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Leo Tolstoy |
"War and Peace" is a great book.
That might come as a surprise, since most people have only one thought regarding the novel: "'War and Peace' is a big book."
Also true. My copy, translated by Richard Pevear and Larisssa Voldkhonsky, is 1,215 pages long. The current thought is that such weighty classics as "War and Peace," written by dead white males such as Leo Tolstoy, are something of a scam, a burden unfairly imposed by society to keep young readers from sharper, more relevant authors.
I promise you that isn't true, as somebody who has read it twice, the second time aloud to my older son. "War and Peace" is the original romance novel, filled with love, adventure, war and, umm, peace.
The book sticks with you. I finished reading it last 10 years ago, the night before my son left for college. (I began the habit of reading aloud to him at bedtime, with "Alice in Wonderland" when he was about 2, progressed through a variety of classics, such as the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey." It was a real struggle to finish "War and Peace," not because of its length, but because he was staying up later than I did.)
"War and Peace" is worth the effort. When Tolstoy writes about a horse, it's like an actual horse canters into the room, twitching and snorting, redolent of hay and sweat, and you remember Tolstoy ran a farm.
When Natasha tucks herself into her mother's bed to tell the old countess about Prince Andrei, it could be any 16-year-old today gushing about her crush.
And one section, toward the end, a rumination on power.
How, Tolstoy wonders, did Napoleon — a character in the book — get 600,000 French soldiers to march 2,800 miles into Russia? In winter?
"Napoleon gave orders to gather troops and go to war," he muses. "We are so accustomed to this notion, we have grown so used to this view, that the question of why six hundred thousand men go to war when Napoleon says such-and-such words seems senseless to us. He had power, and therefore what he ordered was done."
Not physical power — the 600,000 soldiers have that. Nor moral power, certainly not with a Napoleon. Instead: "Power is the sum total of the wills of the masses, transferred by express or tacit agreement to rules chosen by the masses."
Trigger alert: In groping for an answer, Tolstoy grows almost woke:
"As long as histories of separate persons are written — be they Caesars, Alexanders, or Luthers and Voltaires — and not the history of all the people, all without a single exception, who participate in an event, it is absolutely impossible to describe the movement of mankind without the concept of a force that makes people direct their activity toward a single goal. And the only such concept known to historians is power."
Being Tolstoy, he goes on for pages, evaluating various theories. But he keeps circling back to:
"Power is based on the conditional handing over to rulers of the sum total of the wills of the masses, and that historical figures have power only on conditions of carrying out the programs which the will of the people has tacitly agreed to prescribe to them."
Americans are beginning to realize — took them long enough — that electing a guy who will trash the economy, persecute immigrants, ignore law, scrap our government and set himself up as king, might not have been the best idea. This is not the program they tacitly agreed to.
As his polls crater, you can see Donald Trump thrashing, shrinking, like the Wicked Witch of the West doused with a bucket. He's ready to prosecute the pollsters, calling them "Negative Criminals."
We follow rulers because they follow us, leading us where we want to go. This is obviously true for Trump, who plays on the fears and resentments already bone deep. Not a cause, as I've said for years, but a symptom.
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Yes! I was more picturing the fate of Mussolini than the Wicked Witch.
ReplyDeleteits an outdated notion I know to as a patriotic citizen support the president. a rubber stamp congress has never been popular but used to be fairly common. the vitriol and disdain shown by the people of our country when their elected leader is a member of the opposing party has greased the skids for our downfall.
ReplyDeletein a few months we can throw the bums out. or possibly an even larger percentage of voters will vote maga. the Republican Party no longer exists and the democrats are on life support with no clear vision or outstanding leaders to offer.
seems trump has tapped in to what a significant share of voter support by listening to what they want , promising to deliver then doing whatever the fuck he wants. poll numbers notwithstanding he's a second term president and will not be subject to voter demand again.
I find it difficult to support most of his policies but want him to be successful overall so we have a prosperous and peaceful country.
you seem to just want him gone and dont offer up much of anything as an alternative
big lake not deep
Sure I do. A government not based on lies, designed to help regular people instead of give more money to billionaires. What part of that can't you understand?
DeletePerhaps I am naive or ignorant, but i don't understand this comment... First, Trump won one by one of the narrowest margins in the history of our country, so if he did tap into a "significant" portion of the population its not any more significant than any previous president.
DeleteSecondly, he (and the republican's) are demagogues by definition. I ask of you -- or any of his supporters -- to tell me what Mr. Trump has done that he actually campaigned on? They are literal liars who will say and do anything to get elected, and then throw it all away for what they want.
Lastly, for at least the last 40 years, there has only been one political party who has hoped or helped the president be "successful" "overall" regardless of their political party. That's the Democrats, and they've done it to their own detriment. Do people forget what Mich McConnell said when Obama was elected? Or Newt's "contract for America." I cannot for the life of me understand how people can't see what's plainly in front of their eyes. Yes congress is broken, yes democrats deserve some of the blame, by good gob, Republicans are openly treasonous at this point. and yet, people still vote for them. This is akin to the both sides argument. its a falacy and just makes americans and the average person look dumb.
or am i just reading this wrong?
