Respuesta :
For the first time, something really serious happened to Ivan; and for the first time, he came to realize it as a fact of life. It can't be minimized, it won't go away with another game of bridge, it can't be explained. For the first time in his life, Ivan is faced with a truth that is hard to understand, and he can't just get away from it or discard the information. His former way of life just doesn't match with this situation, nor can it explain it. In chapter V, he thinks: “It’s not a question of appendix or kidney, but of life and . . . death. Yes, life was there and now it is going, going and I cannot stop it. Yes. Why deceive myself? Isn’t it obvious to everyone but me that I’m dying, and that it’s only a question of weeks, days . . . it may happen this moment. There was light and now there is darkness. I was here and now I’m going there! Where?” A chill came over him, his breathing ceased, and he felt only the throbbing of his heart.
It's not that Ivan didn't know until now that he was going to die. But it had never dawned on him that death would happen soon, and that it isn't an abstract concept, but a very real thing that, which is going to cut short his carefree, pleasant cosiness, and it is going to happen very soon.
It's not that Ivan didn't know until now that he was going to die. But it had never dawned on him that death would happen soon, and that it isn't an abstract concept, but a very real thing that, which is going to cut short his carefree, pleasant cosiness, and it is going to happen very soon.
Ivan Ilyich displays many examples of insincerity. He belonged to the bourgeoisie, the rich middle class of Russian society in the mid-nineteenth century. The bourgeoisie were influential people who held wealth and status. They often resorted to compromises and lies to get what they wanted. Tolstoy portrays Ivan Ilyich as being more attached to his social status and material possessions than he is to his family.
Tolstoy reveals the superficiality of Ivan Ilyich’s life through the thoughts and actions of several characters. For example, the following scene reveals the hypocrisy of Ivan Ilyich’s wife, Praskovya Fedorovna, as well as Ivan’s alienation from her:
Praskovya Fedorovna’s silk dress rustles at the door and she is heard scolding Peter for not having let her know of the doctor’s arrival. She comes in, kisses her husband, and at once proceeds to prove that she has been up a long time already, and only owing to a misunderstanding failed to be there when the doctor arrived.
Ivan Ilyich looks at her, scans her all over…. He hates her with his whole soul.
Even Ivan Ilyich’s daughter, Lisa, reflects his superficial and selfish attitude toward life. Tolstoy describes how Lisa, who is engaged to be married, is “impatient with [her father’s] illness, suffering, and death, because they interfered with her happiness.”
Ivan Ilyich’s petty life has not prepared him to face death with dignity. When he learns that he is dying, he is overwhelmed by fear and self-pity. Here’s how Tolstoy describes his protagonist’s emotions:
Anger choked him and he was agonizingly, unbearably miserable. "It is impossible that all men have been doomed to suffer this awful horror!"
Ivan Ilyich becomes painfully aware of the insincerity in his life as his death approaches, and it begins to torment him:
This falsity around him and within him did more than anything else to poison his last days.