Information about the life of Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy. See what "Tolstoy, Lev Nikolaevich" is in other dictionaries

26.02.2019

In 1828, on August 26, the future great Russian writer Leo Tolstoy was born in the Yasnaya Polyana estate. The family was well-born - his ancestor was a noble nobleman who received for his service to Tsar Peter county title. Mother was from ancient noble family Volkonsky. Belonging to a privileged stratum of society influenced the behavior and thoughts of the writer throughout his life. short biography Leo Tolstoy does not fully reveal the entire history of the ancient family family.

Serene life in Yasnaya Polyana

The writer's childhood was quite prosperous, despite the fact that he lost his mother early. Thanks to family stories, he kept her bright image in his memory. A brief biography of Leo Tolstoy testifies that his father was the embodiment of beauty and strength for the writer. He instilled in the boy a love for canine hunting, which was later described in detail in the novel "War and Peace".

He also had a close relationship with his older brother Nikolenka - he taught little Levushka different games and told him interesting stories. Tolstoy's first story - "Childhood" - contains many autobiographical memories of the childhood of the writer himself.

Youth

The serene joyful stay in Yasnaya Polyana was interrupted due to the death of his father. In 1837, the family was under the care of an aunt. In this city, according to a short biography of Leo Tolstoy, the youth of the writer passed. Here he entered the university in 1844 - first at the philosophical, and then at the faculty of law. True, studies attracted him little, the student preferred various amusements and revels.

In this biography of Tolstoy, Leo Nikolayevich characterizes him as a person who disdainfully treated people of the lower, non-aristocratic class. He denied history as a science - in his eyes it had no practical use. The writer retained the sharpness of his judgments throughout his life.

As a landlord

In 1847, without graduating from the university, Tolstoy decides to return to Yasnaya Polyana and try to arrange the life of his serfs. Reality sharply diverged from the ideas of the writer. The peasants did not understand the intentions of the master, and a brief biography of Leo Tolstoy describes the experience of his management as unsuccessful (the writer shared it in his story “The Morning of the Landowner”), as a result of which he leaves his estate.

The path of becoming a writer

The next few years spent in St. Petersburg and Moscow were not in vain for the future great prose writer. From 1847 to 1852, diaries were kept in which Leo Tolstoy carefully verified all his thoughts and reflections. A brief biography tells that while serving in the Caucasus, work is being carried out in parallel on the story "Childhood", which will be published a little later in the Sovremennik magazine. This marked the beginning of further creative way great Russian writer.

Ahead of the writer is the creation of his great works "War and Peace" and "Anna Karenina", but for now he is honing his style, being published in Sovremennik and basking in favorable reviews from critics.

Later years of creativity

In 1855, Tolstoy came to St. Petersburg for a short time, but literally a couple of months later he left it and settled in Yasnaya Polyana, opening a school for peasant children there. In 1862 he married Sophia Bers and was very happy in the early years.

In 1863-1869, the novel "War and Peace" was written and revised, which bore little resemblance to classic version. It lacks the traditional key elements of the time. Or rather, they are present, but they are not key.

1877 - Tolstoy completed the novel "Anna Karenina", in which the technique of internal monologue is repeatedly used.

Starting from the second half of the 60s, Tolstoy is experiencing which he managed to overcome only at the turn of the 1870s and 80s by completely rethinking his former life. Then Tolstoy appears - his wife categorically did not accept his new views. The ideas of the late Tolstoy are similar to the socialist doctrine, with the only difference being that he was an opponent of the revolution.

In 1896-1904, Tolstoy finished the story, which was published after his death, which occurred in November 1910 at the Astapovo station on the Ryazan-Ural road.

✍  Tolstoy Lev Nikolaevich(August 28 (September 9), 1828, Yasnaya Polyana, Tula province, Russian Empire - November 7, 1910, Astapovo station, Ryazan province, Russian Empire) - one of the most famous Russian writers and thinkers, one of the greatest writers in the world. Member of the defense of Sevastopol. Enlightener, publicist, religious thinker, his authoritative opinion was the reason for the emergence of a new religious and moral trend - Tolstoyism. Corresponding member of the Imperial Academy of Sciences (1873), honorary academician in the category of fine literature (1900).

A writer who, during his lifetime, was recognized as the head of Russian literature. The work of Leo Tolstoy marked a new stage in Russian and world realism, acting as a bridge between the classic novel of the 19th century and the literature of the 20th century. Leo Tolstoy had a strong influence on the evolution of European humanism, as well as on the development of realistic traditions in world literature. The works of Leo Tolstoy were repeatedly filmed and staged in the USSR and abroad; his plays have been staged all over the world.

