Leo Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina"

The
psychological monologue leading up to Anna's death in Leo Tolstoy's "Anna
Karenina" can be considered one of the most remarkable and insightful
portrayals of the human psyche in nineteenth-century literature.
It
is difficult to imagine which state Tolstoy was in when he wrote these all. The
person who wrote these sentences seems to be Anna herself.
If
the part where Anna commits suicide is taken as the climax of the whole novel,
then the person standing on the highest point overlooking it is not the Author,
but the God of Death.
The
shadow of death has always shrouded the entire novel, from the beginning when
Anna and her lover Vronsky met the man who committed suicide by lying on the
train, to Anna's life in danger during childbirth, and then Vronsky's
death.
From
attempted suicide to Nikolai's difficult death process, even the author's
autobiographical character Levin has thought about suicide many times...
After
Anna made up her mind to die, the pace of the novel suddenly accelerated,
running forward at the acceleration of death. , just in time to meet the
speeding train...
Anna
won the battle of love at the cost of double destruction of body and soul.
"Even her death was the death of a hateful woman with no religious
beliefs." She will never go to heaven.
Tolstoy
added a subtitle to the twentieth section of the fifth volume of the novel.
This may be the only subtitle in all of Tolstoy's novels. This title is
"Death".
The
content of this section is the death process of Levin's brother Nicholas. After
the priest finished praying, he said "He is finished" and wanted to
walk away. Suddenly the deceased made a sharp and clear voice from deep in his
chest:
" Not yet... soon."
After a minute, his face became cheerful, and a smile appeared under his Mustache.
Nicholas had long been a fallen man. When he was dying, he prayed frantically.
Although this was just a "temporary and selfish manifestation of
delusional recovery", in any case, he was conquered by death, and his
appearance was rough. , but he was gentle on the inside, and there was still a
smile on his face after death.
The title "Death" appears almost a quarter of the way through the second half of the book. It seems to have a dynamic meaning. It is like a fulcrum………; the redemption and hope in the last part of the novel can be swayed. Let’s review it!
Book Review
This
is the thickest literary masterpiece I have ever read so far. It is one of
Tolstoy's three masterpieces handed down from generation to generation.
Among
the few classics I read in a young age, there was also
"Resurrection", but completely forgotten.
It’s
hard to imagine that I read most of this book intermittently during the week at
home, through mobile phones and the Internet, in various environments, and I
also read it intermittently. And now, another week has passed, and I am
writing my reading notes with trepidation. It's really scary to criticize such
a masterpiece.
I
can only honestly record the various memories, thoughts, and emotions that
remain in my mind at this moment for comfort.
Although the title of the book is
"Anna", it does not use her as the absolute protagonist, but two main
lines, with Anna and Levin as the core respectively.
By
describing the characters, emotions, and events that happened around them, the
book comprehensively and profoundly Analyzes the living conditions of the
Russian aristocracy in the nineteenth century.
The
novel uses love and married life as the main carrier of description and revolves around the development and ending of four relationships: Anna and her
husband Alexei, Anna and Vronsky, Levin and Kitty, and Stepan, and Dolly.
Wen's
changes in thought are used to express the author's outlook on life, world
outlook, love outlook, and the outlook on family life that he admires.
The
lives, work, interpersonal relationships, and emotional states of these
characters are complex and intertwined into a large network, covering all
social conditions before the aristocratic class is about to decline.
Anna is an almost perfect female character. No
matter in terms of appearance, behavior, conversation, knowledge, cultivation,
morality, and many other aspects mentioned in the book, even when viewed from
the perspective of the aristocratic class, she cannot be more perfect...
If
the emotions and desires stored deep in her heart had not been dug out by
Vronsky, she would have been welcomed and appreciated by all the upper-class
people.
Even
when her morality and soul had fallen to the deepest level, the author had
little regard for appearance and appearance.
In terms of behavior, he still gave the highest praise. From this perspective, she is not a character worthy of criticism but is full of tragedy, arousing people's pity and grief, and venting this anger to the people around her and society.
Anna
is no longer young. She is the mother of an 8-year-old child and loves her son
deeply. She has a high appreciation of art and has shown certain talents in
painting and engineering.
She
can even read a large number of books and write novels. She possesses all the
charm of a woman. She can quickly become the center of attention in any social
situation and easily capture the hearts of men, even the newly married Levine
is no exception.
She
is also blameless in terms of morality. She devoted a lot of care and love to
the workers who committed suicide at the station and her sister-in-law.
She
also treated her brother's children with love. Even the ladies, with all the
jealousy that women deserve, could not be angry with her.
