On the Faculty of Choice

Day 172 of A Year of War and Peace

Yesterday Prince Andrei’s life was in shambles. Today he’s improving. Things are getting better. They’re getting better, in large part, because he has seemingly given up on searching for and thinking about Anatole Kuragin. His mind is now “occupied by the interests of . . . conducting a gigantic war, and he was glad to be free for a while from the distraction caused by the thought of Kuragin.” That is Tolstoy’s way of saying that today Prince Andrei is more focused on what is under his control rather than what is not under his control.

What is under his control, as an army man now, is his opinion on the army’s progress and its position. So he surveys their progress and position. Then, with all the relevant information collected, he reflects on and articulates the competing philosophical schools that compose the various parts of the Russian army. His reflections brings him to a thought perfectly in keeping with what we already know about Tolstoy’s theory of history:

Already from his military experience and what he had seen in the Austrian campaign, he had come to the conclusion that in war the most deeply considered plans have no significance, and that all depends on the way unexpected movements of the enemy are met, and on how and by whom the whole matter is handled.

Readers will note the contrast between Andrei’s calm and focused contemplation in this chapter and the rage, frenzy, and gloom of yesterday’s reading. There is a reason for that.

DAILY MEDITATION