The most famous works of Tolstoy are the novels War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Resurrection, the autobiographical trilogy Childhood, Boyhood, Youth, the stories The Cossacks, The Death of Ivan Ilyich, Kreutzerov sonata”, “Hadji Murad”, a series of essays “Sevastopol Tales”, dramas “The Living Corpse” and “The Power of Darkness”, autobiographical religious and philosophical works “Confession” and “What is my faith?” and etc.

§  Biography

¶  Origin

Representative of the Count's branch of the noble family of Tolstoy, descended from Peter's associate P. A. Tolstoy. The writer had extensive family ties in the world of the highest aristocracy. Among the cousins ​​​​of the father are the adventurer and breeder F.I. Tolstoy, the artist F.P. Tolstoy, the beauty M.I. Lopukhina, socialite A. F. Zakrevskaya, maid of honor A. A. Tolstaya. The poet A. K. Tolstoy was his second cousin. Among the mother's cousins ​​are Lieutenant General D. M. Volkonsky and a wealthy emigrant N. I. Trubetskoy. A.P. Mansurov and A.V. Vsevolozhsky were married to their mother's cousins. Tolstoy was connected by property with the ministers A. A. Zakrevsky and L. A. Perovsky (married to cousins ​​of his parents), the generals of 1812 L. I. Depreradovich (married to his grandmother’s sister) and A. I. Yushkov (brother-in-law of one of aunts), as well as with Chancellor A. M. Gorchakov (brother of the husband of another aunt). common ancestor Leo Tolstoy and Pushkin was Admiral Ivan Golovin, who helped Peter I create the Russian fleet.

The features of Ilya Andreevich's grandfather are given in War and Peace to the good-natured, impractical old Count Rostov. The son of Ilya Andreevich, Nikolai Ilyich Tolstoy (1794-1837), was the father of Lev Nikolaevich. In some character traits and biography facts, he was similar to Nikolenka's father in "Childhood" and "Boyhood" and partly to Nikolai Rostov in "War and Peace". However, in real life Nikolai Ilyich differed from Nikolai Rostov not only in his good education, but also in his convictions that did not allow him to serve under Nicholas I. A participant in the foreign campaign of the Russian army against Napoleon, including participating in the “battle of the peoples” near Leipzig and was captured by the French, but was able to escape, after the conclusion of peace he retired with the rank of lieutenant colonel of the Pavlograd hussar regiment. Soon after his resignation, he was forced to go to official service so as not to end up in a debtor's prison because of the debts of his father, the Kazan governor, who died under investigation for official abuse. The negative example of his father helped Nikolai Ilyich work out his life ideal - a private independent life with family joys. In order to put his frustrated affairs in order, Nikolai Ilyich (like Nikolai Rostov) married the already not very young Princess Maria Nikolaevna of the Volkonsky family in 1822, the marriage was happy. They had five children: Nikolai (1823-1860), Sergei (1826-1904), Dmitry (1827-1856), Lev, Maria (1830-1912).

Tolstoy's maternal grandfather, Catherine's General, Prince Nikolai Sergeevich Volkonsky, had some resemblance to the stern rigorist - the old Prince Bolkonsky in War and Peace. Lev Nikolayevich's mother, similar in some respects to Princess Marya depicted in War and Peace, possessed a wonderful gift for storytelling.

¶ Childhood

Leo Tolstoy was born on August 28, 1828 in the Krapivensky district of the Tula province, in the hereditary estate of his mother - Yasnaya Polyana. He was the fourth child in the family. The mother died in 1830 six months after the birth of her daughter from "birth fever", as they said then, when Leo was not yet 2 years old.

A distant relative, T. A. Ergolskaya, took up the upbringing of orphaned children. In 1837, the family moved to Moscow, settling on Plyushchikha, as the eldest son had to prepare to enter the university. Soon, his father, Nikolai Ilyich, suddenly died, leaving affairs (including some lawsuits related to the family’s property) in an unfinished state, and the three younger children again settled in Yasnaya Polyana under the supervision of Yergolskaya and his paternal aunt, Countess A. M. Osten-Saken appointed guardian of the children. Here Lev Nikolaevich remained until 1840, when Countess Osten-Saken died, the children moved to Kazan, to a new guardian - the father's sister P. I. Yushkova.

The Yushkovs' house was considered one of the most cheerful in Kazan; all members of the family highly valued external brilliance. “My good aunt,” says Tolstoy, “the purest being, always said that she would not want anything more for me than for me to have a relationship with a married woman.”