However, all these perfections began to
gradually shake just because of Vronsky's glance at her on the train and were
completely torn apart with the release of suppressed passion.
Her
only misfortune, the source of all pain, came from her husband's indifference
and hypocrisy towards her. On the surface, her family is also a combination
that everyone envies.
Her
husband Alexei holds great power in the officialdom and has a prosperous
career. He just cares too much about his social status and devotes himself
almost entirely to his career, while neglecting his family, especially
Anna.
The
two sides maintain superficial harmony, but a huge gap has formed. Anna simply
hated him and saw her as a beautiful, well-oiled machine.
If
you put aside the emotional factors, this is indeed an admirable political
machine, running wholeheartedly in accordance with all the requirements of
aristocratic society and officialdom.
Even
all material needs for family life and wife are provided. However, this is a
machine, after all, torturing Anna's energetic and energetic soul day and
night.
A woman is like a beautiful flower. If she
does not receive emotional nourishment, she may wither like a rose and
gradually wither under the erosion of time; or she may grow wild like a poppy
flower and desperately absorb all the dew. The sun continues to bloom with
endless charm, but it is full of toxicity.
What mistake did Vronsky make? He is pursuing his own love. He was simply fascinated by Anna's beauty and went crazy, giving up everything he owned. He has high praise in the circle.
He even had a great talent for painting and a great appreciation of art. He is proud at heart, like a pure and elegant horse, but he can win the love of almost everyone.
Just like taking opium by mistake because of the beauty of poppy flowers, you are crazy and unable to extricate yourself. For Anna, he gave up everything that aristocratic society had given him.
He is willing to bear the contempt of the aristocratic society for him, he is willing to leave the bright career that can be easily obtained, and he can even sever the relationship with his mother and family.
He could stay away from everything, spend time abroad and in the countryside with Anna, and try painting and manor life that he couldn't love.
Under the great grief, he could not even care about his life and attempted suicide twice. Shouldn't these trigger profound sympathy and thinking? But instead, put all the responsibility for this tragedy on him?
As Anna’s husband, should Alexey be ruthlessly criticized? He was indeed indifferent to Anna and his son, and it was true that after he discovered the relationship between Anna and Vronsky, he became colder and more unfeeling towards Anna, and even refused to divorce, leaving himself, Anna, Vronsky, and his son Seryoza all in trouble.
Unable to escape, oppressed, and excluded by the huge moral carrier of the family. No matter how touching and beautiful Anna is, he just devotes all his energy to his career and is unable to have love or even basic emotional attention for Anna.
He also felt all the pain, and this great grief even made his morals sublimated to a high level at the religious level, and he tolerated the betrayal that caused the failure of his career and the breakdown of his family.
For a moment, he even felt pity for the child his wife had secretly had with someone else. No one could find anything against him except Anna, and it even aroused great sympathy, because in a sense his whole life was destroyed as well.
Anna and Vronsky, in their pursuit of love, not only bear the contempt of the entire society and all interpersonal relationships but also the heavy pressure from the soul and morality.
The former is secondary, but what really causes Anna to struggle is her apparent awareness that she is being corrupted by this intense emotional need.
She hesitated, she fought, and after giving birth to her daughter with Vronsky, she also made up her mind to sever her relationship with him, because at least she still loved her son Seryozha deeply, and this was her only concern until the end of her life...
But after meeting Vronsky, who attempted suicide, she completely fell into the endless abyss and became a slave to lust. She devoted the last of her life to Vronsky's emotional care for her.
This is just like a poppy flower that grows crazily. Its demand for sunlight and nutrients expands infinitely, and it cannot tolerate a little loss, otherwise, it will wither immediately.
The fruits of her love with Vronsky also became something she hated. So even in Italy, far away from all the troubles, under the influence of the capital of painting and art, she could not find any comfort.
She could only be peaceful for a moment, and then she became melancholy again. This melancholy and erotic greed has gradually become a burden to Vronsky, oppressing him and unable to breathe.
They become each other's only soul comfort, but they still cannot cherish the source of love that has gradually withered and drawn from each other more wantonly.
They have realized that they cannot live like this. The ideal love scene lasts for less than a year before they return to their original aristocratic social destination.
Overwhelmed, Vronsky wants to escape but is restrained even more tightly by Anna, because Anna cannot survive for a moment without him.
Finally, in the first and irreversible quarrel, Vronsky hopes for a moment of freedom, but Anna chooses to commit suicide. This was the final ending of the tragedy. Vronsky lost his soul and went to the front line.
