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 <description>In this short book, the newly-converted Tolstoy shares some of the struggles he faced
 during a mid-life crisis of faith. He begins by reflecting upon how neither philosophy
 nor religion seemed to answer any of life’s great questions. As he explains, the author
 only overcomes his doubts after observing and immersing himself in the faith of ordinary
 people performing everyday tasks. The Christian life lived out, more than anything else,
 revealed the truths of God to him. Tolstoy’s personal account not only provides insight
 into the mind of one of the world’s greatest novelists, but it also serves to shed light on
 the human experience of doubt, despair, and faith. Tolstoy’s Confession can be read
 especially well alongside his novella of similar themes, The Death of Ivan Ilyich.
 
 <br /><br />Kathleen O’Bannon<br />CCEL Staff
 </description>
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  <DC>
    <DC.Title>A Confession</DC.Title>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="short-form">Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Creator sub="Author" scheme="file-as">Tolstoy, Leo Nikolayevich (1828-1910)</DC.Creator>
    <DC.Publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library</DC.Publisher>
    <DC.Subject scheme="LCCN">BV4509 </DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh1">Practical theology</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="lcsh2">Practical religion. The Christian life</DC.Subject>
    <DC.Subject scheme="ccel">All; Christian Life; </DC.Subject>
    <DC.Date sub="Created">2000-07-08</DC.Date>
    <DC.Type>Text.Monograph</DC.Type>
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    <DC.Identifier scheme="URL">/ccel/tolstoy/confession.html</DC.Identifier>
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    <DC.Language scheme="ISO639-3">eng</DC.Language>
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    <div1 title="Title Page" progress="0.36%" id="i" prev="toc" next="ii">
<h2 id="i-p0.1">A Confession </h2>
<h3 id="i-p0.2">by Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy</h3>
<div style="text-align:center; margin-top:24pt; line-height:200%" id="i-p0.3">
<p id="i-p1">from the plain text version</p>
<p id="i-p2">Disributed by the Tolstoy Library OnLine</p>
<p id="i-p3">HTML version prepared for CCEL July 11, 1998</p>
<h3 id="i-p3.1">First distributed in Russia in 1882 </h3>
</div>
</div1>

    <div1 title="A Confession" progress="0.49%" id="ii" prev="i" next="ii.i">

      <div2 title="I" progress="0.49%" id="ii.i" prev="ii" next="ii.ii">
<h2 id="ii.i-p0.1">I</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p1">I was baptized and brought up in the Orthodox Christian faith. I was taught 
it in childhood and throughout my boyhood and youth. But when I abandoned the 
second course of the university at the age of eighteen I no longer believed 
any of the things I had been taught.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p2">Judging by certain memories, I never seriously believed them, but had merely 
relied on what I was taught and on what was professed by the grown-up people 
around me, and that reliance was very unstable.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p3">I remember that before I was eleven a grammar school pupil, Vladimir Milyutin 
(long since dead), visited us one Sunday and announced as the latest novelty 
a discovery made at his school. This discovery was that there is no God and 
that all we are taught about Him is a mere invention (this was in 1838). I remember 
how interested my elder brothers were in this information. They called me to 
their council and we all, I remember, became very animated, and accepted it 
as something very interesting and quite possible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p4">I remember also that when my elder brother, Dmitriy, who was then at the 
university, suddenly, in the passionate way natural to him, devoted himself 
to religion and began to attend all the Church services, to fast and to lead 
a pure and moral life, we all — even our elders — unceasingly held him up 
to ridicule and for some unknown reason called him “Noah”. I remember that Musin-Pushkin, 
the then Curator of Kazan University, when inviting us to dance at his home, 
ironically persuaded my brother (who was declining the invitation) by the argument 
that even David danced before the Ark. I sympathized with these jokes made by 
my elders, and drew from them the conclusion that though it is necessary to 
learn the catechism and go to church, one must not take such things too seriously. 
I remember also that I read Voltaire when I was very young, and that his raillery, 
far from shocking me, amused me very much.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p5">My lapse from faith occurred as is usual among people on our level of education. 
In most cases, I think, it happens thus: a man lives like everybody else, on 
the basis of principles not merely having nothing in common with religious doctrine, 
but generally opposed to it; religious doctrine does not play a part in life, 
in intercourse with others it is never encountered, and in a man's own life 
he never has to reckon with it. Religious doctrine is professed far away from 
life and independently of it. If it is encountered, it is only as an external 
phenomenon disconnected from life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p6">Then as now, it was and is quite impossible to judge by a man's life and 
conduct whether he is a believer or not. If there be a difference between a 
man who publicly professes orthodoxy and one who denies it, the difference is 
not in favor of the former. Then as now, the public profession and confession 
of orthodoxy was chiefly met with among people who were dull and cruel and who 
considered themselves very important. Ability, honesty, reliability, good-nature 
and moral conduct, were often met with among unbelievers.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p7">The schools teach the catechism and send the pupils to church, and government 
officials must produce certificates of having received communion. But a man 
of our circle who has finished his education and is not in the government service 
may even now (and formerly it was still easier for him to do so) live for ten 
or twenty years without once remembering that he is living among Christians 
and is himself reckoned a member of the orthodox Christian Church.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p8">So that, now as formerly, religious doctrine, accepted on trust and supported 
by external pressure, thaws away gradually under the influence of knowledge 
and experience of life which conflict with it, and a man very often lives on, 
imagining that he still holds intact the religious doctrine imparted to him 
in childhood whereas in fact not a trace of it remains.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p9">S., a clever and truthful man, once told me the story of how he ceased to 
believe. On a hunting expedition, when he was already twenty-six, he once, at 
the place where they put up for the night, knelt down in the evening to pray 
— a habit retained from childhood. His elder brother, who was at the hunt with 
him, was lying on some hay and watching him. When S. had finished and was settling 
down for the night, his brother said to him: “So you still do that?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p10">They said nothing more to one another. But from that day S. ceased to say 
his prayers or go to church. And now he has not prayed, received communion, 
or gone to church, for thirty years. And this not because he knows his brother's 
convictions and has joined him in them, nor because he has decided anything 
in his own soul, but simply because the word spoken by his brother was like 
the push of a finger on a wall that was ready to fall by its own weight. The 
word only showed that where he thought there was faith, in reality there had 
long been an empty space, and that therefore the utterance of words and the 
making of signs of the cross and genuflections while praying were quite senseless 
actions. Becoming conscious of their senselessness he could not continue them.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p11">So it has been and is, I think, with the great majority of people. I am speaking 
of people of our educational level who are sincere with themselves, and not 
of those who make the profession of faith a means of attaining worldly aims. 
(Such people are the most fundamental infidels, for if faith is for them a means 
of attaining any worldly aims, then certainly it is not faith.) these people 
of our education are so placed that the light of knowledge and life has caused 
an artificial erection to melt away, and they have either already noticed this 
and swept its place clear, or they have not yet noticed it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p12">The religious doctrine taught me from childhood disappeared in me as in others, 
but with this difference, that as from the age of fifteen I began to read philosophical 
works, my rejection of the doctrine became a conscious one at a very early age. 
From the time I was sixteen I ceased to say my prayers and ceased to go to church 
or to fast of my own volition. I did not believe what had been taught me in 
childhood but I believed in something. What it was I believed in I could not 
at all have said. I believed in a God, or rather I did not deny God — but I 
could not have said what sort of God. Neither did I deny Christ and his teaching, 
but what his teaching consisted in I again could not have said.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.i-p13">Looking back on that time, I now see clearly that my faith — my only real 
faith — that which apart from my animal instincts gave impulse to my life — 
was a belief in perfecting myself. But in what this perfecting consisted and 
what its object was, I could not have said. I tried to perfect myself mentally 
— I studied everything I could, anything life threw in my way; I tried to perfect 
my will, I drew up rules I tried to follow; I perfected myself physically, cultivating 
my strength and agility by all sorts of exercises, and accustoming myself to 
endurance and patience by all kinds of privations. And all this I considered 
to be the pursuit of perfection. the beginning of it all was of course moral 
perfection, but that was soon replaced by perfection in general: by the desire 
to be better not in my own eyes or those of God but in the eyes of other people. 
And very soon this effort again changed into a desire to be stronger than others: 
to be more famous, more important and richer than others.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="II" progress="5.65%" id="ii.ii" prev="ii.i" next="ii.iii">
<h2 id="ii.ii-p0.1">II</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p1">Some day I will narrate the touching and instructive history of my life during 
those ten years of my youth. I think very many people have had a like experience. 
With all my soul I wished to be good, but I was young, passionate and alone, 
completely alone when I sought goodness. Every time I tried to express my most 
sincere desire, which was to be morally good, I met with contempt and ridicule, 
but as soon as I yielded to low passions I was praised and encouraged.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p2">Ambition, love of power, covetousness, lasciviousness, pride, anger, and 
revenge — were all respected.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p3">Yielding to those passions I became like the grown-up folk and felt that 
they approved of me. The kind aunt with whom I lived, herself the purest of 
beings, always told me that there was nothing she so desired for me as that 
I should have relations with a married woman: ‘<span lang="FR" id="ii.ii-p3.1">Rien ne forme un juene homme, 
comme une liaison avec une femme comme il faut</span>'.<note n="1" id="ii.ii-p3.2">Nothing so forms a young 
man as an intimacy with a woman of good breeding.</note> 
Another happiness she desired for me was that I should become an aide-de-camp, 
and if possible aide-de-camp to the Emperor. But the greatest happiness of all 
would be that I should marry a very rich girl and so become possessed of as 
many serfs as possible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p4">I cannot think of those years without horror, loathing and heartache. I killed 
men in war and challenged men to duels in order to kill them. I lost at cards, 
consumed the labor of the peasants, sentenced them to punishments, lived loosely, 
and deceived people. Lying, robbery, adultery of all kinds, drunkenness, violence, 
murder — there was no crime I did not commit, and in spite of that people praised 
my conduct and my contemporaries considered and consider me to be a comparatively 
moral man.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p5">So I lived for ten years.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p6">During that time I began to write from vanity, covetousness, and pride. In 
my writings I did the same as in my life. to get fame and money, for the sake 
of which I wrote, it was necessary to hide the good and to display the evil. 
and I did so. How often in my writings I contrived to hide under the guise of 
indifference, or even of banter, those strivings of mine towards goodness which 
gave meaning to my life! And I succeeded in this and was praised.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p7">At twenty-six years of age<note n="2" id="ii.ii-p7.1">He was in fact 27 at the time.</note> 
I returned to Petersburg after the war, and met the writers. They received me 
as one of themselves and flattered me. And before I had time to look round I 
had adopted the views on life of the set of authors I had come among, and these 
views completely obliterated all my former strivings to improve — they furnished 
a theory which justified the dissoluteness of my life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p8">The view of life of these people, my comrades in authorship, consisted in 
this: that life in general goes on developing, and in this development we — 
men of thought — have the chief part; and among men of thought it is we — 
artists and poets — who have the greatest influence. Our vocation is to teach 
mankind. And lest the simple question should suggest itself: What do I know, 
and what can I teach? it was explained in this theory that this need not be 
known, and that the artist and poet teach unconsciously. I was considered an 
admirable artist and poet, and therefore it was very natural for me to adopt 
this theory. I, artist and poet, wrote and taught without myself knowing what. 
For this I was paid money; I had excellent food, lodging, women, and society; 
and I had fame, which showed that what I taught was very good.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p9">this faith in the meaning of poetry and in the development of life was a 
religion, and I was one of its priests. To be its priest was very pleasant and 
profitable. And I lived a considerable time in this faith without doubting its 
validity. But in the second and still more in the third year of this life I 
began to doubt the infallibility of this religion and to examine it. My first 
cause of doubt was that I began to notice that the priests of this religion 
were not all in accord among themselves. Some said: We are the best and most 
useful teachers; we teach what is needed, but the others teach wrongly. Others 
said: No! we are the real teachers, and you teach wrongly. and they disputed, 
quarrelled, abused, cheated, and tricked one another. There were also many among 
us who did not care who was right and who was wrong, but were simply bent on 
attaining their covetous aims by means of this activity of ours. All this obliged 
me to doubt the validity of our creed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p10">Moreover, having begun to doubt the truth of the authors' creed itself, I 
also began to observe its priests more attentively, and I became convinced that 
almost all the priests of that religion, the writers, were immoral, and for 
the most part men of bad, worthless character, much inferior to those whom I 
had met in my former dissipated and military life; but they were self-confident 
and self-satisfied as only those can be who are quite holy or who do not know 
what holiness is. These people revolted me, I became revolting to myself, and 
I realized that that faith was a fraud.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p11">But strange to say, though I understood this fraud and renounced it, yet 
I did not renounce the rank these people gave me: the rank of artist, poet, 
and teacher. I naively imagined that I was a poet and artist and could teach 
everybody without myself knowing what I was teaching, and I acted accordingly.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p12">From my intimacy with these men I acquired a new vice: abnormally developed 
pride and an insane assurance that it was my vocation to teach men, without 
knowing what.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p13">To remember that time, and my own state of mind and that of those men (though 
there are thousands like them today), is sad and terrible and ludicrous, and 
arouses exactly the feeling one experiences in a lunatic asylum.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p14">We were all then convinced that it was necessary for us to speak, write, 
and print as quickly as possible and as much as possible, and that it was all 
wanted for the good of humanity. And thousands of us, contradicting and abusing 
one another, all printed and wrote — teaching others. And without noticing 
that we knew nothing, and that to the simplest of life's questions: What is 
good and what is evil? we did not know how to reply, we all talked at the same 
time, not listening to one another, sometimes seconding and praising one another 
in order to be seconded and praised in turn, sometimes getting angry with one 
another — just as in a lunatic asylum.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p15">Thousands of workmen laboured to the extreme limit of their strength day 
and night, setting the type and printing millions of words which the post carried 
all over Russia, and we still went on teaching and could in no way find time 
to teach enough, and were always angry that sufficient attention was not paid 
us.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p16">It was terribly strange, but is now quite comprehensible. Our real innermost 
concern was to get as much money and praise as possible. To gain that end we 
could do nothing except write books and papers. So we did that. But in order 
to do such useless work and to feel assured that we were very important people 
we required a theory justifying our activity. And so among us this theory was 
devised: “All that exists is reasonable. All that exists develops. And it all 
develops by means of Culture. And Culture is measured by the circulation of 
books and newspapers. And we are paid money and are respected because we write 
books and newspapers, and therefore we are the most useful and the best of men.” 