Lev Nikolaevich wanted to shine in society, but his natural shyness and lack of external attractiveness prevented him. The most diverse, as Tolstoy himself defines them, "thinking" about the main issues of our existence - happiness, death, God, love, eternity - left an imprint on his character in that era of life. What he told in "Adolescence" and "Youth", in the novel "Resurrection" about the aspirations of Irtenyev and Nekhlyudov for self-improvement, was taken by Tolstoy from the history of his own ascetic attempts of this time. All this, wrote the critic S. A. Vengerov, led to the fact that Tolstoy developed, in the words of his story “Adolescence”, “the habit of constant moral analysis, which destroyed the freshness of feeling and clarity of mind.” Citing examples of self-analysis of this period, he ironically speaks of the exaggeration of his adolescent philosophical pride and greatness, and at the same time notes the insurmountable inability "to get used to not be ashamed of his every simplest word and movement" when confronted with real people, whose benefactor he then himself seemed.

¶ Education

His education was initially carried out by the French tutor Saint-Thomas (the prototype of St.-Jérôme in the story "Boyhood"), who replaced the good-natured German Reselman, whom Tolstoy portrayed in the story "Childhood" under the name of Karl Ivanovich.

In 1843, P. I. Yushkova, taking on the role of guardian of her underage nephews (only the eldest, Nikolai, was an adult) and niece, brought them to Kazan. Following the brothers Nikolai, Dmitry and Sergei, Lev decided to enter the Imperial Kazan University (the most famous at that time), where Lobachevsky worked at the mathematical faculty, and Kovalevsky at the Vostochny. On October 3, 1844, Leo Tolstoy was enrolled as a student in the category of oriental (Arabic-Turkish) literature as a self-paying student. At the entrance exams, in particular, he showed excellent results in the obligatory "Turkish-Tatar language" for admission. According to the results of the year, he had poor progress in the relevant subjects, did not pass the transitional exam and had to re-take the first-year program.

In order to avoid a complete repetition of the course, he moved to the Faculty of Law, where his problems with grades in some subjects continued. The transitional exams in May 1846 were passed satisfactorily (he received one five, three fours and four threes; the average output was three), and Lev Nikolayevich was transferred to the second year. Leo Tolstoy spent less than two years at the Faculty of Law: “It was always difficult for him to have any education imposed by others, and everything he learned in life, he learned himself, suddenly, quickly, with hard work,” writes S. A. Tolstaya in his “Materials for the biography of Leo Tolstoy”. In 1904, he recalled: “... for the first year I ... did nothing. In the second year, I began to study ... there was Professor Meyer, who ... gave me a job - a comparison of Catherine's "Instruction" with Esprit des lois ("The Spirit of the Laws" (fr.) Russian) Montesquieu. ... I was carried away by this work, I went to the village, began to read Montesquieu, this reading opened up endless horizons for me; I began to read Rousseau and left the university, precisely because I wanted to study.

¶  Beginning of literary activity

From March 11, 1847, Tolstoy was in the Kazan hospital, on March 17 he began to keep a diary, where, imitating Benjamin Franklin, he set goals and objectives for self-improvement, noted successes and failures in completing these tasks, analyzed his shortcomings and train of thought, motives for their actions. He kept this diary with short breaks throughout his life.

Having completed his treatment, in the spring of 1847 Tolstoy left his studies at the university and left for Yasnaya Polyana, which he inherited under the division; his activities there are partly described in the work “The Morning of the Landowner”: Tolstoy tried to establish relations with the peasants in a new way. His attempt to somehow alleviate the young landowner's guilt before the people dates back to the same year when D. V. Grigorovich's "Anton-Goremyk" and the beginning of I. S. Turgenev's "Notes of a Hunter" appeared.

In his diary, Tolstoy formulated for himself a large number of life rules and goals, but he managed to follow only a small part of them. Among the successful - serious studies English language, music, jurisprudence. In addition, neither the diary nor the letters reflected the beginning of Tolstoy's studies in pedagogy and charity, although in 1849 he first opened a school for peasant children. The main teacher was Foka Demidovich, a serf, but Lev Nikolayevich himself often conducted classes.

In mid-October 1848, Tolstoy left for Moscow, settling where many of his relatives and friends lived - in the Arbat area. He stayed at Ivanova's house in Nikolopeskovsky Lane. In Moscow, he was going to start preparing for the candidate's exams, but the classes were never started. Instead, he was attracted to a completely different side of life - social life. In addition to his passion for social life, in Moscow, in the winter of 1848-1849, Lev Nikolayevich first developed a passion for a card game. But since he played very recklessly and not always thinking about his moves, he often lost.

Having left for St. Petersburg in February 1849, he spent time in revelry with K. A. Islavin, the uncle of his future wife (“My love for Islavin ruined for me the whole 8 months of my life in St. Petersburg”). In the spring, Tolstoy began to take the exam for a candidate of rights; he passed two exams, from criminal law and criminal proceedings, but he did not take the third exam and went to the village.

Later he came to Moscow, where he often spent time in gambling, which often had a negative effect on his financial position. During this period of his life, Tolstoy was especially passionately interested in music (he himself played the piano well and greatly appreciated his favorite works performed by others). Passion for music prompted him later to write the Kreutzer Sonata.

