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<h2> CHAPTER VIII </h2>
<p>Again Pierre was overtaken by the depression he so dreaded. For three days
after the delivery of his speech at the lodge he lay on a sofa at home
receiving no one and going nowhere.</p>
<p>It was just then that he received a letter from his wife, who implored him
to see her, telling him how grieved she was about him and how she wished
to devote her whole life to him.</p>
<p>At the end of the letter she informed him that in a few days she would
return to Petersburg from abroad.</p>
<p>Following this letter one of the Masonic Brothers whom Pierre respected
less than the others forced his way in to see him and, turning the
conversation upon Pierre's matrimonial affairs, by way of fraternal advice
expressed the opinion that his severity to his wife was wrong and that he
was neglecting one of the first rules of Freemasonry by not forgiving the
penitent.</p>
<p>At the same time his mother-in-law, Prince Vasili's wife, sent to him
imploring him to come if only for a few minutes to discuss a most
important matter. Pierre saw that there was a conspiracy against him and
that they wanted to reunite him with his wife, and in the mood he then
was, this was not even unpleasant to him. Nothing mattered to him. Nothing
in life seemed to him of much importance, and under the influence of the
depression that possessed him he valued neither his liberty nor his
resolution to punish his wife.</p>
<p>"No one is right and no one is to blame; so she too is not to blame," he
thought.</p>
<p>If he did not at once give his consent to a reunion with his wife, it was
only because in his state of depression he did not feel able to take any
step. Had his wife come to him, he would not have turned her away.
Compared to what preoccupied him, was it not a matter of indifference
whether he lived with his wife or not?</p>
<p>Without replying either to his wife or his mother-in-law, Pierre late one
night prepared for a journey and started for Moscow to see Joseph
Alexeevich. This is what he noted in his diary:</p>
<p>Moscow, 17th November</p>
<p>I have just returned from my benefactor, and hasten to write down what I
have experienced. Joseph Alexeevich is living poorly and has for three
years been suffering from a painful disease of the bladder. No one has
ever heard him utter a groan or a word of complaint. From morning till
late at night, except when he eats his very plain food, he is working at
science. He received me graciously and made me sit down on the bed on
which he lay. I made the sign of the Knights of the East and of Jerusalem,
and he responded in the same manner, asking me with a mild smile what I
had learned and gained in the Prussian and Scottish lodges. I told him
everything as best I could, and told him what I had proposed to our
Petersburg lodge, of the bad reception I had encountered, and of my
rupture with the Brothers. Joseph Alexeevich, having remained silent and
thoughtful for a good while, told me his view of the matter, which at once
lit up for me my whole past and the future path I should follow. He
surprised me by asking whether I remembered the threefold aim of the
order: (1) The preservation and study of the mystery. (2) The purification
and reformation of oneself for its reception, and (3) The improvement of
the human race by striving for such purification. Which is the principal
aim of these three? Certainly self-reformation and self-purification. Only
to this aim can we always strive independently of circumstances. But at
the same time just this aim demands the greatest efforts of us; and so,
led astray by pride, losing sight of this aim, we occupy ourselves either
with the mystery which in our impurity we are unworthy to receive, or seek
the reformation of the human race while ourselves setting an example of
baseness and profligacy. Illuminism is not a pure doctrine, just because
it is attracted by social activity and puffed up by pride. On this ground
Joseph Alexeevich condemned my speech and my whole activity, and in the
depth of my soul I agreed with him. Talking of my family affairs he said
to me, "the chief duty of a true Mason, as I have told you, lies in
perfecting himself. We often think that by removing all the difficulties
of our life we shall more quickly reach our aim, but on the contrary, my
dear sir, it is only in the midst of worldly cares that we can attain our
three chief aims: (1) Self-knowledge—for man can only know himself
by comparison, (2) Self-perfecting, which can only be attained by
conflict, and (3) The attainment of the chief virtue—love of death.
Only the vicissitudes of life can show us its vanity and develop our
innate love of death or of rebirth to a new life." These words are all the
more remarkable because, in spite of his great physical sufferings, Joseph
Alexeevich is never weary of life though he loves death, for which—in
spite of the purity and loftiness of his inner man—he does not yet
feel himself sufficiently prepared. My benefactor then explained to me
fully the meaning of the Great Square of creation and pointed out to me
that the numbers three and seven are the basis of everything. He advised
me not to avoid intercourse with the Petersburg Brothers, but to take up
only second-grade posts in the lodge, to try, while diverting the Brothers
from pride, to turn them toward the true path self-knowledge and
self-perfecting. Besides this he advised me for myself personally above
all to keep a watch over myself, and to that end he gave me a notebook,
the one I am now writing in and in which I will in future note down all my
actions.</p>
<p>Petersburg, 23rd November</p>
<p>I am again living with my wife. My mother-in-law came to me in tears and
said that Helene was here and that she implored me to hear her; that she
was innocent and unhappy at my desertion, and much more. I knew that if I
once let myself see her I should not have strength to go on refusing what
she wanted. In my perplexity I did not know whose aid and advice to seek.
Had my benefactor been here he would have told me what to do. I went to my
room and reread Joseph Alexeevich's letters and recalled my conversations
with him, and deduced from it all that I ought not to refuse a suppliant,
and ought to reach a helping hand to everyone—especially to one so
closely bound to me—and that I must bear my cross. But if I forgive
her for the sake of doing right, then let union with her have only a
spiritual aim. That is what I decided, and what I wrote to Joseph
Alexeevich. I told my wife that I begged her to forget the past, to
forgive me whatever wrong I may have done her, and that I had nothing to
forgive. It gave me joy to tell her this. She need not know how hard it
was for me to see her again. I have settled on the upper floor of this big
house and am experiencing a happy feeling of regeneration.</p>
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