to the edge of the

  board. "Why should there not be a corresponding line on the other

  side? If there be an eternity on one side, there must surely be a

  corresponding one on the other? That means that we have existed in a

  previous life, but have lost the recollection of it."

  This conclusion--which seemed to me at the time both clear and novel,

  but the arguments for which it would be difficult for me, at this

  distance of time, to piece together--pleased me extremely, so I took a

  piece of paper and tried to write it down. But at the first attempt

  such a rush of other thoughts came whirling though my brain that I was

  obliged to jump up and pace the room. At the window, my attention was

  arrested by a driver harnessing a horse to a water-cart, and at once my

  mind concentrated itself upon the decision of the question, "Into what

  animal or human being will the spirit of that horse pass at death?" Just

  at that moment, Woloda passed through the room, and smiled to see me

  absorbed in speculative thoughts. His smile at once made me feel that

  all that I had been thinking about was utter nonsense.

  I have related all this as I recollect it in order to show the reader

  the nature of my cogitations. No philosophical theory attracted me so

  much as scepticism, which at one period brought me to a state of mind

  verging upon insanity. I took the fancy into my head that no one nor

  anything really existed in the world except myself--that objects were

  not objects at all, but that images of them became manifest only so soon

  as I turned my attention upon them, and vanished again directly that

  I ceased to think about them. In short, this idea of mine (that real

  objects do not exist, but only one's conception of them) brought me to

  Schelling's well-known theory. There were moments when the influence

  of this idea led me to such vagaries as, for instance, turning sharply

  round, in the hope that by the suddenness of the movement I should come

  in contact with the void which I believed to be existing where I myself

  purported to be!

  What a pitiful spring of moral activity is the human intellect! My

  faulty reason could not define the impenetrable. Consequently it

  shattered one fruitless conviction after another--convictions which,

  happily for my after life, I never lacked the courage to abandon as soon

  as they proved inadequate. From all this weary mental struggle I derived

  only a certain pliancy of mind, a weakening of the will, a habit

  of perpetual moral analysis, and a diminution both of freshness of

  sentiment and of clearness of thought. Usually abstract thinking

  develops man's capacity for apprehending the bent of his mind at certain

  moments and laying it to heart, but my inclination for abstract thought

  developed my consciousness in such a way that often when I began to

  consider even the simplest matter, I would lose myself in a labyrinthine

  analysis of my own thoughts concerning the matter in question. That is

  to say, I no longer thought of the matter itself, but only of what I was

  thinking about it. If I had then asked myself, "Of what am I thinking?"

  the true answer would have been, "I am thinking of what I am thinking;"

  and if I had further asked myself, "What, then, are the thoughts of

  which I am thinking?" I should have had to reply, "They are attempts

  to think of what I am thinking concerning my own thoughts"--and so on.

  Reason, with me, had to yield to excess of reason. Every philosophical

  discovery which I made so flattered my conceit that I often imagined

  myself to be a great man discovering new truths for the benefit of

  humanity. Consequently, I looked down with proud dignity upon my

  fellow-mortals. Yet, strange to state, no sooner did I come in contact

  with those fellow-mortals than I became filled with a stupid shyness of

  them, and, the higher I happened to be standing in my own opinion, the

  less did I feel capable of making others perceive my consciousness of

  my own dignity, since I could not rid myself of a sense of diffidence

  concerning even the simplest of my words and acts.

  XX. WOLODA

  THE further I advance in the recital of this period of my life, the more

  difficult and onerous does the task become. Too rarely do I find among

  the reminiscences of that time any moments full of the ardent feeling

  of sincerity which so often and so cheeringly illumined my childhood.

  Gladly would I pass in haste over my lonely boyhood, the sooner to

  arrive at the happy time when once again a tender, sincere, and noble

  friendship marked with a gleam of light at once the termination of that

  period and the beginning of a phase of my youth which was full of the

  charm of poetry. Therefore, I will
not pursue my recollections from hour

  to hour, but only throw a cursory glance at the most prominent of them,

  from the time to which I have now carried my tale to the moment of

  my first contact with the exceptional personality that was fated to

  exercise such a decisive influence upon my character and ideas.