Fortunately, there is also Levin, a semi-autobiographical figure of the author himself, which makes this work warm and full. If the image of Anna makes this work profound and powerful, then Levine makes it further sublimated and great.
Perhaps Levin is too ordinary, and his life and destiny are not as ups and downs and exciting as readers expect. Everything seems so mediocre.
He does not have the cynicism, melancholy, and profoundness of his brother Nikolai, nor does he have the talent, wisdom, and indifference of his brother Sergey.
He also escaped with disdain for local politics, committees, and campaigns that the landowning aristocracy was passionate about, completely alienating him from his only opportunity for career success.
He was neither young nor aristocratic. When he was nearly thirty years old and went to visit Stepan, he was even blocked by the gatekeeper for a long time.
However, perhaps it is Levin's ordinariness that highlights the greatness of the work. This kind of ordinariness appears so real and profound under the author's creation.
It allows the most ordinary readers to penetrate deeply into Levin's inner world, experience Levin's most subtle emotional touches, and follow every change and progress of Levin's thinking.
He does not have to have a great career, but he tirelessly pursues the
perfection of his own work; he does not envy the status and reputation of the
upper class, but he can maintain innocent and pleasant friendships with the
servants and farmers around him; he does not wear a hypocritical mask, but
he won the love of almost all his aristocratic friends; he didn't have a lot of
wealth, but he could live happily with his wife and friends; he was dull by
nature,
Stepan won the popularity of the entire upper class, but only had Levin
as his only true friend; Dolly was unhappy in her marriage and troubled in the
lives of her five children, but she could feel real happiness in Levin's
family; her brother Nico La felt resentful of everything in the world,
Wealth, status, talent, beauty, elegance, cultivation, youth, conversation, etiquette, these so-called advantages seem to be impossible to find in Levin.
However, the various advantages respected in that aristocratic era and in today's society have brought endless troubles to other aristocratic characters in the book.
I am afraid that this is also the final expression that the author hopes to use the image of Levin.
These seemingly useless advantages that are looked down upon by contemporary elites and aristocrats can lead to a truly happy life and a perception of the full meaning of life.
The so-called advantages of those who are successful, elegant, elite, and powerful are the endless troubles and harms that capital culture brings to this society and to themselves.
The aristocratic class was like this in the past, but today's capital society is still blindly pursuing money, material, pleasure, status, power, and short-sightedness, which has led to the moral decline of the entire society, a serious reduction in happiness, environmental degradation, indifference in interpersonal friendship, and extravagance and waste.
From the death of his brother Nicholas, Levin felt the fear of death and a sense of belonging for the first time. His short life, compared to the entire history, nature, and universe, is like a bubble.
It will burst after a short period of time, leaving nothing behind and no meaning. A huge sense of emptiness eroded Levin, and the only way to end this emptiness seemed to be death.
This made him unable to escape and even wanted to commit suicide several times. But he didn't after all, he continued to live.
The materialistic natural theory could not bring him any answers, and the opposing philosophical explanations seemed to be only effective in academic mutual criticism, and still could not explain to him what the meaning of life was.
"Some people live to satisfy their own desires; others live to obey the truth, do according to God's will, and to save their souls." "Living is not to satisfy desires! People should not live for their own desires. We should not live for what we understand, what we are obsessed with, what we yearn for, but should live for something incomprehensible, for a God who no one can understand, and no one can determine." "If there is no such thing If I don’t know why I should live for God instead of my own desires, then what kind of person will I be? How will I spend my life?” “If he doesn’t know why he lives, then no matter how hard he thinks, and still can't imagine what kind of beast he will become."
"Let us indulge our desires and thoughts, forget God and the Creator, what will happen? Or we don't understand what is good, and we don't understand the moral principles What is evil, so what will happen?”
"If you forget yourself and love others, you will be able to feel at ease and be happy. Don't just stop at verbal praise but devote yourself wholeheartedly to the new life that is unfolding in front of you."
My whole life, no matter what happens, not only will every minute not be wasted as before, but it will have a meaning that I have a right to make it have a definite good!.
Book Analysis
Anyone
who has read "Anna Karenina" may be as confused as I am: Why does
this book named after the heroine devote nearly half of its space to a person
who is not related to her? The man - Levin.
However,
Tolstoy retorted: "On the contrary, I am proud of 'architecture' - the
round arches are built so that people cannot notice where the vault
is."
He
explained, "This building The connection between buildings does not depend
on the relationship between plot and characters but on an inner connection.”
What
exactly is the “inner connection” Tolstoy talks about? This is exactly what
this article wants to explore.
When
Anna was 17 years old, she followed her aunt's arrangement, married Karenin,
who was 20 years older than her and gave birth to a son.