"its an outdated notion I know to as a patriotic citizen support the president" It wasn't outdated when the Democratic Speaker of the House Tip O'Neil helped pass most of what Republican Ronald Reagan wanted.
DeleteThough, as Double B points out, it certainly WAS outdated when Newt Gingrich came up with his Contract with America, which was much more akin to a contract to destroy America. And when McConnell cheerfully announced that his #1 priority was to make Obama a one-term president. Which was before he blatantly stole a Supreme Court seat from the duly elected Democratic president, of course.
Then we have the orange felon, himself. Perhaps you recall his ever-so-patriotic lies attempting to suggest that President Obama was not born in America. Do you EVER recall him giving President Biden any support whatsoever? He refused to attend Biden's inauguration, refused to concede that election for 4 years and, as far as I know, didn't even acknowledge Biden by name. Classy, patriotic!
"I find it difficult to support most of his policies but want him to be successful overall so we have a prosperous and peaceful country." Uh, sorry, but that's delusional. If his "policies," which is kind of an overblown way to term his whims and grievances, had any chance of leading to a "prosperous and peaceful country," you wouldn't find it difficult to support them. Pardoning January 6 criminals, for example, is not a route toward establishing a more prosperous and peaceful country. Nor is antagonizing our closest allies while giving aid and comfort to our enemies. Nor is destroying the economy in order to punish other countries through tariffs because he has no understanding of history or economics.
It's marketing meets PsyOps using algorithms designed by sociopaths in pursuit of wealth, power and social payback. Enchanted by technology's new toys, like drug pushers, we foolishly primed the subsequent generations to addiction.
DeleteDouble B
DeleteI am not one of his supporters . I support our country and its people. im not going to contribute to the division
"I am not one of his supporters . I support our country and its people. im not going to contribute to the division"
DeleteWhile actively promoting the same.
Do better.
You can't support the country and shrug off Trump. Unless stopped, he's is the ruination of America. Period. If you don't get that, you don't get anything. Not wanting to encourage divisiveness is BS. The woods are burning.
DeleteI will say, I think you hit on it quite nicely towards the end. Though in doing so you've managed to let off the hook most of those responsible.
ReplyDeleteIt's not just that congress has given up it's duty, its more specifically republicans who have given it up.
They are complication. what else is there to say?
So after all that, Tolstoy just concludes that power is power? Eh. Great beard, though!
ReplyDeleteBest dad ever.
ReplyDeleteNeil, I am so used to you posting your own photographs, I was wondering, when did you take the posted photo of Tolstoy? Just kidding, but it almost looks like you with a full beard.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the subject at hand, Tolstoy, Victor Hugo and Dostoevsky wrote the longest novels I've ever tackled. They are all brilliant. Each of them attempted to make sense out of the world as it entered the industrial age. I can't imagine what they would have written in this era of computerization and AI. Although their tomes might have been more hefty, I don't think their message would have been much different than yours.
We need to update the adage: "The pen is mightier than the sword." Maybe something like: The truth is more valuable than money or power."
What would you or your EGD followers suggest?
Loved the expression on a high schooler's face hoping to skid on a book report after hearing of the musical when I gave him the 3- volume translation of Les Miserables. Victor Hugo knew how to describe bricks in a wall!
DeleteI was just listening to NPR and they were having a conversation with people who had voted for Trump and supported him it was very civil they listen to each other there was no name calling it was refreshing it's hard to agree with the Trump supporters but they didn't sound like idiots they weren't angry I guess that comes from their side being in charge.
ReplyDeleteAnyway it just showed that it was possible to have a civil conversation with people who don't agree with you
NPR is trying to keep itself from being kneecapped by the government. You don't have a civil conversation with someone who is ransacking your house. This isn't about disagreement, or manners. But if it helps, imagined a formally engraved card, on quality paper, that reads: "You're a dupe in thrall to a traitor." Better?
DeleteWilbor, NPR interviwers would remain civil interviewing serial rapists and killers. Not a compliment.
DeleteEnthusiasm is not their strong suit; I think they confuse dispassion with intelligence. Let's put it this way: I've been on WBEZ once in the past three years.
DeleteOff topic from the column, but I've been trying to figure out approx what percent of NPR's budget actually comes from taxpayer funding. With these perennial calls to "defund NPR", one might think we're cheating ourselves out of maintaining infrastructure or building stealth bombers.
DeleteI'm not smart enough to figure out the total federal funding/CPB/local government input, but I don't think it's even a tenth of NPR's operating budget. Everything I've read suggests that the overwhelming bulk of it is membership donations, contributions, private grants and endowments, and corporate sponsorship. They have TONS of non-news programming and content which has nothing whatsoever to do with politics. I don't understand the outrage. (Am I reading the numbers wrong? I wouldn't put it past me.)
The only thing I know for certain is that one of the largest contributors to NPR over the years has been the estate of Joan Kroc, widow of Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald's. This included a gift of over $200 million in a single year. If folks truly want to dismantle NPR, they should boycott McDonald's.