This theory would have been all very well if we had been unanimous, but as every 
thought expressed by one of us was always met by a diametrically opposite thought 
expressed by another, we ought to have been driven to reflection. But we ignored 
this; people paid us money and those on our side praised us, so each of us considered 
himself justified.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ii-p17">It is now clear to me that this was just as in a lunatic asylum; but then 
I only dimly suspected this, and like all lunatics, simply called all men lunatics 
except myself.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="III" progress="11.20%" id="ii.iii" prev="ii.ii" next="ii.iv">
<h2 id="ii.iii-p0.1">III</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p1">So I lived, abandoning myself to this insanity for another six years, till 
my marriage. During that time I went abroad. Life in Europe and my acquaintance 
with leading and learned Europeans<note n="3" id="ii.iii-p1.1">Russians generally make a distinction 
between Europeans and Russians.—A.M.</note> 
confirmed me yet more in the faith of striving after perfection in which I believed, 
for I found the same faith among them. That faith took with me the common form 
it assumes with the majority of educated people of our day. It was expressed 
by the word “progress”. It then appeared to me that this word meant something. 
I did not as yet understand that, being tormented (like every vital man) by 
the question how it is best for me to live, in my answer, “Live in conformity 
with progress”, I was like a man in a boat who when carried along by wind and 
waves should reply to what for him is the chief and only question. “whither 
to steer”, by saying, “We are being carried somewhere”.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p2">I did not then notice this. Only occasionally — not by reason but by instinct 
— I revolted against this superstition so common in our day, by which people 
hide from themselves their lack of understanding of life. . . . So, for instance, 
during my stay in Paris, the sight of an execution revealed to me the instability 
of my superstitious belief in progress. When I saw the head part from the body 
and how they thumped separately into the box, I understood, not with my mind 
but with my whole being, that no theory of the reasonableness of our present 
progress could justify this deed; and that though everybody from the creation 
of the world had held it to be necessary, on whatever theory, I knew it to be 
unnecessary and bad; and therefore the arbiter of what is good and evil is not 
what people say and do, nor is it progress, but it is my heart and I. Another 
instance of a realization that the superstitious belief in progress is insufficient 
as a guide to life, was my brother's death. Wise, good, serious, he fell ill 
while still a young man, suffered for more than a year, and died painfully, 
not understanding why he had lived and still less why he had to die. No theories 
could give me, or him, any reply to these questions during his slow and painful 
dying. But these were only rare instances of doubt, and I actually continued 
to live professing a faith only in progress. “Everything evolves and I evolve 
with it: and why it is that I evolve with all things will be known some day.” 
So I ought to have formulated my faith at that time.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p3">On returning from abroad I settled in the country and chanced to occupy 
myself with peasant schools. This work was particularly to my taste because 
in it I had not to face the falsity which had become obvious to me and stared 
me in the face when I tried to teach people by literary means. Here also I acted 
in the name of progress, but I already regarded progress itself critically. 
I said to myself: “In some of its developments progress has proceeded wrongly, 
and with primitive peasant children one must deal in a spirit of perfect freedom, 
letting them choose what path of progress they please.” In reality I was ever 
revolving round one and the same insoluble problem, which was: How to teach 
without knowing what to teach. In the higher spheres of literary activity I 
had realized that one could not teach without knowing what, for I saw that people 
all taught differently, and by quarrelling among themselves only succeeded in 
hiding their ignorance from one another. But here, with peasant children, I 
thought to evade this difficulty by letting them learn what they liked. It amuses 
me now when I remember how I shuffled in trying to satisfy my desire to teach, 
while in the depth of my soul I knew very well that I could not teach anything 
needful for I did not know what was needful. After spending a year at school 
work I went abroad a second time to discover how to teach others while myself 
knowing nothing.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p4">And it seemed to me that I had learnt this aborad, and in the year of the 
peasants' emancipation (1861) I returned to Russia armed with all this wisdom, 
and having become an Arbiter<note n="4" id="ii.iii-p4.1">To keep peace between peasants and owners.—A.M.</note> 
I began to teach, both the uneducated peasants in schools and the educated classes 
through a magazine I published. Things appeared to be going well, but I felt 
I was not quite sound mentally and that matters could not long continue in that 
way. And I should perhaps then have come to the state of despair I reached fifteen 
years later had there not been one side of life still unexplored by me which 
promised me happiness: that was my marriage.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p5">For a year I busied myself with arbitration work, the schools, and the magazine; 
and I became so worn out — as a result especially of my mental confusion — 
and so hard was my struggle as Arbiter, so obscure the results of my activity 
in the schools, so repulsive my shuffling in the magazine (which always amounted 
to one and the same thing: a desire to teach everybody and to hide the fact 
that I did not know what to teach), that I fell ill, mentally rather than physically, 
threw up everything, and went away to the Bashkirs in the steppes, to breathe 
fresh air, drink kumys<note n="5" id="ii.iii-p5.1">A fermented drink prepared from mare's milk.—A.M.</note>, 
and live a merely animal life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p6">Returning from there I married. The new conditions of happy family life completely 
diverted me from all search for the general meaning of life. My whole life was 
centred at that time in my family, wife and children, and therefore in care 
to increase our means of livelihood. My striving after self-perfection, for 
which I had already substituted a striving for perfection in general, i.e. progress, 
was now again replaced by the effort simply to secure the best possible conditions 
for myself and my family.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p7">So another fifteen years passed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p8">In spite of the fact that I now regarded authorship as of no importance — 
the temptation of immense monetary rewards and applause for my insignificant 
work — and I devoted myself to it as a means of improving my material position 
and of stifling in my soul all questions as to the meaning of my own life or 
life in general.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p9">I wrote: teaching what was for me the only truth, namely, that one should 
live so as to have the best for oneself and one's family.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p10">So I lived; but five years ago something very strange began to happen to 
me. At first I experienced moments of perplexity and arrest of life, and though 
I did not know what to do or how to live; and I felt lost and became dejected. 
But this passed and I went on living as before. Then these moments of perplexity 
began to recur oftener and oftener, and always in the same form. They were always 
expressed by the questions: What is it for? What does it lead to?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p11">At first it seemed to me that these were aimless and irrelevant questions. 
I thought that it was all well known, and that if I should ever wish to deal 
with the solution it would not cost me much effort; just at present I had no 
time for it, but when I wanted to I should be able to find the answer. The questions 
however began to repeat themselves frequently, and to demand replies more and 
more insistently; and like drops of ink always falling on one place they ran 
together into one black blot.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p12">Then occurred what happens to everyone sickening with a mortal internal disease. 
At first trivial signs of indisposition appear to which the sick man pays no 
attention; then these signs reappear more and more often and merge into one 
uninterrupted period of suffering. The suffering increases, and before the sick 
man can look round, what he took for a mere indisposition has already become 
more important to him than anything else in the world — it is death!</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p13">That is what happened to me. I understood that it was no casual indisposition 
but something very important, and that if these questions constantly repeated 
themselves they would have to be answered. And I tried to answer them. The questions 
seemed such stupid, simple, childish ones; but as soon as I touched them and 
tried to solve them I at once became convinced, first, that they are not childish 
and stupid but the most important and profound of life's questions; and secondly 
that, occupying myself with my Samara estate, the education of my son, or the 
writing of a book, I had to know <i>why</i> I was doing it. As long as I did 
not know why, I could do nothing and could not live. Amid the thoughts of estate 
management which greatly occupied me at that time, the question would suddenly 
occur: “Well, you will have 6,000 desyatinas<note n="6" id="ii.iii-p13.1">The desyatina is about 2.75 
acres.—A.M.</note> 
of land in Samara Government and 300 horses, and what then?” . . . And I was quite 
disconcerted and did not know what to think. Or when considering plans for the 
education of my children, I would say to myself: “What for?” Or when considering 
how the peasants might become prosperous, I would suddenly say to myself: “But 
what does it matter to me?” Or when thinking of the fame my works would bring 
me, I would say to myself, “Very well; you will be more famous than Gogol or 
Pushkin or Shakespeare or Moliere, or than all the writers in the world — and 
what of it?” And I could find no reply at all. The questions would not wait, 
they had to be answered at once, and if I did not answer them it was impossible 
to live. But there was no answer.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iii-p14">I felt that what I had been standing on had collapsed and that I had nothing 
left under my feet. What I had lived on no longer existed, and there was nothing 
left.</p>
</div2>

      <div2 title="IV" progress="17.80%" id="ii.iv" prev="ii.iii" next="ii.v">

<h2 id="ii.iv-p0.1">IV</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p1">My life came to a standstill. I could breathe, eat, drink, and sleep, and 
I could not help doing these things; but there was no life, for there were no 
wishes the fulfillment of which I could consider reasonable. If I desired anything, 
I knew in advance that whether I satisfied my desire or not, nothing would come 
of it. Had a fairy come and offered to fulfil my desires I should not have know 
what to ask. If in moments of intoxication I felt something which, though not 
a wish, was a habit left by former wishes, in sober moments I knew this to be 
a delusion and that there was really nothing to wish for. I could not even wish 
to know the truth, for I guessed of what it consisted. The truth was that life 
is meaningless. I had as it were lived, lived, and walked, walked, till I had 
come to a precipice and saw clearly that there was nothing ahead of me but destruction. 
It was impossible to stop, impossible to go back, and impossible to close my 
eyes or avoid seeing that there was nothing ahead but suffering and real death 
— complete annihilation.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p2">It had come to this, that I, a healthy, fortunate man, felt I could no longer 
live: some irresistible power impelled me to rid myself one way or other of 
life. I cannot say I <i>wished</i> to kill myself. The power which drew me away 
from life was stronger, fuller, and more widespread than any mere wish. It was 
a force similar to the former striving to live, only in a contrary direction. 
All my strength drew me away from life. The thought of self-destruction now 
came to me as naturally as thoughts of how to improve my life had come formerly. 
and it was seductive that I had to be cunning with myself lest I should carry 
it out too hastily. I did not wish to hurry, because I wanted to use all efforts 
to disentangle the matter. “If I cannot unravel matters, there will always be 
time.” and it was then that I, a man favoured by fortune, hid a cord from myself 
lest I should hang myself from the crosspiece of the partition in my room where 
I undressed alone every evening, and I ceased to go out shooting with a gun 
lest I should be tempted by so easy a way of ending my life. I did not myself 
know what I wanted: I feared life, desired to escape from it, yet still hoped 
something of it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p3">And all this befell me at a time when all around me I had what is considered 
complete good fortune. I was not yet fifty; I had a good wife who loved me and 
whom I loved, good children, and a large estate which without much effort on 
my part improved and increased. I was respected by my relations and acquaintances 
more than at any previous time. I was praised by others and without much self-deception could consider that my name was famous. And far from being insane 
or mentally diseased, I enjoyed on the contrary a strength of mind and body 
such as I have seldom met with among men of my kind; physically I could keep 
up with the peasants at mowing, and mentally I could work for eight and ten 
hours at a stretch without experiencing any ill results from such exertion. 
And in this situation I came to this — that I could not live, and, fearing 
death, had to employ cunning with myself to avoid taking my own life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p4">My mental condition presented itself to me in this way: my life is a stupid 
and spiteful joke someone has played on me. Though I did not acknowledge a “someone” 
who created me, yet such a presentation — that someone had played an evil and 
stupid joke on my by placing me in the world — was the form of expression that 
suggested itself most naturally to me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p5">Involuntarily it appeared to me that there, somewhere, was someone who amused 
himself by watching how I lived for thirty or forty years: learning, developing, 
maturing in body and mind, and how, having with matured mental powers reached 
the summit of life from which it all lay before me, I stood on that summit 
— like an arch-fool — seeing clearly that there is nothing in life, and that 
there has been and will be nothing. And <i>he</i> was amused. . . .</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p6">But whether that “someone” laughing at me existed or not, I was none the 
better off. I could give no reasonable meaning to any single action or to my 
whole life. I was only surprised that I could have avoided understanding this 
from the very beginning — it has been so long known to all. Today or tomorrow 
sickness and death will come (they had come already) to those I love or to me; 
nothing will remain but stench and worms. Sooner or later my affairs, whatever 
they may be, will be forgotten, and I shall not exist. Then why go on making 
any effort? . . . How can man fail to see this? And how go on living? That is 
what is surprising! One can only live while one is intoxicated with life; as 
soon as one is sober it is impossible not to see that it is all a mere fraud 
and a stupid fraud! That is precisely what it is: there is nothing either amusing 
or witty about it, it is simply cruel and stupid.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p7">There is an Eastern fable, told long ago, of a traveller overtaken on a plain 
by an enraged beast. Escaping from the beast he gets into a dry well, but sees 
at the bottom of the well a dragon that has opened its jaws to swallow him. 
And the unfortunate man, not daring to climb out lest he should be destroyed 
by the enraged beast, and not daring to leap to the bottom of the well lest 
he should be eaten by the dragon, seizes s twig growing in a crack in the well 
and clings to it. His hands are growing weaker and he feels he will soon have 
to resign himself to the destruction that awaits him above or below, but still 
he clings on. Then he sees that two mice, a black one and a white one, go regularly 
round and round the stem of the twig to which he is clinging and gnaw at it. 
And soon the twig itself will snap and he will fall into the dragon's jaws. 
The traveller sees this and knows that he will inevitably perish; but while 
still hanging he looks around, sees some drops of honey on the leaves of the 
twig, reaches them with his tongue and licks them. So I too clung to the twig 
of life, knowing that the dragon of death was inevitably awaiting me, ready 
to tear me to pieces; and I could not understand why I had fallen into such 
torment. I tried to lick the honey which formerly consoled me, but the honey 
no longer gave me pleasure, and the white and black mice of day and night gnawed 
at the branch by which I hung. I saw the dragon clearly and the honey no longer 
tasted sweet. I only saw the unescapable dragon and the mice, and I could not 
tear my gaze from them. and this is not a fable but the real unanswerable truth 
intelligible to all.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p8">The deception of the joys of life which formerly allayed my terror of the 
dragon now no longer deceived me. No matter how often I may be told, “You cannot 
understand the meaning of life so do not think about it, but live,” I can no 
longer do it: I have already done it too long. I cannot now help seeing day 
and night going round and bringing me to death. That is all I see, for that 
alone is true. All else is false.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p9">The two drops of honey which diverted my eyes from the cruel truth longer 
than the rest: my love of family, and of writing — art as I called it — were 
no longer sweet to me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p10">“Family”. . .said I to myself. But my family — wife and children — are also 
human. They are placed just as I am: they must either live in a lie or see the 
terrible truth. Why should they live? Why should I love them, guard them, bring 
them up, or watch them? That they may come to the despair that I feel, or else 
be stupid? Loving them, I cannot hide the truth from them: each step in knowledge 
leads them to the truth. And the truth is death.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p11">“Art, poetry?”. . .Under the influence of success and the praise of men, I 
had long assured myself that this was a thing one could do though death was 
drawing near — death which destroys all things, including my work and its remembrance; 
but soon I saw that that too was a fraud. It was plain to me that art is an 
adornment of life, an allurement to life. But life had lost its attraction for 
me, so how could I attract others? As long as I was not living my own life but 
was borne on the waves of some other life — as long as I believed that life 
had a meaning, though one I could not express — the reflection of life in poetry 
and art of all kinds afforded me pleasure: it was pleasant to look at life in 
the mirror of art. But when I began to seek the meaning of life and felt the 
necessity of living my own life, that mirror became for me unnecessary, superfluous, 
ridiculous, or painful. I could no longer soothe myself with what I now saw 
in the mirror, namely, that my position was stupid and desperate. It was all 
very well to enjoy the sight when in the depth of my soul I believed that my 
life had a meaning. Then the play of lights — comic, tragic, touching, beautiful, 
and terrible — in life amused me. No sweetness of honey could be sweet to me 
when I saw the dragon and saw the mice gnawing away my support.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p12">Nor was that all. Had I simply understood that life had no meaning I could 
have borne it quietly, knowing that that was my lot. But I could not satisfy 
myself with that. Had I been like a man living in a wood from which he knows 
there is no exit, I could have lived; but I was like one lost in a wood who, 
horrified at having lost his way, rushes about wishing to find the road. He 
knows that each step he takes confuses him more and more, but still he cannot 
help rushing about.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.iv-p13">It was indeed terrible. And to rid myself of the terror I wished to kill 
myself. I experienced terror at what awaited me — knew that that terror was 
even worse than the position I was in, but still I could not patiently await 
the end. However convincing the argument might be that in any case some vessel 
in my heart would give way, or something would burst and all would be over, 
I could not patiently await that end. The horror of darkness was too great, 
and I wished to free myself from it as quickly as possible by noose or bullet. 
