Page:Rolland Life of Tolstoy.djvu/248

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244
TOLSTOY

“The heroine of my writings, she whom I love with all the forces of my being, she who always was, is, and will be beautiful, is Truth.”[1]

The truth alone escaped shipwreck after the death of his brother.[2] The truth, the pivot of his life, the rock in the midst of an ocean.

But very soon the “horrible truth”[3] was no longer enough for him. Love had supplanted it. It was the living spring of his childhood; “the natural state of his soul”[4] When the moral crisis of 1880 came he never relinquished the truth; he made way for love.[5]

Love is “the basis of energy.”[6] Love is the “reason of life; the only reason, with beauty.”[7] Love is the essence of Tolstoy ripened by life, of the author of War and Peace and the Letter to the Holy Synod.[8]

  1. Sebastopol in May, 1853.
  2. “The truth… the only thing that has been left me of my moral conceptions, the sole thing that I shall still fulfil” (October 17, 1860.)
  3. Ibid.
  4. “The love of men is the natural state of the soul, and we do not observe it.” (Journal, while he was a student at Kazan.)
  5. “The truth will make way for love.” (Confessions.)
  6. “‘You are always talking of energy? But the basis of energy is love,’ said Anna, ‘and love does not come at will.’” (Anna Karenin.)
  7. “Beauty and love, those two sole reasons for human existence.” (War and Peace.)
  8. “I believe in God, who for me is Love” (To the Holy Synod, 1901.)

    “‘Yes, love!… Not selfish love, but love as I knew it, for the first time in my life, when I saw my enemy dying at my