The terms are a bit different if the person ransacking your house has a four year appointment in which to do so. I think what Whitmer did yesterday and Maher did a few weeks ago was the more prudent course.
DeleteThe time to get alarmed about Trump was before the election, and the way to get alarmed about him was to nominate a candidate that could beat him. It was known for two years that Trump would be the GOP candidate, yet the Democrats' strategy was to let Biden decide that he would be their candidate (despite myriad evidence of his mental unfitness, way earlier than June 27th, btw), until they decided he couldn't, and then backdooring his wildly unpopular Vice President into the nomination. The Democrats tanked the election, and that's why we're now yielding to an authoritarian takeover.
No argument there. Biden was a victim of a fraction of the same vanity dictating Trump's every move. Although it's mistaken to assume another path would have worked better. Democrats could have run Pete Buttigieg in 2023, and he could have been beaten worse, and we'd all be asking what the Dems were thinking, running a gay man.
DeleteOur copy of War and Peace is a 1942 edition from Simon and Schuster that belonged to my wife. I have never read the book. What makes it highly unusual are the maps inside the front and back covers. One is a map of Napoleon's invasion, and the other is of Hitler's... complete with dotted lines and swastikas.
ReplyDeleteNever even knew the maps were there until today, when I picked up the book upon reading EGD. I'm betting this edition might be worth a few bucks, especially to WWII junkies like me. O lucky man!
War and Peace is one of the books that I am ashamed not to have read (the other is Ulysses). After reading today's column I pulled out my copy which belonged to my Mother. She always signed and dated her books, this is dated April 1942. Yes, it is the identical edition -- complete with the maps inside the front and back covers of Napoleon's and Hitler's invasions. Despite earlier, futile attempts to read it I don't think that I have a choice at this point!
DeleteI'm sorry but none of this means anything. The cliché is true: The only poll that counts really is the one in November.
ReplyDeleteTo everyone who voted for Trump but is now disenchanted: How about turning that into voting Democratic in the next election? Assuming that 1) there will be a next election and 2) your apparent inability to see what is directly in front of you doesn't cause you to walk off a cliff or something before then.
I've never met a disenchanted Trump voter. Some like to show up and get all pouty, pretending they're hurt at the uncivil society they've created.
DeleteAmen. Just heard one agree with all his immorality only to defend her MAGA vote because only a man should be president.
DeleteMost of the Trump voters who are disenchanted aren't admitting they were Trump voters. Or else they're not admitting they're disenchanted.
DeleteAh, "War and Peace." My wife had always wanted to read it, so we bought two copies featuring the Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky translation, for each of us to do separate battle with, while generally trying to plod along at the same rate. Uh, it took quite a while. I'm afraid I'm just too much of a philistine to appreciate it as much as you do, NS. It had its moments, but it's one of many things that I'm happy to say I've done that I didn't particularly enjoy doing all that much. My wife, almost needless to say, liked it better than I did!
ReplyDeleteRegardless, you've utilized it to good purpose here today.
I'm glad you said that — we also had his-n-her copies. Brought them on our honeymoon, in fact. I'm glad it isn't just us.
DeleteHope you introduce us readers to Tolstoy's Sevastopol Sketches one of these days. War and Peace may not have succeeded in explaining how 600,000 Frenchmen were induced to march into Russia, but I think Sevastopol Sketches comes pretty close to explaining why individual soldiers willingly risk their lives in combat.
Deletejohn
Happy to oblige: https://www.everygoddamnday.com/2014/03/the-second-crimean-war.html
DeleteThank you Neil. This is a great article. Timely.
ReplyDeleteYou're entering into the grumpy old man category with sentences like "The current thought is that such weighty classics as “War and Peace,” written by dead white males such as Leo Tolstoy, are something of a scam, a burden unfairly imposed by society to keep young readers from sharper, more relevant authors." Your appreciation of the book is enough. You don't have to trash some hypothetical group of struggling language arts teachers to make your point.
ReplyDeleteThere's nothing hypothetical about them, nor are they struggling. They're all too real, have won the cultural debate and adopt a false victimhood designed to mask their actual supremacy. Nobody cries like a bully,
DeleteIf the Democrats want to get back in the game they need to find a candidate who is middle of the road....fiscally conservative (i.e. acknowledge and do something about the $37 trillion debt) and socially middle of the road. I believe this is where most Americans are.
ReplyDeletethat is a republican
DeleteI hate takes like this. It's proof propaganda from the right works.
DeleteDemocrats are fiscally responsible, they have been for the last 40 years. Their the only party to make money and shrink the deficit.
Their policies and laws are effective and well liked publicly.
The only real question is, why do you not see that?
The Democrats laws while effective were definitely not universally liked
DeleteNeither party makes money all the money the government has is collected from us in taxes.
Well maybe the purchasing of bonds is the government making money but really I think it's just a loan from people and they paid back with interest.
Ok, I'm going to buy it. I read Grimm's fairytales to my daughter at night. She turned out just fine.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/opinion/trump-100-days-opposition.html
ReplyDelete