that was the feeling which drew me most strongly towards suicide.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="V" progress="24.77%" id="ii.v" prev="ii.iv" next="ii.vi">
<h2 id="ii.v-p0.1">V</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p1">“But perhaps I have overlooked something, or misunderstood something?” said 
to myself several times. “It cannot be that this condition of despair is natural 
to man!” And I sought for an explanation of these problems in all the branches 
of knowledge acquired by men. I sought painfully and long, not from idle curiosity 
or listlessly, but painfully and persistently day and night — sought as a perishing 
man seeks for safety — and I found nothing.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p2">I sought in all the sciences, but far from finding what I wanted, became 
convinced that all who like myself had sought in knowledge for the meaning of 
life had found nothing. And not only had they found nothing, but they had plainly 
acknowledged that the very thing which made me despair — namely the senselessness 
of life — is the one indubitable thing man can know.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p3">I sought everywhere; and thanks to a life spent in learning, and thanks also 
to my relations with the scholarly world, I had access to scientists and scholars 
in all branches of knowledge, and they readily showed me all their knowledge, 
not only in books but also in conversation, so that I had at my disposal all 
that science has to say on this question of life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p4">I was long unable to believe that it gives no other reply to life's questions 
than that which it actually does give. It long seemed to me, when I saw the 
important and serious air with which science announces its conclusions which 
have nothing in common with the real questions of human life, that there was 
something I had not understood. I long was timid before science, and it seemed 
to me that the lack of conformity between the answers and my questions arose 
not by the fault of science but from my ignorance, but the matter was for me 
not a game or an amusement but one of life and death, and I was involuntarily 
brought to the conviction that my questions were the only legitimate ones, forming 
the basis of all knowledge, and that I with my questions was not to blame, but 
science if it pretends to reply to those questions.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p5">My question — that which at the age of fifty brought me to the verge of 
suicide — was the simplest of questions, lying in the soul of every man from 
the foolish child to the wisest elder: it was a question without an answer to 
which one cannot live, as I had found by experience. It was: “What will come 
of what I am doing today or shall do tomorrow? What will come of my whole life?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p6">Differently expressed, the question is: “Why should I live, why wish for 
anything, or do anything?” It can also be expressed thus: “Is there any meaning 
in my life that the inevitable death awaiting me does not destroy?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p7">To this one question, variously expressed, I sought an answer in science. 
And I found that in relation to that question all human knowledge is divided 
as it were into tow opposite hemispheres at the ends of which are two poles: 
the one a negative and the other a positive; but that neither at the one nor 
the other pole is there an answer to life's questions.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p8">The one series of sciences seems not to recognize the question, but replies 
clearly and exactly to its own independent questions: that is the series of 
experimental sciences, and at the extreme end of it stands mathematics. The 
other series of sciences recognizes the question, but does not answer it; that 
is the series of abstract sciences, and at the extreme end of it stands metaphysics.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p9">From early youth I had been interested in the abstract sciences, but later 
the mathematical and natural sciences attracted me, and until I put my question 
definitely to myself, until that question had itself grown up within me urgently 
demanding a decision, I contented myself with those counterfeit answers which 
science gives.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p10">Now in the experimental sphere I said to myself: “Everything develops and 
differentiates itself, moving towards complexity and perfection, and there are 
laws directing this movement. You are a part of the whole. Having learnt as 
far as possible the whole, and having learnt the law of evolution, you will 
understand also your place in the whole and will know yourself.” Ashamed as 
I am to confess it, there wa a time when I seemed satisfied with that. It was 
just the time when I was myself becoming more complex and was developing. My 
muscles were growing and strengthening, my memory was being enriched, my capacity 
to think and understand was increasing, I was growing and developing; and feeling 
this growth in myself it was natural for me to think that such was the universal 
law in which I should find the solution of the question of my life. But a time 
came when the growth within me ceased. I felt that I was not developing, but 
fading, my muscles were weakening, my teeth falling out, and I saw that the 
law not only did not explain anything to me, but that there never had been or 
could be such a law, and that I had taken for a law what I had found in myself 
at a certain period of my life. I regarded the definition of that law more strictly, 
and it became clear to me that there could be no law of endless development; 
it became clear that to say, “in infinite space and time everything develops, 
becomes more perfect and more complex, is differentiated”, is to say nothing 
at all. These are all words with no meaning, for in the infinite there is neither 
complex nor simple, neither forward nor backward, nor better or worse.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p11">Above all, my personal question, “What am I with my desires?” remained quite 
unanswered. And I understood that those sciences are very interesting and attractive, 
but that they are exact and clear in inverse proportion to their applicability 
to the question of life: the less their applicability to the question of life, 
the more exact and clear they are, while the more they try to reply to the question 
of life, the more obscure and unattractive they become. If one turns to the 
division of sciences which attempt to reply to the questions of life — to physiology, 
psychology, biology, sociology — one encounters an appalling poverty of thought, 
the greatest obscurity, a quite unjustifiable pretension to solve irrelevant 
question, and a continual contradiction of each authority by others and even 
by himself. If one turns to the branches of science which are not concerned 
with the solution of the questions of life, but which reply to their own special 
scientific questions, one is enraptured by the power of man's mind, but one 
knows in advance that they give no reply to life's questions. Those sciences 
simply ignore life's questions. They say: “To the question of what you are and 
why you live we have no reply, and are not occupied with that; but if you want 
to know the laws of light, of chemical combinations, the laws of development 
of organisms, if you want to know the laws of bodies and their form, and the 
relation of numbers and quantities, if you want to know the laws of your mind, 
to all that we have clear, exact and unquestionable replies.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p12">In general the relation of the experimental sciences to life's question may 
be expressed thus: Question: “Why do I live?” Answer: “In infinite space, in 
infinite time, infinitely small particles change their forms in infinite complexity, 
and when you have under stood the laws of those mutations of form you will understand 
why you live on the earth.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p13">Then in the sphere of abstract science I said to myself: “All humanity lives 
and develops on the basis of spiritual principles and ideals which guide it. 
Those ideals are expressed in religions, in sciences, in arts, in forms of government. 
Those ideals become more and more elevated, and humanity advances to its highest 
welfare. I am part of humanity, and therefore my vocation is to forward the 
recognition and the realization of the ideals of humanity.” And at the time 
of my weak-mindedness I was satisfied with that; but as soon as the question 
of life presented itself clearly to me, those theories immediately crumbled 
away. Not to speak of the unscrupulous obscurity with which those sciences announce 
conclusions formed on the study of a small part of mankind as general conclusions; 
not to speak of the mutual contradictions of different adherents of this view 
as to what are the ideals of humanity; the strangeness, not to say stupidity, 
of the theory consists in the fact that in order to reply to the question facing 
each man: “What am I?” or “Why do I live?” or “What must I do?” one has first 
to decide the question: “What is the life of the whole?” (which is to him unknown 
and of which he is acquainted with one tiny part in one minute period of time. 
To understand what he is, one man must first understand all this mysterious 
humanity, consisting of people such as himself who do not understand one another.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p14">I have to confess that there was a time when I believed this. It was the 
time when I had my own favourite ideals justifying my own caprices, and I was 
trying to devise a theory which would allow one to consider my caprices as the 
law of humanity. But as soon as the question of life arose in my soul in full 
clearness that reply at once flew to dust. And I understood that as in the experimental 
sciences there are real sciences, and semi-sciences which try to give answers 
to questions beyond their competence, so in this sphere there is a whole series 
of most diffused sciences which try to reply to irrelevant questions. Semi-sciences 
of that kind, the juridical and the social-historical, endeavour to solve the 
questions of a man's life by pretending to decide each in its own way, the question 
of the life of all humanity.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p15">But as in the sphere of man's experimental knowledge one who sincerely inquires 
how he is to live cannot be satisfied with the reply — “Study in endless space 
the mutations, infinite in time and in complexity, of innumerable atoms, and 
then you will understand your life” — so also a sincere man cannot be satisfied 
with the reply: “Study the whole life of humanity of which we cannot know either 
the beginning or the end, of which we do not even know a small part, and then 
you will understand your own life.” And like the experimental semi-sciences, 
so these other semi-sciences are the more filled with obscurities, inexactitudes, 
stupidities, and contradictions, the further they diverge from the real problems. 
The problem of experimental science is the sequence of cause and effect in material 
phenomena. It is only necessary for experimental science to introduce the question 
of a final cause for it to become nonsensical. The problem of abstract science 
is the recognition of the primordial essence of life. It is only necessary to 
introduce the investigation of consequential phenomena (such as social and historical 
phenomena) and it also becomes nonsensical.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p16">Experimental science only then gives positive knowledge and displays the 
greatness of the human mind when it does not introduce into its investigations 
the question of an ultimate cause. And, on the contrary, abstract science is 
only then science and displays the greatness of the human mind when it puts 
quite aside questions relating to the consequential causes of phenomena and 
regards man solely in relation to an ultimate cause. Such in this realm of science 
— forming the pole of the sphere — is metaphysics or philosophy. That science 
states the question clearly: “What am I, and what is the universe? And why do 
I exist, and why does the universe exist?” And since it has existed it has always 
replied in the same way. Whether the philosopher calls the essence of life existing 
within me, and in all that exists, by the name of “idea”, or “substance”, or 
“spirit”, or “will”, he says one and the same thing: that this essence exists 
and that I am of that same essence; but why it is he does not know, and does 
not say, if he is an exact thinker. I ask: “Why should this essence exist? What 
results from the fact that it is and will be?” . . . And philosophy not merely 
does not reply, but is itself only asking that question. And if it is real philosophy 
all its labour lies merely in trying to put that question clearly. And if it 
keeps firmly to its task it cannot reply to the question otherwise than thus: 
“What am I, and what is the universe?” “All and nothing”; and to the question 
“Why?” by “I do not know”.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.v-p17">So that however I may turn these replies of philosophy, I can never obtain 
anything like an answer — and not because, as in the clear experimental sphere, 
the reply does not relate to my question, but because here, though all the mental 
work is directed just to my question, there is no answer, but instead of an 
answer one gets the same question, only in a complex form.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="VI" progress="33.55%" id="ii.vi" prev="ii.v" next="ii.vii">
<h2 id="ii.vi-p0.1">VI</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p1">In my search for answers to life's questions I experienced just what is felt 
by a man lost in a forest.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p2">He reaches a glade, climbs a tree, and clearly sees the limitless distance, 
but sees that his home is not and cannot be there; then he goes into the dark 
wood and sees the darkness, but there also his home is not.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p3">So I wandered n that wood of human knowledge, amid the gleams of mathematical 
and experimental science which showed me clear horizons but in a direction where 
there could be no home, and also amid the darkness of the abstract sciences 
where I was immersed in deeper gloom the further I went, and where I finally 
convinced myself that there was, and could be, no exit.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p4">Yielding myself to the bright side of knowledge, I understood that I was 
only diverting my gaze from the question. However alluringly clear those horizons 
which opened out before me might be, however alluring it might be to immerse 
oneself in the limitless expanse of those sciences, I already understood that 
the clearer they were the less they met my need and the less they applied to 
my question.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p5">“I know,” said I to myself, “what science so persistently tries to discover, 
and along that road there is no reply to the question as to the meaning of my 
life.” In the abstract sphere I understood that notwithstanding the fact, or 
just because of the fact, that the direct aim of science is to reply to my question, 
there is no reply but that which I have myself already given: “What is the meaning 
of my life?” “There is none.” Or: “What will come of my life?” “Nothing.” Or: 
“Why does everything exist that exists, and why do I exist?” “Because it exists.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p6">Inquiring for one region of human knowledge, I received an innumerable quantity 
of exact replies concerning matters about which I had not asked: about the chemical 
constituents of the stars, about the movement of the sun towards the constellation 
Hercules, about the origin of species and of man, about the forms of infinitely 
minute imponderable particles of ether; but in this sphere of knowledge the 
only answer to my question, “What is the meaning of my life?” was: “You are 
what you call your ‘life'; you are a transitory, casual cohesion of particles. 
The mutual interactions and changes of these particles produce in you what you 
call your “life”. That cohesion will last some time; afterwards the interaction 
of these particles will cease and what you call “life” will cease, and so will 
all your questions. You are an accidentally united little lump of something. 
that little lump ferments. The little lump calls that fermenting its ‘life'. 
The lump will disintegrate and there will be an end of the fermenting and of 
all the questions.” So answers the clear side of science and cannot answer otherwise 
if it strictly follows its principles.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p7">From such a reply one sees that the reply does not answer the question. I 
want to know the meaning of my life, but that it is a fragment of the infinite, 
far from giving it a meaning destroys its every possible meaning. The obscure 
compromises which that side of experimental exact science makes with abstract 
science when it says that the meaning of life consists in development and in 
cooperation with development, owing to their inexactness and obscurity cannot 
be considered as replies.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p8">The other side of science — the abstract side — when it holds strictly 
to its principles, replying directly to the question, always replies, and in 
all ages has replied, in one and the same way: “The world is something infinite 
and incomprehensible part of that incomprehensible ‘all'.” Again I exclude all 
those compromises between abstract and experimental sciences which supply the 
whole ballast of the semi-sciences called juridical, political, and historical. 
In those semi-sciences the conception of development and progress is again wrongly 
introduced, only with this difference, that there it was the development of 
everything while here it is the development of the life of mankind. The error 
is there as before: development and progress in infinity can have no aim or 
direction, and, as far as my question is concerned, no answer is given.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p9">In truly abstract science, namely in genuine philosophy — not in that which 
Schopenhauer calls “professorial philosophy” which serves only to classify all 
existing phenomena in new philosophic categories and to call them by new names 
— where the philosopher does not lose sight of the essential question, the 
reply is always one and the same — the reply given by Socrates, Schopenhauer, 
Solomon, and buddha.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p10">“We approach truth only inasmuch as we depart from life”, said Socrates when 
preparing for death. “For what do we, who love truth, strive after in life? 
