Leo Tolstoy’s The
Cossacks weaves together disparate philosophical elements to produce a tale
about the spiritual emptiness of modern urban life, the redemption that can be
found in the primal state of nature and the rural communities close to it, and
the way that sudden romantic love can derail this particular path to salvation.
This narrative structure is expressed through the life and journey of Olenin,
an aristocratic Russian who, like other members of the 19th century
nobility, whittled away his time engaging in shallow pursuits—attending balls,
gambling, drinking and womanizing. For Olenin, the enjoyment derived from these
activities is ephemeral and ultimately produces an enduring sense of anomie and
ennui, as well as large financial liabilities. He has become cynical and
detests the superficiality of it all, and seeks redemption by joining the army
and subjecting himself to the rigour, hierarchy, and struggle of the military
while getting a post far away from the modern enclave of Moscow. Olenin is
posted with a Cossack regiment, which is on the front lines of Russia’s conflict
with the obstreperous Chechens, who have a reputation—now just as much as in
the middle of the 19th century when The Cossacks was written—as being fierce and brave warriors.
Although the Chechens are Muslims and the Cossacks are
Christians, they are historically and ethnically related and hence share many
traits, particularly those associated with warrior tribes—the love of freedom,
a strong sense of honour, the celebration of strength, risk, and courage, and none
of the social stratifications which characterize modern life. Both are also
rural communities and are therefore very close to the land and to nature’s
capricious rhythms. When Olenin goes to live with Cossacks, it is the natural
world which sparks his moral and spiritual transformation. Tolstoy is at his
literary best when recounting this change, particularly when describing
Olenin’s emotions. When the latter would look at the pristine mountains in
their eternal and resplendent beauty, he would not only see them, but would feel them (emphasis Tolstoy’s). Olenin’s
epiphany reaches its apotheosis one beautiful day in the woods; he realizes
that he intrinsically part of nature and not morally different from other
living things. Like other beasts, he was born, will decay, and will die. This
sense of his own oneness with nature, and his mortality, leads him to the
conviction that the accoutrements, and social distinctions, of his privileged
aristocratic life in Moscow are meaningless. All that matters is the intrinsic
value of God’s creation, and since Olenin’s existence is insignificant in the
vastness of it all, his ultimate purpose is not to serve his own needs, but
rather those of others. Complete self-negation and unconditional love for
everything and everybody becomes his credo, and it brings him genuine
happiness, which further strengthens Olenin’s conviction that he has found the
secret of life.
Olenin’s epiphany clearly reveals Tolstoy’s odd mix of
romanticism and Christian mysticism, and his belief that combining them can
fill the spiritual hole in the heart of modernity. Readers familiar with
Tolstoy’s other works will recognize these ideas, and their representation in
The Cossacks probably tracks
very closely Tolstoy’s own experience. He was, after all, a Russian noble who
found modern life to be deeply unsatisfying, and who consequently decided to
become a soldier and was sent to a Cossack settlement. Tolstoy’s emphasis on
the emotional dimensions of this eclectic philosophy perhaps leads him to
minimize the logical tensions between, on the one hand, the romanticization of
nature and, on the other, the Christian worldview. For the latter, original sin
means that man no longer lives in a paradise characterized with the harmony of
things; rather, humans are in a constant struggle with others and with nature.
This fallen state means that true redemption cannot be achieved in the present
state of affairs, which is why doctrinally orthodox Christians, although they
may admire nature’s beauty, cannot venerate it while staying true to their core
beliefs. Rather, they look towards either the next life in heaven or the
paradise that will be established after Judgement day.
But The Cossacks is a novel, not a
philosophically rigorous text. Therefore, logical inconsistencies matter much
less than the emotional power of Olenin’s moral and spiritual transformation.
The relationships Olenin develops with individual members of the tribe are
central to this development. One in particular stands out: a Cossack who Olenin
affectionately calls “uncle Yerovshka” becomes a frequent visitor and is,
despite his rural simplicity, a remarkable man with a character forged from
years of experience as a soldier, father, friend, and loyal member of the
Cossacks. Despite a life of physical labour, aged 70 years old and a heavy
drinker, uncle Yerovshka brims at the seams of his wrinkled face with
confidence, optimism, wisdom and affection for everything and everybody (except
the Chechens). He is past his prime but is still energetic and jocular, and
never misses an opportunity to flirt with pretty Cossack girls or to drink and
socialize with everyone else. At the same time, he embodies the warrior values
of his tribe, sharpened by direct experience of fighting on the front lines.
