Anton Chekhov
celebrated a life that would have crushed most others. Even at the height
of his literary success he had ample opportunity to witness and experience
life's many unfairnesses. New and old oppressions - a precocious mortality
from tuberculosis that presented as hemorrhages at twenty-four and killed
him at forty-four, and a partially resolved past - haunted his newly achieved
"sense of personal freedom" that, he told a friend in 1889, he had "paid
for with his youth."
In his plays Chekhov illustrated with insight and feeling the constant
temptation he suffered to yield to the circumstances over which he triumphed.
His characters struggle to avoid the many roads of surrender to a harsh
and unfair world. The multiple guises of slavery - resignation, self deception,
intoxication, identification with aggressors - continually trip them up
and threaten to consume their lives. The population of Uncle
Vanya fall away from work and truth, away from responsibility and
self knowledge, into drink, denial, and illusion, as the world rots and
is consumed around them. The consumption of Chekhov's lungs is mapped
in the impulsive inexorable consumption of the forests; the cattle eat
the seedlings as the hawks pursue the chicks, the locals are scratching
at the front door, the inhabitants are drunk and infected.
The play describes certain vicissitudes of surrender but never indulges
in judgment or despair. Vanya accuses Yelena of sacrificing her youth
to her husband the Professor, as Vanya's sister did before her, but he
readily confesses that he is the one who "worshipped" the Professor "like
a dog." Astrov, recognizing the romance, asks Vanya if he is "worried
about his little Professor." Vanya introduces himself in the Professor's
presence as the "relief nurse." He says he "lived and breathed for him,"
that he "squeezed every last drop for him."
As so often happens in Chekhov, fiction and autobiography tread parallel
paths. These last words of Vanya evoke language that Chekhov himself used
in 1889 in a famous letter to his mentor, the writer Suvorin. That same
year Chekhov had begun work on The Wood Demon, the unfinished,
unproduced play that was later transformed into Uncle
Vanya. In The Wood Demon, a conservationist battles a father
- a blowhard, literary critic - for his daughter's affections. The girl
chooses the conservationist. Uncle
Vanya
, the rewrite, is darker. It focuses on the failed attempts of several
characters to release themselves from a loved and hated father-figure.
In the letter to Suvorin, Chekhov similarly describes his efforts to free
himself from the legacy of a harsh childhood at the hands of a tyrannical
father:
"Try and write a story about a young man - the son of a serf, a former
grocer, choir boy, schoolboy and university student, raised on respect
for rank, kissing the priests' hands, worshipping the ideas of others,
and giving thanks for every piece of bread, receiving frequent whippings,
making the rounds as a tutor without galoshes, brawling, torturing animals,
enjoying dinners at the houses of rich relatives, needlessly hypocritical
before God and man merely to acknowledge his own insignificance - write
about how this young man squeezes the slave out of himself drop by drop
and how, on waking up one fine morning, he finds that the blood coursing
through his veins is no longer the blood of a slave, but that of a real
human being." (Karlinsky, 85).
Vanya also wakes to self-recognition, but his discovery is the reverse
of that described in Chekhov's letter. Vanya's productive years have been
wasted in blind devotion to a false god. Unable to face his own participation
in his servitude, he can only blame the Professor. His tragicomic revolution
readily collapses back into a regressed and timeless world of a boy king
holding the fort for an absent father.
Through his literary gifts and his resilient nature, Chekhov freed himself
financially, from his family, and emotionally, from a series of mentors
and father substitutes. At twenty-six, Chekhov thanked Grigorovich, a
famous older writer, for his words of encouragement, but a few years later
Chekhov wrote to Suvorin, his new mentor, "I'm glad I didn't listen to
Grigorovich." Chekhov worshipped Tolstoy for his moral certainty, then
began to distance himself, attributing his former attachment to "a sort
of hypnosis." He rejected the later puritanical Tolstoy, with feeling,
and complained that he ought to be arrested. "Devil take the philosophy
of the great ones of the world!" (Laffitte, 185).
Biographers have speculated that Chekhov's keen observational skills
may have created a distance that limited his capacity for intimacy, just
as his empathy may have muted his aggression. Perhaps humor was his most
direct outlet for gratification. He discovered the power of theatre through
humor when, as a teenager, he impersonated a beggar and successfully obtained
charity at the home of an uncle. His writing skills flourished in humor
through caricature and parody. The mature Chekhov relied on irony and
surprise - putting wisdom in the mouths of fools and fits of blind foolishness
in his wise men - to create morally ambiguous characters that subvert
our expectations. The humorist Chekhov declares his liberation but creates
Vanya to express his disavowed passivity. Vanya makes Chekhov's struggle
with passivity overt. He is a punchline. His life is a joke.
By the play's end, the question becomes less developmental and more
existential. Why go on? And how? Astrov and Sonya seek solace in work
and the promise of heaven, whereas Chekhov in his letters pledged to abjure
his father's lies and violence. But Chekhov also mocks finality and closure.
He identifies himself with the Professor, the buffoon, by promising, "After
everything that's happened, after what I have learned in these last few
hours, I could write volumes for posterity about the way we ought to be
living our lives."
Dr. Phillip Freeman is a psychiatrist and a training and supervising
psychoanalyst at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute. He practices in
Newton.
References:
Karlinsky, S. Anton Chekhov's Life and Thought: Selected Letters and
Commentary. University of California Press. Berkeley, 1973.
Laffitte, S. Chekhov. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York, 1971.