To free ourselves from the body, and from all the evil that is caused by the 
life of the body! If so, then how can we fail to be glad when death comes to 
us?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p11">“The wise man seeks death all his life and therefore death is not terrible 
to him.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p12">And Schopenhauer says:</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p13">“Having recognized the inmost essence of the world as <i>will</i>, and all 
its phenomena — from the unconscious working of the obscure forces of Nature 
up to the completely conscious action of man — as only the objectivity of that 
will, we shall in no way avoid the conclusion that together with the voluntary 
renunciation and self-destruction of the will all those phenomena also disappear, 
that constant striving and effort without aim or rest on all the stages of objectivity 
in which and through which the world exists; the diversity of successive forms 
will disappear, and together with the form all the manifestations of will, with 
its most universal forms, space and time, and finally its most fundamental form 
— subject and object. Without will there is no concept and no world. Before 
us, certainly, nothing remains. But what resists this transition into annihilation, 
our nature, is only that same wish to live — <i><span lang="DE" id="ii.vi-p13.1">Wille zum Leben</span></i> — which 
forms ourselves as well as our world. That we are so afraid of annihilation 
or, what is the same thing, that we so wish to live, merely means that we are 
ourselves nothing else but this desire to live, and know nothing but it. And 
so what remains after the complete annihilation of the will, for us who are 
so full of the will, is, of course, nothing; but on the other hand, for those 
in whom the will has turned and renounced itself, this so real world of ours 
with all its suns and milky way is nothing.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p14">“Vanity of vanities”, says Solomon — “vanity of vanities — all is vanity. 
What profit hath a man of all his labor which he taketh under the sun? One generation 
passeth away, and another generation commeth: but the earth abideth for ever. . . . The 
thing that hath been, is that which shall be; and that which is done is that 
which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun. Is there anything 
whereof it may be said, See, this is new? it hath been already of old time, 
which was before us. there is no remembrance of former things; neither shall 
there be any remembrance of things that are to come with those that shall come 
after. I the Preacher was King over Israel in Jerusalem. And I gave my heart 
to seek and search out by wisdom concerning all that is done under heaven: this 
sore travail hath God given to the sons of man to be exercised therewith. I 
have seen all the works that are done under the sun; and behold, all is vanity 
and vexation of spirit. . . . I communed with my own heart, saying, Lo, I am come 
to great estate, and have gotten more wisdom than all they that have been before 
me over Jerusalem: yea, my heart hath great experience of wisdom and knowledge. 
And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly: I perceived 
that this also is vexation of spirit. For in much wisdom is much grief: and 
he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p15">“I said in my heart, Go to now, I will prove thee with mirth, therefore enjoy 
pleasure: and behold this also is vanity. I said of laughter, It is mad: and 
of mirth, What doeth it? I sought in my heart how to cheer my flesh with wine, 
and while my heart was guided by wisdom, to lay hold on folly, till I might 
see what it was good for the sons of men that they should do under heaven the 
number of the days of their life. I made me great works; I builded me houses; 
I planted me vineyards; I made me gardens and orchards, and I planted trees 
in them of all kinds of fruits: I made me pools of water, to water therefrom 
the forest where trees were reared: I got me servants and maidens, and had servants 
born in my house; also I had great possessions of herds and flocks above all 
that were before me in Jerusalem: I gathered me also silver and gold and the 
peculiar treasure from kings and from the provinces: I got me men singers and 
women singers; and the delights of the sons of men, as musical instruments and 
all that of all sorts. So I was great, and increased more than all that were 
before me in Jerusalem: also my wisdom remained with me. And whatever mine eyes 
desired I kept not from them. I withheld not my heart from any joy. . . . Then I 
looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on the labour that I 
had laboured to do: and, behold, all was vanity and vexation of spirit, and 
there was no profit from them under the sun. And I turned myself to behold wisdom, 
and madness, and folly. . . .  But I perceived that one even happeneth to them all. 
Then said I in my heart, As it happeneth to the fool, so it happeneth even to 
me, and why was I then more wise? then I said in my heart, that this also is 
vanity. For there is no remembrance of the wise more than of the fool for ever; 
seeing that which now is in the days to come shall all be forgotten. And how 
dieth the wise man? as the fool. Therefore I hated life; because the work that 
is wrought under the sun is grievous unto me: for all is vanity and vexation 
of spirit. Yea, I hated all my labour which I had taken under the sun: seeing 
that I must leave it unto the man that shall be after me. . . .  For what hath man 
of all his labour, and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he hath laboured 
under the sun? For all his days are sorrows, and his travail grief; yea, even 
in the night his heart taketh no rest. this is also vanity. Man is not blessed 
with security that he should eat and drink and cheer his soul from his own labour. . . .  
All things come alike to all: there is one event to the righteous and to the 
wicked; to the good and to the evil; to the clean and to the unclean; to him 
that sacrificeth and to him that sacrificeth not; as is the good, so is the 
sinner; and he that sweareth, as he that feareth an oath. This is an evil in 
all that is done under the sun, that there is one event unto all; yea, also 
the heart of the sons of men is full of evil, and madness is in their heart 
while they live, and after that they go to the dead. For him that is among the 
living there is hope: for a living dog is better than a dead lion. For the living 
know that they shall die: but the dead know not any thing, neither have they 
any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten. also their love, and 
their hatred, and their envy, is now perished; neither have they any more a 
portion for ever in any thing that is done under the sun.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p16">So said Solomon, or whoever wrote those words.<note n="7" id="ii.vi-p16.1">Tolstoy's version differs 
slightly in a few places from our own Authorized or Revised version. I have 
followed his text, for in a letter to Fet, quoted on p. 18, vol. ii, of my “Life 
of Tolstoy,” he says that “The Authorized English version [of Ecclesiastes] 
is bad.'—A.M.</note></p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p17">And this is what the Indian wisdom tells:</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p18">Sakya Muni, a young, happy prince, from whom the existence of sickness, old 
age, and death had been hidden, went out to drive and saw a terrible old man, 
toothless and slobbering. the prince, from whom till then old age had been concealed, 
was amazed, and asked his driver what it was, and how that man had come to such 
a wretched and disgusting condition, and when he learnt that this was the common 
fate of all men, that the same thing inevitably awaited him — the young prince 
— he could not continue his drive, but gave orders to go home, that he might 
consider this fact. So he shut himself up alone and considered it. and he probably 
devised some consolation for himself, for he subsequently again went out to 
drive, feeling merry and happy. But this time he saw a sick man. He saw an emaciated, 
livid, trembling man with dim eyes. The prince, from whom sickness had been 
concealed, stopped and asked what this was. And when he learnt that this was 
sickness, to which all men are liable, and that he himself — a healthy and 
happy prince — might himself fall ill tomorrow, he again was in no mood to 
enjoy himself but gave orders to drive home, and again sought some solace, and 
probably found it, for he drove out a third time for pleasure. But this third 
time he saw another new sight: he saw men carrying something. ‘What is that?' 
‘A dead man.' ‘What does <i>dead</i> mean?' asked the prince. He was told that 
to become dead means to become like that man. The prince approached the corpse, 
uncovered it, and looked at it. ‘What will happen to him now?' asked the prince. 
He was told that the corpse would be buried in the ground. ‘Why?' ‘Because he 
will certainly not return to life, and will only produce a stench and worms.' 
‘And is that the fate of all men? Will the same thing happen to me? Will they 
bury me, and shall I cause a stench and be eaten by worms?' ‘Yes.' ‘Home! I 
shall not drive out for pleasure, and never will so drive out again!'</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p19">And Sakya Muni could find no consolation in life, and decided that life is 
the greatest of evils; and he devoted all the strength of his soul to free himself 
from it, and to free others; and to do this so that, even after death, life 
shall not be renewed any more but be completely destroyed at its very roots. 
So speaks all the wisdom of India.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p20">These are the direct replies that human wisdom gives when it replies to life's 
question.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p21">“The life of the body is an evil and a lie. Therefore the destruction of 
the life of the body is a blessing, and we should desire it,” says Socrates.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p22">“Life is that which should not be — an evil; and the passage into Nothingness 
is the only good in life,” says Schopenhauer.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p23">“All that is in the world — folly and wisdom and riches and poverty and 
mirth and grief — is vanity and emptiness. Man dies and nothing is left of 
him. And that is stupid,” says Solomon.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p24">“To life in the consciousness of the inevitability of suffering, of becoming 
enfeebled, of old age and of death, is impossible — we must free ourselves 
from life, from all possible life,” says Buddha.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p25">And what these strong minds said has been said and thought and felt by millions 
upon millions of people like them. And I have thought it and felt it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p26">So my wandering among the sciences, far from freeing me from my despair, 
only strengthened it. One kind of knowledge did not reply to life's question, 
the other kind replied directly confirming my despair, indicating not that the 
result at which I had arrived was the fruit of error or of a diseased state 
of my mind, but on the contrary that I had thought correctly, and that my thoughts 
coincided with the conclusions of the most powerful of human minds.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vi-p27">It is no good deceiving oneself. It is all — vanity! Happy is he who has 
not been born: death is better than life, and one must free oneself from life.
</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="VII" progress="44.32%" id="ii.vii" prev="ii.vi" next="ii.viii">
<h2 id="ii.vii-p0.1">VII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p1">Not finding an explanation in science I began to seek for it in life, hoping 
to find it among the people around me. And I began to observe how the people 
around me — people like myself — lived, and what their attitude was to this 
question which had brought me to despair.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p2">And this is what I found among people who were in the same position as myself 
as regards education and manner of life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p3">I found that for people of my circle there were four ways out of the terrible 
position in which we are all placed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p4">The first was that of ignorance. It consists in not knowing, not understanding, 
that life is an evil and an absurdity. People of this sort — chiefly women, 
or very young or very dull people — have not yet understood that question of 
life which presented itself to Schopenhauer, Solomon, and Buddha. They see neither 
the dragon that awaits them nor the mice gnawing the shrub by which they are 
hanging, and they lick the drops of honey. but they lick those drops of honey 
only for a while: something will turn their attention to the dragon and the 
mice, and there will be an end to their licking. From them I had nothing to 
learn — one cannot cease to know what one does know.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p5">The second way out is epicureanism. It consists, while knowing the hopelessness 
of life, in making use meanwhile of the advantages one has, disregarding the 
dragon and the mice, and licking the honey in the best way, especially if there 
is much of it within reach. Solomon expresses this way out thus: “Then I commended 
mirth, because a man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat, and to 
drink, and to be merry: and that this should accompany him in his labour the 
days of his life, which God giveth him under the sun.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p6">“Therefore eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart. . . .  
Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest all the days of the life of thy 
vanity. . .for this is thy portion in life and in thy labours which thou takest 
under the sun. . . .  Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for 
there is not work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither 
thou goest.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p7">That is the way in which the majority of people of our circle make life possible 
for themselves. Their circumstances furnish them with more of welfare than of 
hardship, and their moral dullness makes it possible for them to forget that 
the advantage of their position is accidental, and that not everyone can have 
a thousand wives and palaces like Solomon, that for everyone who has a thousand 
wives there are a thousand without a wife, and that for each palace there are 
a thousand people who have to build it in the sweat of their brows; and that 
the accident that has today made me a Solomon may tomorrow make me a Solomon's 
slave. The dullness of these people's imagination enables them to forget the 
things that gave Buddha no peace — the inevitability of sickness, old age, 
and death, which today or tomorrow will destroy all these pleasures.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p8">So think and feel the majority of people of our day and our manner of life. 
The fact that some of these people declare the dullness of their thoughts and 
imaginations to be a philosophy, which they call Positive, does not remove them, 
in my opinion, from the ranks of those who, to avoid seeing the question, lick 
the honey. I could not imitate these people; not having their dullness of imagination 
I could not artificially produce it in myself. I could not tear my eyes from 
the mice and the dragon, as no vital man can after he has once seen them.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p9">The third escape is that of strength and energy. It consists in destroying 
life, when one has understood that it is an evil and an absurdity. A few exceptionally 
strong and consistent people act so. Having understood the stupidity of the 
joke that has been played on them, and having understood that it is better to 
be dead than to be alive, and that it is best of all not to exist, they act 
accordingly and promptly end this stupid joke, since there are means: a rope 
round one's neck, water, a knife to stick into one's heart, or the trains on 
the railways; and the number of those of our circle who act in this way becomes 
greater and greater, and for the most part they act so at the best time of their 
life, when the strength of their mind is in full bloom and few habits degrading 
to the mind have as yet been acquired.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p10">I saw that this was the worthiest way of escape and I wished to adopt it.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p11">The fourth way out is that of weakness. It consists in seeing the truth of 
the situation and yet clinging to life, knowing in advance that nothing can 
come of it. People of this kind know that death is better than life, but not 
having the strength to act rationally — to end the deception quickly and kill 
themselves — they seem to wait for something. This is the escape of weakness, 
for if I know what is best and it is within my power, why not yield to what 
is best? . . . I found myself in that category.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p12">So people of my class evade the terrible contradiction in four ways. Strain 
my attention as I would, I saw no way except those four. One way was not to 
understand that life is senseless, vanity, and an evil, and that it is better 
not to live. I could not help knowing this, and when I once knew it could not 
shut my eyes to it. the second way was to use life such as it is without thinking 
of the future. And I could not do that. I, like Sakya Muni, could not ride out 
hunting when I knew that old age, suffering, and death exist. My imagination 
was too vivid. Nor could I rejoice in the momentary accidents that for an instant 
threw pleasure to my lot. The third way, having under stood that life is evil 
and stupid, was to end it by killing oneself. I understood that, but somehow 
still did not kill myself. The fourth way was to live like Solomon and Schopenhauer 
— knowing that life is a stupid joke played upon us, and still to go on living, 
washing oneself, dressing, dining, talking, and even writing books. This was 
to me repulsive and tormenting, but I remained in that position.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p13">I see now that if I did not kill myself it was due to some dim consciousness 
of the invalidity of my thoughts. However convincing and indubitable appeared 
to me the sequence of my thoughts and of those of the wise that have brought 
us to the admission of the senselessness of life, there remained in me a vague 
doubt of the justice of my conclusion.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p14">It was like this: I, my reason, have acknowledged that life is senseless. 
If there is nothing higher than reason (and there is not: nothing can prove 
that there is), then reason is the creator of life for me. If reason did not 
exist there would be for me no life. How can reason deny life when it is the 
creator of life? Or to put it the other way: were there no life, my reason would 
not exist; therefore reason is life's son. Life is all. Reason is its fruit 
yet reason rejects life itself! I felt that there was something wrong here.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p15">Life is a senseless evil, that is certain, said I to myself. Yet I have lived 
and am still living, and all mankind lived and lives. How is that? Why does 
it live, when it is possible not to live? Is it that only I and Schopenhauer 
are wise enough to understand the senselessness and evil of life?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p16">The reasoning showing the vanity of life is not so difficult, and has long 
been familiar to the very simplest folk; yet they have lived and still live. 
