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    There Are No Guilty People

    by Leo Tolstoy
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    Page 1 of 10
    I

    MINE is a strange and wonderful lot! The chances are that there is not a
    single wretched beggar suffering under the luxury and oppression of the
    rich who feels anything like as keenly as I do either the injustice,
    the cruelty, and the horror of their oppression of and contempt for
    the poor; or the grinding humiliation and misery which befall the great
    majority of the workers, the real producers of all that makes life
    possible. I have felt this for a long time, and as the years have
    passed by the feeling has grown and grown, until recently it reached its
    climax. Although I feel all this so vividly, I still live on amid the
    depravity and sins of rich society; and I cannot leave it, because I
    have neither the knowledge nor the strength to do so. I cannot. I do
    not know how to change my life so that my physical needs--food, sleep,
    clothing, my going to and fro--may be satisfied without a sense of shame
    and wrongdoing in the position which I fill.

    There was a time when I tried to change my position, which was not in
    harmony with my conscience; but the conditions created by the past, by
    my family and its claims upon me, were so complicated that they would
    not let me out of their grasp, or rather, I did not know how to free
    myself. I had not the strength. Now that I am over eighty and have

    become feeble, I have given up trying to free myself; and, strange to
    say, as my feebleness increases I realise more and more strongly the
    wrongfulness of my position, and it grows more and more intolerable to
    me.

    It has occurred to me that I do not occupy this position for nothing:
    that Providence intended that I should lay bare the truth of my
    feelings, so that I might atone for all that causes my suffering, and
    might perhaps open the eyes of those--or at least of some of those--who
    are still blind to what I see so clearly, and thus might lighten
    the burden of that vast majority who, under existing conditions, are
    subjected to bodily and spiritual suffering by those who deceive them
    and also deceive themselves. Indeed, it may be that the position which
    I occupy gives me special facilities for revealing the artificial and
    criminal relations which exist between men--for telling the whole truth
    in regard to that position without confusing the issue by attempting to
    vindicate myself, and without rousing the envy of the rich and feelings
    of oppression in the hearts of the poor and downtrodden. I am so
    placed that I not only have no desire to vindicate myself; but, on the
    contrary, I find it necessary to make an effort lest I should exaggerate
    the wickedness of the great among whom I live, of whose society I am
    ashamed, whose attitude towards their fellow-men I detest with my whole
    soul, though I find it
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