  Woloda was about to enter the University. Tutors came to give

  him lessons independently of myself, and I listened with envy and

  involuntary respect as he drew boldly on the blackboard with white chalk

  and talked about "functions," "sines," and so forth--all of which seemed

  to me terms pertaining to unattainable wisdom. At length, one Sunday

  before luncheon all the tutors--and among them two professors--assembled

  in Grandmamma's room, and in the presence of Papa and some friends put

  Woloda through a rehearsal of his University examination--in which,

  to Grandmamma's delight, he gave evidence of no ordinary amount of

  knowledge.

  Questions on different subjects were also put to me, but on all of

  them I showed complete ignorance, while the fact that the professors

  manifestly endeavoured to conceal that ignorance from Grandmamma only

  confused me the more. Yet, after all, I was only fifteen, and so had a

  year before me in which to prepare for the examinations. Woloda now came

  downstairs for luncheon only, and spent whole days and evenings over

  his studies in his own room--to which he kept, not from necessity, but

  because he preferred its seclusion. He was very ambitious, and meant to

  pass the examinations, not by halves, but with flying colours.

  The first day arrived. Woloda was wearing a new blue frockcoat with

  brass buttons, a gold watch, and shiny boots. At the door stood Papa's

  phaeton, which Nicola duly opened; and presently, when Woloda and

  St. Jerome set out for the University, the girls--particularly

  Katenka--could be seen gazing with beaming faces from the window at

  Woloda's pleasing figure as it sat in the carriage. Papa said several

  times, "God go with him!" and Grandmamma, who also had dragged herself

  to the window, continued to make the sign of the cross as long as the

  phaeton was visible, as well as to murmur something to herself.

  When Woloda returned, every one eagerly crowded round him. "How many

  marks? Were they good ones?" "Yes." But his happy face was an answer in

  itself. He had received five marks-the maximum! The next day, he sped on

  his way with the same good wishes and the same anxiety for his success,

  and was welcomed home with the same eagerness and joy.

  This lasted for nine days. On the tenth day there was to be the last and

  most difficult examination of all--the one in divinity.

  We all stood at the window, and watched for him with greater impatience

  than ever. Two o'clock, and yet no Woloda.

  "Here they come, Papa! Here they come!" suddenly screamed Lubotshka as

  she peered through the window.

  Sure enough the phaeton was driving up with St. Jerome and Woloda--the

  latter no longer in his grey cap and blue frockcoat, but in the uniform

  of a student of the University, with its embroidered blue collar,

  three-cornered hat, and gilded sword.

  "Ah! If only SHE had been alive now!" exclaimed Grandmamma on seeing

  Woloda in this dress, and swooned away.

  Woloda enters the anteroom with a beaming face, and embraces myself,

  Lubotshka, Mimi, and Katenka--the latter blushing to her ears. He hardly

  knows himself for joy. And how smart he looks in that uniform! How well

  the blue collar suits his budding, dark moustache! What a tall, elegant

  figure is his, and what a distinguished walk!

  On that memorable day we all lunched together in Grandmamma's room.

  Every face expressed delight, and with the dessert which followed the

  meal the servants, with grave but gratified faces, brought in bottles of

  champagne.

  Grandmamma, for the first time since Mamma's death, drank a full glass

  of the wine to Woloda's health, and wept for joy as she looked at him.

  Henceforth Woloda drove his own turn-out, invited his own friends,

  smoked, and went to balls. On one occasion, I even saw him sharing a

  couple of bottles of champagne with some guests in his room, and the

  whole company drinking a toast, with each glass, to some mysterious

  being, and then quarrelling as to who should have the bottom of the

  bottle!

