Ivan Ilyich's Death

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Death is the most important and abrupt stop in life. With no other option, man is forced to reflect back on a life that has no chance of future redemption. Of course, the concept of death features prominently in both The Death of Ivan Ilyich, by Leo Tolstoy, and Death in Venice, by Thomas Mann. The drab Ivan Ilyich, hailing from The Death of Ivan Ilyich, only realizes the faults in his life when backed against the inevitable wall of death. In the critical view of Tolstoy, “Ivan Ilyich’s life had been most simple and most ordinary and therefore most terrible” (818). Ivan always followed the Apollonian lifestyle, only acting in proper ways based on the structure of society. As such, the greater portion of his existence was incredibly dull and unexceptional. However, in attempting to live this way, Ivan suffers a fall that leads to his subsequent illness and bitter end. This locks Ivan in a state of self-reflection and depression. Unable to leave the prison of his own illness, this becomes his only option. In this torture, Ivan finds comfort in the presence of the youthful Gerasim. In fact, Ivan feels Gerasim’s presence “such a comfort that he did not want to let him go” (Tolstoy 838).

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