How is it they all live and never think of doubting the reasonableness of life?
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p17">My knowledge, confirmed by the wisdom of the sages, has shown me that everything 
on earth — organic and inorganic — is all most cleverly arranged — only my 
own position is stupid. and those fools — the enormous masses of people — 
know nothing about how everything organic and inorganic in the world is arranged; 
but they live, and it seems to them that their life is very wisely arranged! 
. . .</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p18">And it struck me: “But what if there is something I do not yet know? Ignorance 
behaves just in that way. Ignorance always says just what I am saying. When 
it does not know something, it says that what it does not know is stupid. Indeed, 
it appears that there is a whole humanity that lived and lives as if it understood 
the meaning of its life, for without understanding it could not live; but I 
say that all this life is senseless and that I cannot live.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p19">“Nothing prevents our denying life by suicide. well then, kill yourself, 
and you won't discuss. If life displeases you, kill yourself! You live, and 
cannot understand the meaning of life — then finish it, and do not fool about 
in life, saying and writing that you do not understand it. You have come into 
good company where people are contented and know what they are doing; if you 
find it dull and repulsive — go away!”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p20">Indeed, what are we who are convinced of the necessity of suicide yet do 
not decide to commit it, but the weakest, most inconsistent, and to put it plainly, 
the stupidest of men, fussing about with our own stupidity as a fool fusses 
about with a painted hussy? For our wisdom, however indubitable it may be, has 
not given us the knowledge of the meaning of our life. But all mankind who sustain 
life — millions of them — do not doubt the meaning of life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p21">Indeed, from the most distant time of which I know anything, when life began, 
people have lived knowing the argument about the vanity of life which has shown 
me its senselessness, and yet they lived attributing some meaning to it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.vii-p22">From the time when any life began among men they had that meaning of life, 
and they led that life which has descended to me. All that is in me and around 
me, all, corporeal and incorporeal, is the fruit of their knowledge of life. 
Those very instruments of thought with which I consider this life and condemn 
it were all devised not be me but by them. I myself was born, taught, and brought 
up thanks to them. They dug out the iron, taught us to cut down the forests, 
tamed the cows and horses, taught us to sow corn and to live together, organized 
our life, and taught me to think and speak. And I, their product, fed, supplied 
with drink, taught by them, thinking with their thoughts and words, have argued 
that they are an absurdity! “There is something wrong,” said I to myself. “I 
have blundered somewhere.” But it was a long time before I could find out where 
the mistake was.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="VIII" progress="51.49%" id="ii.viii" prev="ii.vii" next="ii.ix">
<h2 id="ii.viii-p0.1">VIII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p1">All these doubts, which I am now able to express more or less systematically, 
I could not then have expressed. I then only felt that however logically inevitable 
were my conclusions concerning the vanity of life, confirmed as they were by 
the greatest thinkers, there was something not right about them. Whether it 
was in the reasoning itself or in the statement of the question I did not know 
— I only felt that the conclusion was rationally convincing, but that that 
was insufficient. All these conclusions could not so convince me as to make 
me do what followed from my reasoning, that is to say, kill myself. And I should 
have told an untruth had I, without killing myself, said that reason had brought 
me to the point I had reached. Reason worked, but something else was also working 
which I can only call a consciousness of life. A force was working which compelled 
me to turn my attention to this and not to that; and it was this force which 
extricated me from my desperate situation and turned my mind in quite another 
direction. This force compelled me to turn my attention to the fact that I and 
a few hundred similar people are not the whole of mankind, and that I did not 
yet know the life of mankind.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p2">Looking at the narrow circle of my equals, I saw only people who had not 
understood the question, or who had understood it and drowned it in life's intoxication, 
or had understood it and ended their lives, or had understood it and yet from 
weakness were living out their desperate life. And I saw no others. It seemed 
to me that that narrow circle of rich, learned, and leisured people to which 
I belonged formed the whole of humanity, and that those milliards of others 
who have lived and are living were cattle of some sort — not real people.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p3">Strange, incredibly incomprehensible as it now seems to me that I could, 
while reasoning about life, overlook the whole life of mankind that surrounded 
me on all sides; that I could to such a degree blunder so absurdly as to think 
that my life, and Solomon's and Schopenhauer's, is the real, normal life, and 
that the life of the milliards is a circumstance undeserving of attention — 
strange as this now is to me, I see that so it was. In the delusion of my pride 
of intellect it seemed to me so indubitable that I and Solomon and Schopenhauer 
had stated the question so truly and exactly that nothing else was possible 
— so indubitable did it seem that all those milliards consisted of men who 
had not yet arrived at an apprehension of all the profundity of the question 
— that I sought for the meaning of my life without it once occurring to me 
to ask: “But what meaning is and has been given to their lives by all the milliards 
of common folk who live and have lived in the world?”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p4">I long lived in this state of lunacy, which, in fact if not in words, is 
particularly characteristic of us very liberal and learned people. But thanks 
either to the strange physical affection I have for the real labouring people, 
which compelled me to understand them and to see that they are not so stupid 
as we suppose, or thanks to the sincerity of my conviction that I could know 
nothing beyond the fact that the best I could do was to hang myself, at any 
rate I instinctively felt that if I wished to live and understand the meaning 
of life, I must seek this meaning not among those who have lost it and wish 
to kill themselves, but among those milliards of the past and the present who 
make life and who support the burden of their own lives and of ours also. And 
I considered the enormous masses of those simple, unlearned, and poor people 
who have lived and are living and I saw something quite different. I saw that, 
with rare exceptions, all those milliards who have lived and are living do not 
fit into my divisions, and that I could not class them as not understanding 
the question, for they themselves state it and reply to it with extraordinary 
clearness. Nor could I consider them epicureans, for their life consists more 
of privations and sufferings than of enjoyments. Still less could I consider 
them as irrationally dragging on a meaningless existence, for every act of their 
life, as well as death itself, is explained by them. To kill themselves they 
consider the greatest evil. It appeared that all mankind had a knowledge, unacknowledged 
and despised by me, of the meaning of life. It appeared that reasonable knowledge 
does not give the meaning of life, but excludes life: while the meaning attributed 
to life by milliards of people, by all humanity, rests on some despised pseudo-knowledge.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p5">Rational knowledge presented by the learned and wise, denies the meaning 
of life, but the enormous masses of men, the whole of mankind receive that meaning 
in irrational knowledge. And that irrational knowledge is faith, that very thing 
which I could not but reject. It is God, One in Three; the creation in six days; 
the devils and angels, and all the rest that I cannot accept as long as I retain 
my reason.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.viii-p6">My position was terrible. I knew I could find nothing along the path of reasonable 
knowledge except a denial of life; and there — in faith — was nothing but 
a denial of reason, which was yet more impossible for me than a denial of life. 
From rational knowledge it appeared that life is an evil, people know this and 
it is in their power to end life; yet they lived and still live, and I myself 
live, though I have long known that life is senseless and an evil. By faith 
it appears that in order to understand the meaning of life I must renounce my 
reason, the very thing for which alone a meaning is required.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="IX" progress="55.40%" id="ii.ix" prev="ii.viii" next="ii.x">
<h2 id="ii.ix-p0.1">IX</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p1">A contradiction arose from which there were two exits. Either that which 
I called reason was not so rational as I supposed, or that which seemed to me 
irrational was not so irrational as I supposed. And I began to verify the line 
of argument of my rational knowledge.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p2">Verifying the line of argument of rational knowledge I found it quite correct. 
The conclusion that life is nothing was inevitable; but I noticed a mistake. 
The mistake lay in this, that my reasoning was not in accord with the question 
I had put. The question was: “Why should I live, that is to say, what real, 
permanent result will come out of my illusory transitory life — what meaning 
has my finite existence in this infinite world?” And to reply to that question 
I had studied life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p3">The solution of all the possible questions of life could evidently not satisfy 
me, for my question, simple as it at first appeared, included a demand for an 
explanation of the finite in terms of the infinite, and vice versa.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p4">I asked: “What is the meaning of my life, beyond time, cause, and space?” 
And I replied to quite another question: “What is the meaning of my life within 
time, cause, and space?” With the result that, after long efforts of thought, 
the answer I reached was: “None.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p5">In my reasonings I constantly compared (nor could I do otherwise) the finite 
with the finite, and the infinite with the infinite; but for that reason I reached 
the inevitable result: force is force, matter is matter, will is will, the infinite 
is the infinite, nothing is nothing — and that was all that could result.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p6">It was something like what happens in mathematics, when thinking to solve 
an equation, we find we are working on an identity. the line of reasoning is 
correct, but results in the answer that <i>a</i> equals <i>a</i>, or <i>x</i> 
equals <i>x</i>, or ø equals ø. the same thing happened with my reasoning in 
relation to the question of the meaning of my life. The replies given by all 
science to that question only result in — identity.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p7">And really, strictly scientific knowledge — that knowledge which begins, 
as Descartes's did, with complete doubt about everything — rejects all knowledge 
admitted on faith and builds everything afresh on the laws of reason and experience, 
and cannot give any other reply to the question of life than that which I obtained: 
an indefinite reply. Only at first had it seemed to me that knowledge had given 
a positive reply — the reply of Schopenhauer: that life has no meaning and 
is an evil. But on examining the matter I understood that the reply is not positive, 
it was only my feeling that so expressed it. Strictly expressed, as it is by 
the Brahmins and by Solomon and Schopenhauer, the reply is merely indefinite, 
or an identity: ø equals ø, life is nothing. So that philosophic knowledge denies 
nothing, but only replies that the question cannot be solved by it — that for 
it the solution remains indefinite.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p8">Having understood this, I understood that it was not possible to seek in 
rational knowledge for a reply to my question, and that the reply given by rational 
knowledge is a mere indication that a reply can only be obtained by a different 
statement of the question and only when the relation of the finite to the infinite 
is included in the question. And I understood that, however irrational and distorted 
might be the replies given by faith, they have this advantage, that they introduce 
into every answer a relation between the finite and the infinite, without which 
there can be no solution.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p9">In whatever way I stated the question, that relation appeared in the answer. 
How am I to live? — According to the law of God. What real result will come 
of my life? — Eternal torment or eternal bliss. What meaning has life that 
death does not destroy? — Union with the eternal God: heaven.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p10">So that besides rational knowledge, which had seemed to me the only knowledge, 
I was inevitably brought to acknowledge that all live humanity has another irrational 
knowledge — faith which makes it possible to live. Faith still remained to 
me as irrational as it was before, but I could not but admit that it alone gives 
mankind a reply to the questions of life, and that consequently it makes life 
possible. Reasonable knowledge had brought me to acknowledge that life is senseless 
— my life had come to a halt and I wished to destroy myself. Looking around 
on the whole of mankind I saw that people live and declare that they know the 
meaning of life. I looked at myself — I had lived as long as I knew a meaning 
of life and had made life possible.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p11">Looking again at people of other lands, at my contemporaries and at their 
predecessors, I saw the same thing. Where there is life, there since man began 
faith has made life possible for him, and the chief outline of that faith is 
everywhere and always identical.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p12">Whatever the faith may be, and whatever answers it may give, and to whomsoever 
it gives them, every such answer gives to the finite existence of man an infinite 
meaning, a meaning not destroyed by sufferings, deprivations, or death. This 
means that only in faith can we find for life a meaning and a possibility. What, 
then, is this faith? And I understood that faith is not merely “the evidence 
of things not seen”, etc., and is not a revelation (that defines only one of 
the indications of faith, is not the relation of man to God (one has first to 
define faith and then God, and not define faith through God); it not only agreement 
with what has been told one (as faith is most usually supposed to be), but faith 
is a knowledge of the meaning of human life in consequence of which man does 
not destroy himself but lives. Faith is the strength of life. If a man lives 
he believes in something. If he did not believe that one must live for something, 
he would not live. If he does not see and recognize the illusory nature of the 
finite, he believes in the finite; if he understands the illusory nature of 
the finite, he must believe in the infinite. Without faith he cannot live.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p13">And I recalled the whole course of my mental labour and was horrified. It 
was now clear to me that for man to be able to live he must either not see the 
infinite, or have such an explanation of the meaning of life as will connect 
the finite with the infinite. Such an explanation I had had; but as long as 
I believed in the finite I did not need the explanation, and I began to verify 
it by reason. And in the light of reason the whole of my former explanation 
flew to atoms. But a time came when I ceased to believe in the finite. And then 
I began to build up on rational foundations, out of what I knew, an explanation 
which would give a meaning to life; but nothing could I build. Together with 
the best human intellects I reached the result that ø equals ø, and was much 
astonished at that conclusion, though nothing else could have resulted.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p14">What was I doing when I sought an answer in the experimental sciences? I 
wished to know why I live, and for this purpose studied all that is outside 
me. Evidently I might learn much, but nothing of what I needed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p15">What was I doing when I sought an answer in philosophical knowledge? I was 
studying the thoughts of those who had found themselves in the same position 
as I, lacking a reply to the question “why do I live?” Evidently I could learn 
nothing but what I knew myself, namely that nothing can be known.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p16">What am I? — A part of the infinite. In those few words lies the whole problem.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p17">Is it possible that humanity has only put that question to itself since yesterday? 
And can no one before me have set himself that question — a question so simple, 
and one that springs to the tongue of every wise child?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p18">Surely that question has been asked since man began; and naturally for the 
solution of that question since man began it has been equally insufficient to 
compare the finite with the finite and the infinite with the infinite, and since 
man began the relation of the finite to the infinite has been sought out and 
expressed.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p19">All these conceptions in which the finite has been adjusted to the infinite 
and a meaning found for life — the conception of God, of will, of goodness 
— we submit to logical examination. And all those conceptions fail to stand 
reason's criticism.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p20">Were it not so terrible it would be ludicrous with what pride and self-satisfaction 
we, like children, pull the watch to pieces, take out the spring, make a toy 
of it, and are then surprised that the watch does not go.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p21">A solution of the contradiction between the finite and the infinite, and 
such a reply to the question of life as will make it possible to live, is necessary 
and precious. And that is the only solution which we find everywhere, always, 
and among all peoples: a solution descending from times in which we lose sight 
of the life of man, a solution so difficult that we can compose nothing like 
it — and this solution we light-heartedly destroy in order again to set the 
same question, which is natural to everyone and to which we have no answer.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p22">The conception of an infinite god, the divinity of the soul, the connexion 
of human affairs with God, the unity and existence of the soul, man's conception 
of moral goodness and evil — are conceptions formulated in the hidden infinity 
of human thought, they are those conceptions without which neither life nor 
I should exist; yet rejecting all that labour of the whole of humanity, I wished 
to remake it afresh myself and in my own manner.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.ix-p23">I did not then think like that, but the germs of these thoughts were already 
in me. I understood, in the first place, that my position with Schopenhauer 
and Solomon, notwithstanding our wisdom, was stupid: we see that life is an 
evil and yet continue to live. That is evidently stupid, for if life is senseless 
and I am so fond of what is reasonable, it should be destroyed, and then there 
would be no one to challenge it. Secondly, I understood that all one's reasonings 
turned in a vicious circle like a wheel out of gear with its pinion. However 
much and however well we may reason we cannot obtain a reply to the question; 
and o will always equal o, and therefore our path is probably erroneous. Thirdly, 
I began to understand that in the replies given by faith is stored up the deepest 
human wisdom and that I had no right to deny them on the ground of reason, and 
that those answers are the only ones which reply to life's question.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="X" progress="62.61%" id="ii.x" prev="ii.ix" next="ii.xi">
<h2 id="ii.x-p0.1">X</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p1">I understood this, but it made matters no better for me. I was now ready 
to accept any faith if only it did not demand of me a direct denial of reason 
— which would be a falsehood. And I studied Buddhism and Mohammedanism from 
books, and most of all I studied Christianity both from books and from the people 
around me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p2">Naturally I first of all turned to the orthodox of my circle, to people who 
were learned: to Church theologians, monks, to theologians of the newest shade, 
and even to Evangelicals who profess salvation by belief in the Redemption. 