During
the years of boring marriage, the old-fashioned and hypocritical Karenin only
cared about his official career and was full of bureaucratic clichés. Anna's
cheerful and enthusiastic nature was severely suppressed.
At
this time, she went to Moscow to mediate the conflict between her brother and
her sister-in-law and met the handsome officer Vronsky, and they were
fascinated by each other.
Anna
knew very well that this relationship was immoral, and that her brother's
sister-in-law Kitty was having a passionate fight with Vronsky, and she should
not fight for love.
She
returned home to Petersburg, originally thinking of letting it go, but as a
result, the infatuated Vronsky pursued her feverishly, giving her the romance
and passion she had dreamed of, and Anna couldn't help but indulge in it.
On
the other side, Kitty was waiting for Vronsky's proposal, so she rejected
Levin's love.
After
witnessing Vronsky's transference, the heartbroken Kitty and her family went
abroad to recuperate in a hot spring. Levin, who felt humiliated, also went
abroad to inspect agriculture.
After
they returned to China, Kitty's sister Tao Li tried her best to bring them
together, so that they fell deeply in love with each other in a new state of
mind and got married with everyone's blessing.
Miraculously,
Anna and Levin's interpersonal network is unusually close - they know everyone
around each other, and even their partners are almost married, so they also
regard each other's partners as love rivals.
Although
they had heard each other's names from countless people, they still didn't know
each other.
However,
in my opinion, Anna and Levin are the most suitable partners. They have too
many things in common, and they are all noble qualities that are rare in that
class: sincerity, simplicity, kindness, aversion to hypocrisy, a sense of justice,
and the ability to think independently. , Dare to declare war on mainstream
society for ideals...
Whenever
I see them suffering in their respective relationships, when Anna accuses
Vronsky of engaging in ostentatious social interactions, and when Levin laments
Kitty's lack of depth of thought, I can't help but imagine what would happen if
this were the case. Is it the other person who is always by their side?
The
two most true souls are ups and downs in their respective destinies. They have
their closest lovers by their side, but they taste the bitterness of spiritual
loneliness.
They
are travelers on each other's destiny, extremely close but never integrated.
There is no family affection, no love, or even friendship. This bizarre sense
of absurdity made me lament the cruelty of fate.
It
wasn't until Tolstoy said that analogy about dome architecture that I suddenly
realized: The reason why I think they are the most suitable partners is because
I see the light in their souls. And this light is what Tolstoy refers to as the
"inner connection."
On
the surface, Anna is enthusiastic and loves literature and art, while Levin is
serious and reserved, obsessed with agriculture. They are completely different
in personality and hobbies.
However,
if you look at the fate they chose, you will see a very similar spiritual core.
Anna's
husband, Karenin, has a successful official career and is a
"respectable" husband that many women would choose. Even if you lack
interest, you can still find one or even several lovers outside of marriage.
This is a common choice for the ladies around Anna.
However,
there is no cheating noble lady like Anna who dares to abandon her family and
children and fly away while pregnant with her lover's child when the divorce is
rejected.
Such
a desperate attempt to strive for happiness is not "respectable"
enough in the eyes of those who are just trying to take advantage of the
situation. Therefore, while other women flirted with their lovers and still
thrived, Anna was ostracized by the entire social world. They isolated her,
criticized her, and even humiliated her.
Anna's
love for life and longing for love were both due to her character and
environmental factors. At that time, Russia's outdated feudal system was under
great impact from the Western bourgeoisie. Levin was also affected, mainly in
agriculture.
As
a big landowner, Levin hoped that farmers would be prosperous, and Russia would
be prosperous and powerful. However, the economic situation in rural Russia at
that time worried him deeply: farmers had no land and were unwilling to work
for landlords. The contradiction between farmers and landlords could not be
reconciled, and agriculture was in trouble. It is a vital part of the Russian
economy.
With
a naive enthusiasm, Lie advocated the implementation of a "halving
system" to increase farmers' enthusiasm. That is to say, half of the
harvest went to the farmers and half to the landlords.
But
this approach can only be an illusion in the end. Unless the land ownership
problem is solved, farmers cannot have real enthusiasm for work, so Levin's
reform approach will not work.
Anna
and Levin, one pursues the true meaning of love, and the other pursues career
reform, both strive to fight against the mainstream ideas of the time, and both
choose to declare war on the outdated system.
However,
such mavericks are not understood and understood by the people around them.
support.
Although
they fight in different fields, they are true spiritual companions. Sadly,
despite their great determination, perseverance, and eager expectations, they
inevitably failed.
