Two points in our lives can only be known and experienced anecdotally: our birth and our death. “The Death of Ivan Ilych” and “Master and Man” are Leo Tolstoy‘s late masterpieces. Written well after “War & Peace” and “Anna Karenina,” both stories directly confront the long, uneventful process of dying, some two decades before Tolstoy‘s own death at the railway station of Astapova. Yet both stories also draw on experiences described in his earlier work and resolve some of the questions overwhelming him during his crisis of faith in the 1880s.
“The Death of Ivan Ilych”
“The Death of Ivan Ilych” is a short novel but not a modest one. As the spiritual crisis of Levin, Leo Tolstoy’s self-portrait, had been left unresolved in “Anna Karenina,” here he describes the agony of ambivalence that led to that resolution, albeit through the story of a less complicated man, a man less liable to crises of self-understanding than Levin
Ivan Ilych is an ambitious bureaucrat jostling his way up the ladder of advantages in a corrupt Russia still harnessed by the czar’s bureaucratic apparatus. He slides gracefully into the roles offered to him, adjusting the attitudes and ethics of his youth to fit with the exigencies of his career, and accepting gladly the circus of perks and soul leisures offered by fashionable society and its luxuries. He particularly enjoys playing cards, a pastime evidently despised by Tolstoy as much as by the German philosopher Schopenhauer, who thought it the most degraded and senseless behavior imaginable.
Following what seems like an unremarkable injury, Ivan becomes gradually more incapacitated until finally he is unable to rise from the couch in his drawing room. Tolstoy describes with ferocious zeal the intensity of Ivan‘s physical suffering, which so exhausts him that eventually he gives up speaking and simply screams without remission, horrifying his attendant family. Love is not raised in the story’s last pages. It is his wife and son’s pity that rouses Ivan Ilych reciprocal compassion. His last word, and attempt to say “prosti” (“forgive me“) is a stumbled apology and not a pardon. Ironically, no one understands what he says. In the end, death proves not to be the destination of Ivan’s tormented and ignorant spiritual journey. Instead, it is simply the wasted province of all that he leaves behind by relinquishing his life, all the possessions and affectations, and even the human intimacies that he permitted himself in order to pass off his life as a reality worth settling for.
“Master and Man”
The toughness and simple dignity of the Russian peasant is the central theme of this story in which a wealthy, effete landowner is cast alongside his sturdy servant to face a harrowing winter snowstorm. Their master tries unsuccessfully to use the servant for his survival, as he has used his body for his own comfort for many years. The master dies in the blizzard but the servant, using his peasant wisdom and strength, survives to have a long and productive life.
The wealthy and youthful Vasili Andreevich is the master who is driven by greed to set out in a blizzard to make a bid on a piece of property. Nikita is the man, a “peasant of about 50 from a neighboring village“ who works as a freelance laborer. On the day that Andreevich decides to leave, Nikita is the only labor around who is sober so Andreevich hires him to accompany him in his sled from the small village where he lives to Goryackin. Nikita, although “a habitual drunkard,“ is not keen to make the journey, he outfits the sled with his favorite horse, Mukhorty.
Andreevich prizes Nikita for his dedication to work and his “kindly and pleasant temper.“ About twice a year, however, Nikita goes on a destructive bender that lasts until he has lost everything. Andreevich especially likes Nikita for “his honesty, his kindness to animals, and especially his cheapness.“ Nikita’s accommodating personality is the compensatory part of his character, that feeds on his guilt about drinking. We’ve all been there.
Wearing two fur-lined coats, Andreevich jumps into the coach, takes the reins and gives the horse a swat with the whip. At first, they follow some tracks in the snow left by the previous sled, but quickly realize they have veered off the road. They take a turn that they hope will put them on another road marked with stakes, but once again are surrounded by snow drifts and become disoriented. The two men can find no road to either side of the sled. At last, Andreevich stops the sled to allow the sweating, heaving horse to rest. When they resume their journey, they follow the sound of girls singing and approach the village of Grishkino. They pause for vodka and a bite of food, and the generous farm family offer them a place to spend the night. Refusing, they leave and promptly get lost in the snowy woods again.
It is dark when they decide to stop for the night. Nikita finds a comfortable spot near the front of the sled to huddle against the snowstorm. Andreevich prances about, sleepless, bemoaning his fate. Finally, he lies on top of the sleeping Nikita and puts his two coats above himself. This scene serves as a dramatic reminder to the reader of the commonsense wisdom of the peasant, contrasted with the clueless dithering of the wealthy. When villagers find them the next day, Andreevich is frozen, Nikita is alive, but suffering frostbite. After surgery for removal of dead tissue and recuperation, Nikita lives for another 20 years. The narrator asks rhetorically whether Nikita was pleased with his life or would have preferred to die in the snow.
Before Tolstoy died, he told his daughter, “The more a man loves, the more real he becomes.” This seems to be the overwhelming message of both stories. Tolstoy understood this concept most completely after his spiritual conversion and could not rest until he tried his best to convey it to others through his writing, whether in parables, folktales, drama, pamphlets, or fiction. Like the look of warning on the dead face of Ivan Ilych which Peter Ivanovich looks down upon, Tolstoy’s stories communicate a warning of the same message to his readers. Thus, “The Death of Ivan Ilych” and “Master and Man” read repeatedly throughout one’s life as one always needs to be reminded, or rather warned, to live and love before death comes.
Yes, it’s a great life with authors like Leo Tolstoy and readers like you in it. Rock on, mis amigos and mis amigas!