And I seized on these believers and questioned them as to their beliefs and 
their understanding of the meaning of life.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p3">But though I made all possible concessions, and avoided all disputes, I could 
not accept the faith of these people. I saw that what they gave out as their 
faith did not explain the meaning of life but obscured it, and that they themselves 
affirm their belief not to answer that question of life which brought me to 
faith, but for some other aims alien to me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p4">I remember the painful feeling of fear of being thrown back into my former 
state of despair, after the hope I often and often experienced in my intercourse 
with these people.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p5">The more fully they explained to me their doctrines, the more clearly did 
I perceive their error and realized that my hope of finding in their belief 
an explanation of the meaning of life was vain.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p6">It was not that in their doctrines they mixed many unnecessary and unreasonable 
things with the Christian truths that had always been near to me: that was not 
what repelled me. I was repelled by the fact that these people's lives were 
like my own, with only this difference — that such a life did not correspond 
to the principles they expounded in their teachings. I clearly felt that they 
deceived themselves and that they, like myself found no other meaning in life 
than to live while life lasts, taking all one's hands can seize. I saw this 
because if they had had a meaning which destroyed the fear of loss, suffering, 
and death, they would not have feared these things. But they, these believers 
of our circle, just like myself, living in sufficiency and superfluity, tried 
to increase or preserve them, feared privations, suffering, and death, and just 
like myself and all of us unbelievers, lived to satisfy their desires, and lived 
just as badly, if not worse, than the unbelievers.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p7">No arguments could convince me of the truth of their faith. Only deeds which 
showed that they saw a meaning in life making what was so dreadful to me — 
poverty, sickness, and death — not dreadful to them, could convince me. And 
such deeds I did not see among the various believers in our circle. On the contrary, 
I saw such deeds done<note n="8" id="ii.x-p7.1">This passage is noteworthy as being one of the few 
references made by Tolstoy at this period to the revolutionary or “Back-to-the-People” 
movement, in which many young men and women were risking and sacrificing home, 
property, and life itself from motives which had much in common with his own 
perception that the upper layers of Society are parasitic and prey on the vitals 
of the people who support them.—A.M.</note> 
by people of our circle who were the most unbelieving, but never by our so-called believers.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p8">And I understood that the belief of these people was not the faith I sought, 
and that their faith is not a real faith but an epicurean consolation in life.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p9">I understood that that faith may perhaps serve, if not for a consolation 
at least for some distraction for a repentant Solomon on his death-bed, but 
it cannot serve for the great majority of mankind, who are called on not to 
amuse themselves while consuming the labour of others but to create life.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p10">For all humanity to be able to live, and continue to live attributing a meaning 
to life, they, those milliards, must have a different, a real, knowledge of 
faith. Indeed, it was not the fact that we, with Solomon and Schopenhauer, did 
not kill ourselves that convinced me of the existence of faith, but the fact 
that those milliards of people have lived and are living, and have borne Solomon 
and us on the current of their lives.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p11">And I began to draw near to the believers among the poor, simple, unlettered 
folk: pilgrims, monks, sectarians, and peasants. The faith of these common people 
was the same Christian faith as was professed by the pseudo-believers of our 
circle. Among them, too, I found a great deal of superstition mixed with the 
Christian truths; but the difference was that the superstitions of the believers 
of our circle were quite unnecessary to them and were not in conformity with 
their lives, being merely a kind of epicurean diversion; but the superstitions 
of the believers among the labouring masses conformed so with their lives that 
it was impossible to imagine them to oneself without those superstitions, which 
were a necessary condition of their life. the whole life of believers in our 
circle was a contradiction of their faith, but the whole life of the working-folk 
believers was a confirmation of the meaning of life which their faith gave them. 
And I began to look well into the life and faith of these people, and the more 
I considered it the more I became convinced that they have a real faith which 
is a necessity to them and alone gives their life a meaning and makes it possible 
for them to live. In contrast with what I had seen in our circle — where life 
without faith is possible and where hardly one in a thousand acknowledges himself 
to be a believer — among them there is hardly one unbeliever in a thousand. 
In contrast with what I had seen in our circle, where the whole of life is passed 
in idleness, amusement, and dissatisfaction, I saw that the whole life of these 
people was passed in heavy labour, and that they were content with life. In 
contradistinction to the way in which people of our circle oppose fate and complain 
of it on account of deprivations and sufferings, these people accepted illness 
and sorrow without any perplexity or opposition, and with a quiet and firm conviction 
that all is good. In contradistinction to us, who the wiser we are the less 
we understand the meaning of life, and see some evil irony in the fact that 
we suffer and die, these folk live and suffer, and they approach death and suffering 
with tranquillity and in most cases gladly. In contrast to the fact that a tranquil 
death, a death without horror and despair, is a very rare exception in our circle, 
a troubled, rebellious, and unhappy death is the rarest exception among the 
people. and such people, lacking all that for us and for Solomon is the only 
good of life and yet experiencing the greatest happiness, are a great multitude. 
I looked more widely around me. I considered the life of the enormous mass of 
the people in the past and the present. And of such people, understanding the 
meaning of life and able to live and to die, I saw not two or three, or tens, 
but hundreds, thousands, and millions. and they all — endlessly different in 
their manners, minds, education, and position, as they were — all alike, in 
complete contrast to my ignorance, knew the meaning of life and death, laboured 
quietly, endured deprivations and sufferings, and lived and died seeing therein 
not vanity but good.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.x-p12">And I learnt to love these people. The more I came to know their life, the 
life of those who are living and of others who are dead of whom I read and heard, 
the more I loved them and the easier it became for me to live. So I went on 
for about two years, and a change took place in me which had long been preparing 
and the promise of which had always been in me. It came about that the life 
of our circle, the rich and learned, not merely became distasteful to me, but 
lost all meaning in my eyes. All our actions, discussions, science and art, 
presented itself to me in a new light. I understood that it is all merely self-indulgence, 
and the to find a meaning in it is impossible; while the life of the whole labouring 
people, the whole of mankind who produce life, appeared to me in its true significance. 
I understood that <i>that</i> is life itself, and that the meaning given to 
that life is true: and I accepted it.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XI" progress="68.31%" id="ii.xi" prev="ii.x" next="ii.xii">
<h2 id="ii.xi-p0.1">XI</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p1">And remembering how those very beliefs had repelled me and had seemed meaningless 
when professed by people whose lives conflicted with them, and how these same 
beliefs attracted me and seemed reasonable when I saw that people lived in accord 
with them, I understood why I had then rejected those beliefs and found them 
meaningless, yet now accepted them and found them full of meaning. I understood 
that I had erred, and why I erred. I had erred not so much because I thought 
incorrectly as because I lived badly. I understood that it was not an error 
in my thought that had hid truth from me as much as my life itself in the exceptional 
conditions of epicurean gratification of desires in which I passed it. I understood 
that my question as to what my life is, and the answer — and evil — was quite 
correct. The only mistake was that the answer referred only to my life, while 
I had referred it to life in general. I asked myself what my life is, and got 
the reply: An evil and an absurdity. and really my life — a life of indulgence 
of desires — was senseless and evil, and therefore the reply, “Life is evil 
and an absurdity”, referred only to my life, but not to human life in general. 
I understood the truth which I afterwards found in the Gospels, “that men loved 
darkness rather than the light, for their works were evil. For everyone that 
doeth ill hateth the light, and cometh not to the light, lest his works should 
be reproved.” I perceived that to understand the meaning of life it is necessary 
first that life should not be meaningless and evil, then we can apply reason 
to explain it. I understood why I had so long wandered round so evident a truth, 
and that if one is to think and speak of the life of mankind, one must think 
and speak of that life and not of the life of some of life's parasites. That 
truth was always as true as that two and two are four, but I had not acknowledged 
it, because on admitting two and two to be four I had also to admit that I was 
bad; and to feel myself to be good was for me more important and necessary than 
for two and two to be four. I came to love good people, hated myself, and confessed 
the truth. Now all became clear to me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p2">What if an executioner passing his whole life in torturing people and cutting 
off their heads, or a hopeless drunkard, or a madman settled for life in a dark 
room which he has fouled and imagines that he would perish if he left — what 
if he asked himself: “What is life?” Evidently he could not other reply to that 
question than that life is the greatest evil, and the madman's answer would 
be perfectly correct, but only as applied to himself. What if I am such a madman? 
What if all we rich and leisured people are such madmen? and I understood that 
we really are such madmen. I at any rate was certainly such.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p3">And indeed a bird is so made that it must fly, collect food, and build a 
nest, and when I see that a bird does this I have pleasure in its joy. A goat, 
a hare, and a wolf are so made that they must feed themselves, and must breed 
and feed their family, and when they do so I feel firmly assured that they are 
happy and that their life is a reasonable one. then what should a man do? He 
too should produce his living as the animals do, but with this difference, that 
he will perish if he does it alone; he must obtain it not for himself but for 
all. And when he does that, I have a firm assurance that he is happy and that 
his life is reasonable. But what had I done during the whole thirty years of 
my responsible life? Far from producing sustenance for all, I did not even produce 
it for myself. I lived as a parasite, and on asking myself, what is the use 
of my life? I got the reply: “No use.” If the meaning of human life lies in 
supporting it, how could I — who for thirty years had been engaged not on supporting 
life but on destroying it in myself and in others — how could I obtain any 
other answer than that my life was senseless and an evil? . . . It was both senseless 
and evil.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p4">The life of the world endures by someone's will — by the life of the whole 
world and by our lives someone fulfills his purpose. To hope to understand the 
meaning of that will one must first perform it by doing what is wanted of us. 
But if I will not do what is wanted of me, I shall never understand what is 
wanted of me, and still less what is wanted of us all and of the whole world.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p5">If a naked, hungry beggar has been taken from the cross-roads, brought into 
a building belonging to a beautiful establishment, fed, supplied with drink, 
and obliged to move a handle up and down, evidently, before discussing why he 
was taken, why he should move the handle, and whether the whole establishment 
is reasonably arranged — the begger should first of all move the handle. If 
he moves the handle he will understand that it works a pump, that the pump draws 
water and that the water irrigates the garden beds; then he will be taken from 
the pumping station to another place where he will gather fruits and will enter 
into the joy of his master, and, passing from lower to higher work, will understand 
more and more of the arrangements of the establishment, and taking part in it 
will never think of asking why he is there, and will certainly not reproach 
the master.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xi-p6">So those who do his will, the simple, unlearned working folk, whom we regard 
as cattle, do not reproach the master; but we, the wise, eat the master's food 
but do not do what the master wishes, and instead of doing it sit in a circle 
and discuss: “Why should that handle be moved? Isn't it stupid?” So we have 
decided. We have decided that the master is stupid, or does not exist, and that 
we are wise, only we feel that we are quite useless and that we must somehow 
do away with ourselves.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XII" progress="72.32%" id="ii.xii" prev="ii.xi" next="ii.xiii">
<h2 id="ii.xii-p0.1">XII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p1">The consciousness of the error in reasonable knowledge helped me to free 
myself from the temptation of idle ratiocination. the conviction that knowledge 
of truth can only be found by living led me to doubt the rightness of my life; 
but I was saved only by the fact that I was able to tear myself from my exclusiveness 
and to see the real life of the plain working people, and to understand that 
it alone is real life. I understood that if I wish to understand life and its 
meaning, I must not live the life of a parasite, but must live a real life, 
and — taking the meaning given to live by real humanity and merging myself 
in that life — verify it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p2">During that time this is what happened to me. During that whole year, when 
I was asking myself almost every moment whether I should not end matters with 
a noose or a bullet — all that time, together with the course of thought and 
observation about which I have spoken, my heart was oppressed with a painful 
feeling, which I can only describe as a search for God.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p3">I say that that search for God was not reasoning, but a feeling, because 
that search proceeded not from the course of my thoughts — it was even directly 
contrary to them — but proceeded from the heart. It was a feeling of fear, 
orphanage, isolation in a strange land, and a hope of help from someone.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p4">Though I was quite convinced of the impossibility of proving the existence 
of a Deity (Kant had shown, and I quite understood him, that it could not be 
proved), I yet sought for god, hoped that I should find Him, and from old habit 
addressed prayers to that which I sought but had not found. I went over in my 
mind the arguments of Kant and Schopenhauer showing the impossibility of proving 
the existence of a God, and I began to verify those arguments and to refute 
them. Cause, said I to myself, is not a category of thought such as are Time 
and Space. If I exist, there must be some cause for it, and a cause of causes. 
And that first cause of all is what men have called “God”. And I paused on that 
thought, and tried with all my being to recognize the presence of that cause. 
And as soon as I acknowledged that there is a force in whose power I am, I at 
once felt that I could live. But I asked myself: What is that cause, that force? 
How am I to think of it? What are my relations to that which I call “God”? And 
only the familiar replies occurred to me: “He is the Creator and Preserver.” 
This reply did not satisfy me, and I felt I was losing within me what I needed 
for my life. I became terrified and began to pray to Him whom I sought, that 
He should help me. But the more I prayed the more apparent it became to me that 
He did not hear me, and that there was no one to whom to address myself. And 
with despair in my heart that there is no God at all, I said: “Lord, have mercy, 
save me! Lord, teach me!” But no one had mercy on me, and I felt that my life 
was coming to a standstill.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p5">But again and again, from various sides, I returned to the same conclusion 
that I could not have come into the world without any cause or reason or meaning; 
I could not be such a fledgling fallen from its nest as I felt myself to be. 
Or, granting that I be such, lying on my back crying in the high grass, even 
then I cry because I know that a mother has borne me within her, has hatched 
me, warmed me, fed me, and loved me. Where is she — that mother? If I have 
been deserted, who has deserted me? I cannot hide from myself that someone bored 
me, loving me. Who was that someone? Again “God”? He knows and sees my searching, 
my despair, and my struggle.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p6">“He exists,” said I to myself. And I had only for an instant to admit that, 
and at once life rose within me, and I felt the possibility and joy of being. 