Vronsky,
whom Anna wanted to hold on to, became more and more indifferent; Levin wanted
to reform agriculture with new and dilapidated ideas but was trampled under his
feet by old ideas. At this moment, these two losers finally reached the
intersection of fate.
Levin
went to visit Anna on the recommendation of Oblonsky. On seeing her, Levin fell
almost immediately under the spell of her enchanting beauty. Anna is generous,
steady, and dignified, fully understands Levin's witty remarks, and can express
her own unique opinions.
In
addition to her intelligence and elegance, what impressed Levin most was Anna's
virtue of honesty. She did not hide her difficult situation in front of him.
You know, the entire social world was ashamed of her at that time. And Levin also
received Anna's heartfelt appreciation for his frank and sincere attitude.
"What
a wonderful, lovely, and pitiful woman!" After leaving, Levin held an
almost heartbreaking pity for Anna and even worried that Vronsky could not
understand her. Isn't this love?
However,
such a precious meeting was a little too late. It could not change Levin's
responsibility and loyalty to his wife Kitty, nor could it stop Anna's despair
in seeking death.
3.
The opposite ending
The
essential similarity between Anna and Levin is also reflected in the fact that
after their dreams were shattered - due to the failure of love and career, they
turned to doubt the meaning of life and had thoughts of seeking death.
As
early as when Anna first met Vronsky, the tragedy occurred that the railway
worker died tragically under the wheel, which seemed to have laid the shadow of
death for this unethical love.
Later,
Anna became pregnant with Vronsky's child and suffered severe bleeding during
delivery. She was forgiven by her husband Karenin on her deathbed.
After
seeing all this, Vronsky was also overwhelmed by multiple pressures and
returned home and shot himself. It can be said that Vronsky's love for Anna
reached its peak at this time.
However,
Anna miraculously survived, and then she tasted Karenin's consistent
ruthlessness and Vronsky's declining love.
Therefore,
Anna wants to win this love war and punish Vronsky with fierce means. In the
end, she chooses to throw herself under the speeding train. In the words of
Vronsky's mother, it is "a dirty death of a dirty woman." Law."
In
fact, Tolstoy had already foreshadowed such a terrible ending in the preface -
"It is mine to retaliate, and I will retaliate." This sentence comes
from the Bible, and its original meaning is that only God can judge the sins of
the world, and the world has no right to comment.
Tolstoy
further elaborated in his answer to Veresayev: "I chose this inscription,
as I have explained, simply to express the idea that the bad things people do
have their painful consequences. This does not come from man, but from God;
Anna Karenina experienced this firsthand.”
If
this is not enough evidence of the author's condemning attitude towards Anna,
another strong piece of evidence comes from his overall view of men and women.
Five
years before writing "Anna Karenina", that is, in 1868, Tolstoy said
in an article entitled "On Marriage and Women's Duty":
This kind of extreme mental depression cannot be comforted even by a loving wife and beloved children. He thought about suicide so many times that he had to hide the rope to avoid hanging himself and did not carry a pistol to avoid shooting himself.
Anna and Levin, a pair of fellow travellers and spiritual companions in life, shouldered Tolstoy's outlook on life and values, and as the carrier of the author's thoughts, in the very similar spiritual core, they finally went to the end of the world. The opposite ending.
Reading Notes
1.
Although I try my best to be balanced and self-reflective, I still feel anxious
from time to time. To deal with this kind of emotion, my most common way is to
read Lao Tuo and large works like Tolstoy. I recently reread "Anna...
Karenina". The master's works always make people full of emotion, but it
is difficult to say anything, so it is still the same as before, one by one, I
can talk about whatever comes to my mind, but I can't say it all anyway.
13.
The old man was born to be rebellious throughout his life. He has struggled
with many things. He has studied, been an official, been in upper-class
circles, farmed, been a landlord, a soldier, and fought in wars. He gave up
private property at the age of 63, and 65 He learned to ride a bicycle at the
age of 70 and was still skating at the age of 70. The Czar did not need his
humanitarianism, nor did the revolutionaries. Even the religious church
expelled him. When writing "Anna", he also hid the rope and put away
the shotgun to prevent himself from committing suicide. Even today, on the
centenary of Tolstoy's birth, Russia is still silent. Compared with the
high-profile activities commemorating Chekov, only a few TV stations broadcast
it.
14.
But people love him. His tomb has no tombstone or inscription. Zweig said that
this is the most beautiful tomb in the world. Local young people will go to
Tolstoy's tomb to lay flowers when they hold weddings. Of course, if you are
not married, you can still give flowers.
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