  Nevertheless he always lunched at home, and after the meal would stretch

  himself on a sofa and talk confidentially to Katenka: yet from what I

  overheard (while pretending, of course, to pay no attention) I gathered

  that they were only talking of the heroes and heroines of novels which

  they had read, or else of jealousy and love, and so on. Never could I

  understand what they found so attractive in these conversations, nor why

  they smiled so happily and discussed things with such animation.

  Altogether I could see that, in addition to the friendship natural to

  persons who had been companions from childhood, there existed between

  Woloda and Katenka a relation which differentiated them from us, and

  united them mysteriously to one another.

  XXI. KATENKA AND LUBOTSHKA

  Katenka was now sixteen years old--quite a grown-up girl; and although

  at that age the angular figures, the bashfulness, and the gaucherie

  peculiar to girls passing from childhood to youth usually replace the

  comely freshness and graceful, half-developed bloom of childhood, she

  had in no way altered. Still the blue eyes with their merry glance were

  hers, the well-shaped nose with firm nostrils and almost forming a line

  with the forehead, the little mouth with its charming smile, the dimples

  in the rosy cheeks, and the small white hands. To her, the epithet of

  "girl," pure and simple, was pre-eminently applicable, for in her the

  only new features were a new and "young-lady-like" arrangement of her

  thick flaxen hair and a youthful bosom--the latter an addition which at

  once caused her great joy and made her very bashful.

  Although Lubotshka and she had grown up together and received the same

  education, they were totally unlike one another. Lubotshka was not tall,

  and the rickets from which she had suffered had shaped her feet in goose

  fashion and made her figure very bad. The only pretty feature in her

  face was her eyes, which were indeed wonderful, being large and black,

  and instinct with such an extremely pleasing expression of mingled

  gravity and naivete that she was bound to attract attention. In

  everything she was simple and natural, so that, whereas Katenka always

  looked as though she were trying to be like some one else, Lubotshka

  looked people straight in the face, and sometimes fixed them so long

  with her splendid black eyes that she got blamed for doing what was

  thought to be improper. Katenka, on the contrary, always cast her

  eyelids down, blinked, and pretended that she was short-sighted, though

  I knew very well that her sight was excellent. Lubotshka hated being

  shown off before strangers, and when a visitor offered to kiss her she

  invariably grew cross, and said that she hated "affection"; whereas,


  when strangers were present, Katenka was always particularly endearing

  to Mimi, and loved to walk about the room arm in arm with another girl.

  Likewise, though Lubotshka was a terrible giggler, and sometimes ran

  about the room in convulsions of gesticulating laughter, Katenka always

  covered her mouth with her hands or her pocket-handkerchief when she

  wanted to laugh. Lubotshka, again, loved to have grown-up men to talk

  to, and said that some day she meant to marry a hussar, but Katenka

  always pretended that all men were horrid, and that she never meant to

  marry any one of them, while as soon as a male visitor addressed her she

  changed completely, as though she were nervous of something. Likewise,

  Lubotshka was continually at loggerheads with Mimi because the latter

  wanted her to have her stays so tight that she could not breathe or eat

  or drink in comfort, while Katenka, on the contrary, would often insert

  her finger into her waistband to show how loose it was, and always ate

  very little. Lubotshka liked to draw heads; Katenka only flowers and

  butterflies. The former could play Field's concertos and Beethoven's

  sonatas excellently, whereas the latter indulged in variations and

  waltzes, retarded the time, and used the pedals continuously--not to

  mention the fact that, before she began, she invariably struck three

  chords in arpeggio.

  Nevertheless, in those days I thought Katenka much the grander person of

  the two, and liked her the best.

  XXII. PAPA

  Papa had been in a particularly good humour ever since Woloda had passed

  into the University, and came much oftener to dine with Grandmamma.

  However, I knew from Nicola that he had won a great deal lately.

  Occasionally, he would come and sit with us in the evening before going

  to the club. He used to sit down to the piano and bid us group ourselves

  around him, after which he would beat time with his thin boots (he

 

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