But again, from the admission of the existence of a God I went on to seek my 
relation with Him; and again I imagined <i>that</i> God — our Creator in Three 
Persons who sent His Son, the Saviour — and again <i>that</i> God, detached 
from the world and from me, melted like a block of ice, melted before my eyes, 
and again nothing remained, and again the spring of life dried up within me, 
and I despaired and felt that I had nothing to do but to kill myself. And the 
worst of all was, that I felt I could not do it.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p7">Not twice or three times, but tens and hundreds of times, I reached those 
conditions, first of joy and animation, and then of despair and consciousness 
of the impossibility of living.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p8">I remember that it was in early spring: I was alone in the wood listening 
to its sounds. I listened and thought ever of the same thing, as I had constantly 
done during those last three years. I was again seeking God.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p9">“Very well, there is no God,” said I to myself; “there is no one who is not 
my imagination but a reality like my whole life. He does not exist, and no miracles 
can prove His existence, because the miracles would be my imagination, besides 
being irrational.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p10">“But my <i>perception</i> of God, of Him whom I seek,” I asked myself, “where 
has that perception come from?” And again at this thought the glad waves of 
life rose within me. All that was around me came to life and received a meaning. 
But my joy did not last long. My mind continued its work.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p11">“The conception of God is not God,” said I to myself. “The conception is 
what takes place within me. The conception of God is something I can evoke or 
can refrain from evoking in myself. That is not what I seek. I seek that without 
which there can be no life.” And again all around me and within me began to 
die, and again I wished to kill myself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p12">But then I turned my gaze upon myself, on what went on within me, and I remembered 
all those cessations of life and reanimations that recurred within me hundreds 
of times. I remembered that I only lived at those times when I believed in God. 
As it was before, so it was now; I need only be aware of God to live; I need 
only forget Him, or disbelieve Him, and I died.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p13">What is this animation and dying? I do not live when I lose belief in the 
existence of God. I should long ago have killed myself had I not had a dim hope 
of finding Him. I live, really live, only when I feel Him and seek Him. “What 
more do you seek?” exclaimed a voice within me. “This is He. He is that without 
which one cannot live. To know God and to live is one and the same thing. God 
is life.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p14">“Live seeking God, and then you will not live without God.” And more than 
ever before, all within me and around me lit up, and the light did not again 
abandon me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p15">And I was saved from suicide. When and how this change occurred I could 
not say. As imperceptibly and gradually the force of life in me had been destroyed 
and I had reached the impossibility of living, a cessation of life and the necessity 
of suicide, so imperceptibly and gradually did that force of life return to 
me. And strange to say the strength of life which returned to me was not new, 
but quite old — the same that had borne me along in my earliest days.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p16">I quite returned to what belonged to my earliest childhood and youth. I returned 
to the belief in that Will which produced me and desires something of me. I 
returned to the belief that the chief and only aim of my life is to be better, 
i.e. to live in accord with that Will. and I returned to the belief that I can 
find the expression of that Will in what humanity, in the distant past hidden 
from, has produced for its guidance: that is to say, I returned to a belief 
in God, in moral perfection, and in a tradition transmitting the meaning of 
life. There was only this difference, that then all this was accepted unconsciously, 
while now I knew that without it I could not live.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p17">What happened to me was something like this: I was put into a boat (I do 
not remember when) and pushed off from an unknown shore, shown the direction 
of the opposite shore, had oars put into my unpractised hands, and was left 
alone. I rowed as best I could and moved forward; but the further I advanced 
towards the middle of the stream the more rapid grew the current bearing me 
away from my goal and the more frequently did I encounter others, like myself, 
borne away by the stream. There were a few rowers who continued to row, there 
were others who had abandoned their oars; there were large boats and immense 
vessels full of people. Some struggled against the current, others yielded to 
it. And the further I went the more, seeing the progress down the current of 
all those who were adrift, I forgot the direction given me. In the very centre 
of the stream, amid the crowd of boats and vessels which were being borne down 
stream, I quite lost my direction and abandoned my oars. Around me on all sides, 
with mirth and rejoicing, people with sails and oars were borne down the stream, 
assuring me and each other that no other direction was possible. And I believed 
them and floated with them. And I was carried far; so far that I heard the roar 
of the rapids in which I must be shattered, and I saw boats shattered in them. 
And I recollected myself. I was long unable to understand what had happened 
to me. I saw before me nothing but destruction, towards which I was rushing 
and which I feared. I saw no safety anywhere and did not know what to do; but, 
looking back, I perceived innumerable boats which unceasingly and strenuously 
pushed across the stream, and I remembered about the shore, the oars, and the 
direction, and began to pull back upwards against the stream and towards the 
shore.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xii-p18">That shore was God; that direction was tradition; the oars were the freedom 
given me to pull for the shore and unite with God. And so the force of life 
was renewed in me and I again began to live.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XIII" progress="79.02%" id="ii.xiii" prev="ii.xii" next="ii.xiv">
<h2 id="ii.xiii-p0.1">XIII</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p1">I turned from the life of our circle, acknowledging that ours is not life 
but a simulation of life — that the conditions of superfluity in which we live 
deprive us of the possibility of understanding life, and that in order to understand 
life I must understand not an exceptional life such as our who are parasites 
on life, but the life of the simple labouring folk — those who make life — 
and the meaning which they attribute to it. The simplest labouring people around 
me were the Russian people, and I turned to them and to the meaning of life 
which they give. That meaning, if one can put it into words, was as follows: 
Every man has come into this world by the will of God. And God has so made man 
that every man can destroy his soul or save it. The aim of man in life is to 
save his soul, and to save his soul he must live “godly” and to live “godly” 
he must renounce all the pleasures of life, must labour, humble himself, suffer, 
and be merciful. That meaning the people obtain from the whole teaching of faith 
transmitted to them by their pastors and by the traditions that live among the 
people. This meaning was clear to me and near to my heart. But together with 
this meaning of the popular faith of our non-sectarian folk, among whom I live, 
much was inseparably bound up that revolted me and seemed to me inexplicable: 
sacraments, Church services, fasts, and the adoration of relics and icons. The 
people cannot separate the one from the other, nor could I. And strange as much 
of what entered into the faith of these people was to me, I accepted everything, 
and attended the services, knelt morning and evening in prayer, fasted, and 
prepared to receive the Eucharist: and at first my reason did not resist anything. 
The very things that had formerly seemed to me impossible did not now evoke 
in me any opposition.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p2">My relations to faith before and after were quite different. Formerly life 
itself seemed to me full of meaning and faith presented itself as the arbitrary 
assertion of propositions to me quite unnecessary, unreasonable, and disconnected 
from life. I then asked myself what meaning those propositions had and, convinced 
that they had none, I rejected them. Now on the contrary I knew firmly that 
my life otherwise has, and can have, no meaning, and the articles of faith were 
far from presenting themselves to me as unnecessary — on the contrary I had 
been led by indubitable experience to the conviction that only these propositions 
presented by faith give life a meaning. formerly I looked on them as on some 
quite unnecessary gibberish, but now, if I did not understand them, I yet knew 
that they had a meaning, and I said to myself that I must learn to understand 
them.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p3">I argued as follows, telling myself that the knowledge of faith flows, like 
all humanity with its reason, from a mysterious source. That source is God, 
the origin both of the human body and the human reason. As my body has descended 
to me from God, so also has my reason and my understanding of life, and consequently 
the various stages of the development of that understanding of life cannot be 
false. All that people sincerely believe in must be true; it may be differently 
expressed but it cannot be a lie, and therefore if it presents itself to me 
as a lie, that only means that I have not understood it. Furthermore I said 
to myself, the essence of every faith consists in its giving life a meaning 
which death does not destroy. Naturally for a faith to be able to reply to the 
questions of a king dying in luxury, of an old slave tormented by overwork, 
of an unreasoning child, of a wise old man, of a half-witted old woman, of a 
young and happy wife, of a youth tormented by passions, of all people in the 
most varied conditions of life and education — if there is one reply to the 
one eternal question of life: “Why do I live and what will result from my life?” 
— the reply, though one in its essence, must be endlessly varied in its presentation; 
and the more it is one, the more true and profound it is, the more strange and 
deformed must it naturally appear in its attempted expression, conformably to 
the education and position of each person. But this argument, justifying in 
my eyes the queerness of much on the ritual side of religion, did not suffice 
to allow me in the one great affair of life — religion — to do things which 
seemed to me questionable. With all my soul I wished to be in a position to 
mingle with the people, fulfilling the ritual side of their religion; but I 
could not do it. I felt that I should lie to myself and mock at what was sacred 
to me, were I to do so. At this point, however, our new Russian theological 
writers came to my rescue.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p4">According to the explanation these theologians gave, the fundamental dogma 
of our faith is the infallibility of the Church. From the admission of that 
dogma follows inevitably the truth of all that is professed by the Church. The 
Church as an assembly of true believers united by love and therefore possessed 
of true knowledge became the basis of my belief. I told myself that divine truth 
cannot be accessible to a separate individual; it is revealed only to the whole 
assembly of people united by love. To attain truth one must not separate, and 
in order not to separate one must love and must endure things one may not agree 
with.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p5">Truth reveals itself to love, and if you do not submit to the rites of the 
Church you transgress against love; and by transgressing against love you deprive 
yourself of the possibility of recognizing the truth. I did not then see the 
sophistry contained in this argument. I did not see that union in love may give 
the greatest love, but certainly cannot give us divine truth expressed in the 
definite words of the Nicene Creed. I also did not perceive that love cannot 
make a certain expression of truth an obligatory condition of union. I did not 
then see these mistakes in the argument and thanks to it was able to accept 
and perform all the rites of the Orthodox Church without understanding most 
of them. I then tried with all strength of my soul to avoid all arguments and 
contradictions, and tried to explain as reasonably as possible the Church statements 
I encountered.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiii-p6">When fulfilling the rites of the Church I humbled my reason and submitted 
to the tradition possessed by all humanity. I united myself with my forefathers: 
the father, mother, and grandparents I loved. They and all my predecessors believed 
and lived, and they produced me. I united myself also with the missions of the 
common people whom I respected. Moveover, those actions had nothing bad in themselves 
(“bad” I considered the indulgence of one's desires). When rising early for 
Church services I knew I was doing well, if only because I was sacrificing my 
bodily ease to humble my mental pride, for the sake of union with my ancestors 
and contemporaries, and for the sake of finding the meaning of life. It was 
the same with my preparations to receive Communion, and with the daily reading 
of prayers with genuflections, and also with the observance of all the fasts. 
However insignificant these sacrifices might be I made them for the sake of 
something good. I fasted, prepared for Communion, and observed the fixed hours 
of prayer at home and in church. During Church service I attended to every word, 
and gave them a meaning whenever I could. In the Mass the most important words 
for me were: “Let us love one another in conformity!” The further words, “In 
unity we believe in the Father, the Son, and Holy Ghost”, I passed by, because 
I could not understand them.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XIV" progress="84.30%" id="ii.xiv" prev="ii.xiii" next="ii.xv">
<h2 id="ii.xiv-p0.1">XIV</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p1">In was then so necessary for me to believe in order to live that I unconsciously 
concealed from myself the contradictions and obscurities of theology. but this 
reading of meanings into the rites had its limits. If the chief words in the 
prayer for the Emperor became more and more clear to me, if I found some explanation 
for the words “and remembering our Sovereign Most-Holy Mother of God and all 
the Saints, ourselves and one another, we give our whole life to Christ our 
God”, if I explained to myself the frequent repetition of prayers for the Tsar 
and his relations by the fact that they are more exposed to temptations than 
other people and therefore are more in need of being prayed for — the prayers 
about subduing our enemies and evil under our feet (even if one tried to say 
that <i>sin</i> was the enemy prayed against), these and other prayers, such 
as the “cherubic song” and the whole sacrament of oblation, or “the chosen Warriors”, 
etc. — quite two-thirds of all the services — either remained completely 
incomprehensible or, when I forced an explanation into them, made me feel that 
I was lying, thereby quite destroying my relation to God and depriving me of 
all possibility of belief.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p2">I felt the same about the celebration of the chief holidays. To remember 
the Sabbath, that is to devote one day to God, was something I could understand. 
But the chief holiday was in commemoration of the Resurrection, the reality 
of which I could not picture to myself or understand. And that name of “Resurrection” 
was also given the weekly holiday.<note n="9" id="ii.xiv-p2.1">In Russia Sunday was called Resurrection-day.—A.M.</note> 
And on those days the Sacrament of the Eucharist was administered, which was 
quite unintelligible to me. The rest of the twelve great holidays, except Christmas, 
commemorated miracles — the things I tried not to think about in order not 
to deny: the Ascension, Pentecost, Epiphany, the Feast of the Intercession of 
the Holy Virgin, etc. At the celebration of these holidays, feeling that importance 
was being attributed to the very things that to me presented a negative importance, 
I either devised tranquillizing explanations or shut my eyes in order not to 
see what tempted me.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p3">Most of all this happened to me when taking part in the most usual Sacraments, 
which are considered the most important: baptism and communion. There I encountered 
not incomprehensible but fully comprehensible doings: doings which seemed to 
me to lead into temptation, and I was in a dilemma — whether to lie or to reject 
them.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p4">Never shall I forge the painful feeling I experienced the day I received 
the Eucharist for the first time after many years. The service, confession, 
and prayers were quite intelligible and produced in me a glad consciousness 
that the meaning of life was being revealed to me. The Communion itself I explained 
as an act performed in remembrance of Christ, and indicating a purification 
from sin and the full acceptance of Christ's teaching. If that explanation 
was artificial I did not notice its artificiality: so happy was I at humbling 
and abasing myself before the priest — a simple, timid country clergyman — 
turning all the dirt out of my soul and confessing my vices, so glad was I to 
merge in thought with the humility of the fathers who wrote the prayers of the 
office, so glad was I of union with all who have believed and now believe, that 
I did not notice the artificiality of my explanation. But when I approached 
the altar gates, and the priest made me say that I believed that what I was 
about to swallow was truly flesh and blood, I felt a pain in my heart: it was 
not merely a false note, it was a cruel demand made by someone or other who 
evidently had never known what faith is.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p5">I now permit myself to say that it was a cruel demand, but I did not then 
think so: only it was indescribably painful to me. I was no longer in the position 
in which I had been in youth when I thought all in life was clear; I had indeed 
come to faith because, apart from faith, I had found nothing, certainly nothing, 
except destruction; therefore to throw away that faith was impossible and I 
submitted. And I found in my soul a feeling which helped me to endure it. This 
was the feeling of self-abasement and humility. I humbled myself, swallowed 
that flesh and blood without any blasphemous feelings and with a wish to believe. 