Another Cossack with whom Olenin becomes close is Luka, a youthful and brave
soldier in his physical prime, who finds nothing to be more glorious than fighting
Chechens.
Luka and Olenin are both soldiers, and hence they
develop that special bond of comrades in arms. But their relationship is
strained by the rivalry over the beautiful Cossack girl Maryanka. And it is
here where we arrive at the next part of Tolstoy’s narrative structure: the
power of sexual desire to derail spiritual development (Tolstoy, a notorious
womanizer, was probably writing from personal experience). Maryanka is the
daughter of the owner of the house rented by Olenin, and so he sees her frequently. Although he immediately recognizes her
beauty and develops an affection for her, it is not, at least initially,
carnal. Rather, Maryanka is perceived through the prism of Olenin’s spiritual
transformation. As such, she is beautiful but in the same way that the
mountains, trees, and sunsets are. He loves her in the same way that he loves
nature—abstract, generalized, and lofty. But this changes when Olenin is
corrupted by Beletsky, another member of the Russian nobility who comes to live
as a soldier with the Cossacks. He invites Olenin to a soiree where there will
be alcohol and young Cossack girls; Olenin intuitively senses it is a bad idea,
but ignores his inner voice and goes to Beletsky’s event, where, because of the
latter’s drunken shenanigans, Olenin unexpectedly finds himself alone with
Maryanka. They do not sleep together but connect nonetheless through sincere
and profound conversation and physical closeness. Subsequently, Olenin’s
new- found philosophy of self-negation falls like a proverbial house of cards.
He falls madly in love with Maryanka, and, in Tolstoy’s own words, nothing is
more egotistical than emotional rapture.
Olenin’s love for Maryanka has now become carnal
rather than spiritual, and hence obsessive and maddening. He can’t stop
thinking about her, and wants nothing more than to marry and live with her. She
has complete control over him, which in modern language we would call being
“whipped”. The problem is that she is slated to marry Luka, the brave Cossack
soldier who, like Olenin, loves her deeply. When the narrative reaches this
point, the text produces a strong sense of suspense because the reader can
perceive a coming climax of betrayal, revenge, and tragedy. Only one can get
the girl, which means one must be jilted, but in the context of a warrior
culture based on honour and the violent resolution of disputes, one will probably
die. At a certain point, readers may get the impression that Maryanka will
accept Olenin’s marriage proposal, since she does not give him an affirmative
answer but promises to the next day. Before then, the Cossack squadron, which
includes both Luka and Olenin, encounters a group of Chechens and a vicious firefight ensues. Unsurprisingly, Luka, the bravest and fiercest soldier,
charges and slaughters many, while Olenin, in a clear demonstration of his
privileged origins, makes a cowardly effort to avoid danger. The former is
gravely shot despite slaughtering many Chechens. When the Cossacks return to
the settlement, Olenin visits Maryanka, but she is distraught about Luka.
Readers who think, or hope, that at this point she gives her hand to Olenin
will be disappointed. Despite Luka’s inevitable death, she rejects Olenin and
even looks at him with an air of contempt and hatred. Olenin leaves her house,
distraught at being rejected, and shortly after returns to his vacuous life as
a Russian noble in Moscow.
Evidently, Maryanka’s loyalty to her tribe trumped the
potential marital bliss and material comfort with Olenin. One should not be
surprised that Tolstoy ended on this note. Olenin, after all, betrayed his
original epiphany which taught him that the secret to life was complete
self-negation, selflessness, and service to nature and to others. The rural
life of the Cossacks, and individual members of the tribe like uncle Yeroshvka,
led him to salvation, and once obtained, he was tested when temptation came his
way in the form of Beletsky. Rather than following his inner voice and avoiding
Beletsky’s soiree, he surrendered to his baser instincts; soulless reason was
no defense, since all it did was help him to rationalize his action. Olenin
became smitten and then tried to trade his salvation for a woman, but in the
end he got neither. Even worse, he was forced to abandon the pristine beauty
and the spiritual fulfilment of the Cossacks, return to Moscow, and end his
days living the empty and meaningless life he tried to escape.
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