But the blow had been struck and, knowing what awaited me, I could not go a 
second time.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p6">I continued to fulfil the rites of the Church and still believed that the 
doctrine I was following contained the truth, when something happened to me 
which I now understand but which then seemed strange.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p7">I was listening to the conversation of an illiterate peasant, a pilgrim, 
about God, faith, life, and salvation, when a knowledge of faith revealed itself 
to me. I drew near to the people, listening to their opinions of life and faith, 
and I understood the truth more and more. So also was it when I read the Lives 
of Holy men, which became my favourite books. Putting aside the miracles and 
regarding them as fables illustrating thoughts, this reading revealed to me 
life's meaning. There were the lives of Makarius the Great, the story of Buddha, 
there were the words of St. John Chrysostom, and there were the stories of the 
traveller in the well, the monk who found some gold, and of Peter the publican. 
There were stories of the martyrs, all announcing that death does not exclude 
life, and there were the stories of ignorant, stupid men, who knew nothing of 
the teaching of the Church but who yet were saves.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xiv-p8">But as soon as I met learned believers or took up their books, doubt of myself, 
dissatisfaction, and exasperated disputation were roused within me, and I felt 
that the more I entered into the meaning of these men's speech, the more I went 
astray from truth and approached an abyss.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XV" progress="88.38%" id="ii.xv" prev="ii.xiv" next="ii.xvi">
<h2 id="ii.xv-p0.1">XV</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p1">How often I envied the peasants their illiteracy and lack of learning! Those 
statements in the creeds which to me were evident absurdities, for them contained 
nothing false; they could accept them and could believe in the truth — the 
truth I believed in. Only to me, unhappy man, was it clear that with truth falsehood 
was interwoven by finest threads, and that I could not accept it in that form.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p2">So I lived for about three years. At first, when I was only slightly associated 
with truth as a catechumen and was only scenting out what seemed to me clearest, 
these encounters struck me less. When I did not understand anything, I said, 
“It is my fault, I am sinful”; but the more I became imbued with the truths 
I was learning, the more they became the basis of my life, the more oppressive 
and the more painful became these encounters and the sharper became the line 
between what I do not understand because I am not able to understand it, and 
what cannot be understood except by lying to oneself.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p3">In spite of my doubts and sufferings I still clung to the Orthodox Church. 
But questions of life arose which had to be decided; and the decision of these 
questions by the Church — contrary to the very bases of the belief by which 
I lived — obliged me at last to renounce communion with Orthodoxy as impossible. 
These questions were: first the relation of the Orthodox Eastern Church to other 
Churches — to the Catholics and to the so-called sectarians. At that time, 
in consequence of my interest in religion, I came into touch with believers 
of various faiths: Catholics, protestants, Old-Believers, Molokans<note n="10" id="ii.xv-p3.1">A sect 
that rejects sacraments and ritual.</note>, and others. And I met among them 
many men of lofty morals who were truly religious. I wished to be a brother 
to them. And what happened? That teaching which promised to unite all in one 
faith and love — that very teaching, in the person of its best representatives, 
told me that these men were all living a lie; that what gave them their power 
of life was a temptation of the devil; and that we alone possess the only possible 
truth. And I saw that all who do not profess an identical faith with themselves 
are considered by the Orthodox to be heretics, just as the Catholics and others 
consider the Orthodox to be heretics. And i saw that the Orthodox (though they 
try to hide this) regard with hostility all who do not express their faith by 
the same external symbols and words as themselves; and this is naturally so; 
first, because the assertion that you are in falsehood and I am in truth, is 
the most cruel thing one man can say to another; and secondly, because a man 
loving his children and brothers cannot help being hostile to those who wish 
to pervert his children and brothers to a false belief. And that hostility is 
increased in proportion to one's greater knowledge of theology. And to me who 
considered that truth lay in union by love, it became self-evident that theology 
was itself destroying what it ought to produce.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p4">This offence is so obvious to us educated people who have lived in countries 
where various religions are professed and have seen the contempt, self-assurance, 
and invincible contradiction with which Catholics behave to the Orthodox Greeks 
and to the Protestants, and the Orthodox to Catholics and Protestants, and the 
Protestants to the two others, and the similar attitude of Old-Believers, Pashkovites 
(Russian Evangelicals), Shakers, and all religions — that the very obviousness 
of the temptation at first perplexes us. One says to oneself: it is impossible 
that it is so simple and that people do not see that if two assertions are mutually 
contradictory, then neither of them has the sole truth which faith should possess. 
There is something else here, there must be some explanation. I thought there 
was, and sought that explanation and read all I could on the subject, and consulted 
all whom I could. And no one gave me any explanation, except the one which causes 
the Sumsky Hussars to consider the Sumsky Hussars the best regiment in the world, 
and the Yellow Uhlans to consider that the best regiment in the world is the 
Yellow Uhlans. The ecclesiastics of all the different creeds, through their 
best representatives, told me nothing but that they believed themselves to have 
the truth and the others to be in error, and that all they could do was to pray 
for them. I went to archimandrites, bishops, elders, monks of the strictest 
orders, and asked them; but none of them made any attempt to explain the matter 
to me except one man, who explained it all and explained it so that I never 
asked any one any more about it. I said that for every unbeliever turning to 
a belief (and all our young generation are in a position to do so) the question 
that presents itself first is, why is truth not in Lutheranism nor in Catholicism, 
but in Orthodoxy? Educated in the high school he cannot help knowing what the 
peasants do not know — that the Protestants and Catholics equally affirm that 
their faith is the only true one. Historical evidence, twisted by each religion 
in its own favour, is insufficient. Is it not possible, said I, to understand 
the teaching in a loftier way, so that from its height the differences should 
disappear, as they do for one who believes truly? Can we not go further along 
a path like the one we are following with the Old-Believers? They emphasize 
the fact that they have a differently shaped cross and different alleluias and 
a different procession round the altar. We reply: You believe in the Nicene 
Creed, in the seven sacraments, and so do we. Let us hold to that, and in other 
matters do as you pease. We have united with them by placing the essentials 
of faith above the unessentials. Now with the Catholics can we not say: You 
believe in so and so and in so and so, which are the chief things, and as for 
the Filioque clause and the Pope — do as you please. Can we not say the same 
to the Protestants, uniting with them in what is most important?</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p5">My interlocutor agreed with my thoughts, but told me that such conceptions 
would bring reproach o the spiritual authorities for deserting the faith of 
our forefathers, and this would produce a schism; and the vocation of the spiritual 
authorities is to safeguard in all its purity the Greco-Russian Orthodox faith 
inherited from our forefathers.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p6">And I understood it all. I am seeking a faith, the power of life; and they 
are seeking the best way to fulfil in the eyes of men certain human obligations. 
and fulfilling these human affairs they fulfil them in a human way. However 
much they may talk of their pity for their erring brethren, and of addressing 
prayers for them to the throne of the Almighty — to carry out human purposes 
violence is necessary, and it has always been applied and is and will be applied. 
If of two religions each considers itself true and the other false, then men 
desiring to attract others to the truth will preach their own doctrine. And 
if a false teaching is preached to the inexperienced sons of their Church — 
which as the truth — then that Church cannot but burn the books and remove 
the man who is misleading its sons. What is to be done with a sectarian — burning, 
in the opinion of the Orthodox, with the fire of false doctrine — who in the 
most important affair of life, in faith, misleads the sons of the Church? What 
can be done with him except to cut off his head or to incarcerate him? Under 
the Tsar Alexis Mikhaylovich people were burned at the stake, that is to say, 
the severest method of punishment of the time was applied, and in our day also 
the severest method of punishment is applied — detention in solitary confinement.<note n="11" id="ii.xv-p6.1">At 
the time this was written capital punishment was considered to be abolished 
in Russia.—A.M.</note></p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p7">The second relation of the Church to a question of life was with regard to 
war and executions.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xv-p8">At that time Russia was at war. And Russians, in the name of Christian love, 
began to kill their fellow men. It was impossible not to think about this, and 
not to see that killing is an evil repugnant to the first principles of any 
faith. Yet prayers were said in the churches for the success of our arms, and 
the teachers of the Faith acknowledged killing to be an act resulting from the 
Faith. And besides the murders during the war, I saw, during the disturbances 
which followed the war, Church dignitaries and teachers and monks of the lesser 
and stricter orders who approved the killing of helpless, erring youths. And 
I took note of all that is done by men who profess Christianity, and I was horrified.
</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="XVI" progress="94.36%" id="ii.xvi" prev="ii.xv" next="ii.xvii">
<h2 id="ii.xvi-p0.1">XVI</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvi-p1">And I ceased to doubt, and became fully convinced that not all was true in 
the religion I had joined. Formerly I should have said that it was all false, 
but I could not say so now. The whole of the people possessed a knowledge of 
the truth, for otherwise they could not have lived. Moreover, that knowledge 
was accessible to me, for I had felt it and had lived by it. But I no longer 
doubted that there was also falsehood in it. And all that had previously repelled 
me now presented itself vividly before me. And though I saw that among the peasants 
there was a smaller admixture of the lies that repelled me than among the representatives 
of the Church, I still saw that in the people's belief also falsehood was mingled 
with the truth.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvi-p2">But where did the truth and where did the falsehood come from? Both the falsehood 
and the truth were contained in the so-called holy tradition and in the Scriptures. 
Both the falsehood and the truth had been handed down by what is called the 
Church.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvi-p3">And whether I liked or not, I was brought to the study and investigation 
of these writings and traditions — which till now I had been so afraid to investigate.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvi-p4">And I turned to the examination of that same theology which I had once rejected 
with such contempt as unnecessary. Formerly it seemed to me a series of unnecessary 
absurdities, when on all sides I was surrounded by manifestations of life which 
seemed to me clear and full of sense; now I should have been glad to throw away 
what would not enter a health head, but I had nowhere to turn to. On this teaching 
religious doctrine rests, or at least with it the only knowledge of the meaning 
of life that I have found is inseparably connected. However wild it may seem 
too my firm old mind, it was the only hope of salvation. It had to be carefully, 
attentively examined in order to understand it, and not even to understand it 
as I understand the propositions of science: I do not seek that, nor can I seek 
it, knowing the special character of religious knowledge. I shall not seek the 
explanation of everything. I know that the explanation of everything, like the 
commencement of everything, must be concealed in infinity. But I wish to understand 
in a way which will bring me to what is inevitably inexplicable. I wish to recognize 
anything that is inexplicable as being so not because the demands of my reason 
are wrong (they are right, and apart from them I can understand nothing), but 
because I recognize the limits of my intellect. I wish to understand in such 
a way that everything that is inexplicable shall present itself to me as being 
necessarily inexplicable, and not as being something I am under an arbitrary 
obligation to believe.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvi-p5">That there is truth in the teaching is to me indubitable, but it is also 
certain that there is falsehood in it, and I must find what is true and what 
is false, and must disentangle the one from the other. I am setting to work 
upon this task. What of falsehood I have found in the teaching and what I have 
found of truth, and to what conclusions I came, will form the following parts 
of this work, which if it be worth it and if anyone wants it, will probably 
some day be printed somewhere.</p>

</div2>

      <div2 title="1879" progress="96.58%" id="ii.xvii" prev="ii.xvi" next="toc">
<h2 id="ii.xvii-p0.1">1879.</h2>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p1">The foregoing was written by me some three years ago, and will be printed.
</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p2">Now a few days ago, when revising it and returning to the line of thought 
and to the feelings I had when I was living through it all, I had a dream. This 
dream expressed in condensed form all that I had experienced and described, 
and I think therefore that, for those who have understood me, a description 
of this dream will refresh and elucidate and unify what has been set forth at 
such length in the foregoing pages. The dream was this:</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p3">I saw that I was lying on a bed. I was neither comfortable nor uncomfortable: 
I was lying on my back. But I began to consider how, and on what, I was lying 
— a question which had not till then occurred to me. And observing my bed, 
I saw I was lying on plaited string supports attached to its sides: my feet 
were resting on one such support, by calves on another, and my legs felt uncomfortable. 
I seemed to know that those supports were movable, and with a movement of my 
foot I pushed away the furthest of them at my feet — it seemed to me that 
it would be more comfortable so. But I pushed it away too far and wished to 
reach it again with my foot, and that movement caused the next support under 
my calves to slip away also, so that my legs hung in the air. I made a movement 
with my whole body to adjust myself, fully convinced that I could do so at once; 
but the movement caused the other supports under me to slip and to become entangled, 
and I saw that matters were going quite wrong: the whole of the lower part of 
my body slipped and hung down, though my feet did not reach the ground. I was 
holding on only by the upper part of my back, and not only did it become uncomfortable 
but I was even frightened. And then only did I ask myself about something that 
had not before occurred to me. I asked myself: Where am I and what am I lying 
on? and I began to look around and first of all to look down in the direction 
which my body was hanging and whiter I felt I must soon fall. I looked down 
and did not believe my eyes. I was not only at a height comparable to the height 
of the highest towers or mountains, but at a height such as I could never have 
imagined.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p4">I could not even make out whether I saw anything there below, in that bottomless 
abyss over which I was hanging and whiter I was being drawn. My heart contracted, 
and I experienced horror. To look thither was terrible. If I looked thither 
I felt that I should at once slip from the last support and perish. And I did 
not look. But not to look was still worse, for I thought of what would happen 
to me directly I fell from the last support. And I felt that from fear I was 
losing my last supports, and that my back was slowly slipping lower and lower. 
Another moment and I should drop off. And then it occurred to me that this cannot 
e real. It is a dream. Wake up! I try to arouse myself but cannot do so. What 
am I to do? What am I to do? I ask myself, and look upwards. Above, there is 
also an infinite space. I look into the immensity of sky and try to forget about 
the immensity below, and I really do forget it. The immensity below repels and 
frightens me; the immensity above attracts and strengthens me. I am still supported 
above the abyss by the last supports that have not yet slipped from under me; 
I know that I am hanging, but I look only upwards and my fear passes. As happens 
in dreams, a voice says: “Notice this, this is it!” And I look more and more 
into the infinite above me and feel that I am becoming calm. I remember all 
that has happened, and remember how it all happened; how I moved my legs, how 
I hung down, how frightened I was, and how I was saved from fear by looking 
upwards. And I ask myself: Well, and now am I not hanging just the same? And 
I do not so much look round as experience with my whole body the point of support 
on which I am held. I see that I no longer hang as if about to fall, but am 
firmly held. I ask myself how I am held: I feel about, look round, and see that 
under me, under the middle of my body, there is one support, and that when I 
look upwards I lie on it in the position of securest balance, and that it alone 
gave me support before. And then, as happens in dreams, I imagined the mechanism 
by means of which I was held; a very natural intelligible, and sure means, though 
to one awake that mechanism has no sense. I was even surprised in my dream that 
I had not understood it sooner. It appeared that at my head there was a pillar, 
and the security of that slender pillar was undoubted though there was nothing 
to support it. From the pillar a loop hung very ingeniously and yet simply, 
and if one lay with the middle of one's body in that loop and looked up, there 
could be no question of falling. This was all clear to me, and I was glad and 
tranquil. And it seemed as if someone said to me: “See that you remember.”</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p5">And I awoke.</p>
<p class="normal" id="ii.xvii-p6">1882.</p>
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