Tolstoy's favorite composers were Bach, Handel and Chopin. The development of Tolstoy's love for music was also facilitated by the fact that during a trip to St. Petersburg in 1848, he met in a very unsuitable dance class environment with a gifted, but astray German musician, whom he later described in the story "Albert". In 1849, Lev Nikolaevich settled the musician Rudolf in Yasnaya Polyana, with whom he played four hands on the piano. Carried away by music at that time, he played works by Schumann, Chopin, Mozart, Mendelssohn for several hours a day. In the late 1840s, Tolstoy, in collaboration with his acquaintance Zybin, composed a waltz, which he performed in the early 1900s with the composer S. I. Taneyev, who made a musical notation of this piece of music(the only one composed by Tolstoy). Waltz sounds in the film Father Sergius, based on the novel by L. N. Tolstoy.

A lot of time was also spent on carousing, playing and hunting.

In the winter of 1850-1851 began to write "Childhood". In March 1851 he wrote The History of Yesterday. 4 years after he left the university, Nikolay Nikolayevich's brother, who had served in the Caucasus, arrived in Yasnaya Polyana and invited his younger brother to join military service in the Caucasus. Lev agreed not immediately, until a major loss in Moscow hastened the final decision. The writer's biographers note the significant and positive influence of brother Nikolai on the young and inexperienced in worldly affairs Leo. The older brother, in the absence of his parents, was his friend and mentor.

In order to pay off the debts, it was necessary to reduce their expenses to a minimum - and in the spring of 1851 Tolstoy hurriedly left Moscow for the Caucasus without a specific goal. Soon he decided to enter the military service, but for this he lacked the necessary documents left in Moscow, in anticipation of which Tolstoy lived for about five months in Pyatigorsk, in a simple hut. He spent a significant part of his time hunting, in the company of the Cossack Epishka, the prototype of one of the heroes of the story "The Cossacks", appearing there under the name Eroshka.

In the autumn of 1851, having passed an exam in Tiflis, Tolstoy entered the 4th battery of the 20th artillery brigade, stationed in the Cossack village of Starogladovskaya on the banks of the Terek, near Kizlyar, as a cadet. With some changes in details, she is depicted in the story "Cossacks". The story reproduces the picture inner life a young gentleman who fled from Moscow life. In the Cossack village, Tolstoy began to write again and in July 1852 sent the first part of the future autobiographical trilogy, Childhood, signed only with the initials L. N. T. When sending the manuscript to the journal, Leo Tolstoy attached a letter that said: “... I look forward to your verdict. He will either encourage me to continue my favorite activities, or make me burn everything I started.

Having received the manuscript of Childhood, the editor of Sovremennik, N. A. Nekrasov, immediately recognized its literary value and wrote a kind letter to the author, which had a very encouraging effect on him. In a letter to I. S. Turgenev, Nekrasov noted: “This is a new talent and, it seems, reliable.” The manuscript is still unknown author was published in September of the same year. Meanwhile, the beginning and inspired author began to continue the tetralogy "Four Epochs of Development", the last part of which - "Youth" - did not take place. He pondered the plot of The Morning of the Landowner (the finished story was only a fragment of The Novel of the Russian Landowner), The Raid, The Cossacks. Published in Sovremennik on September 18, 1852, Childhood was an extraordinary success; after the publication of the author, they immediately began to rank among the luminaries of the young literary school, along with I. S. Turgenev, Goncharov, D. V. Grigorovich, Ostrovsky, who already enjoyed loud literary fame. Critics Apollon Grigoriev, Annenkov, Druzhinin, Chernyshevsky appreciated the depth of psychological analysis, the seriousness of the author's intentions and the bright convexity of realism.

The relatively late beginning of the career is very characteristic of Tolstoy: he never considered himself a professional writer, understanding professionalism not in the sense of a profession that provides a livelihood, but in the sense of the predominance of literary interests. He did not take the interests of literary parties to heart, he was reluctant to talk about literature, preferring to talk about issues of faith, morality, and social relations.

¶ Military service

As a cadet, Lev Nikolaevich remained for two years in the Caucasus, where he participated in many skirmishes with the highlanders, led by Shamil, and was exposed to the dangers of military life in the Caucasus. He had the right to the St. George Cross, however, in accordance with his convictions, he “conceded” to his fellow soldier, believing that a significant improvement in the conditions of service of a colleague was higher than personal vanity. Since the beginning Crimean War Tolstoy transferred to the Danube army, participated in the battle of Oltenitsa and in the siege of Silistria, and from November 1854 to the end of August 1855 was in Sevastopol.

For a long time he lived on the 4th bastion, which was often attacked, commanded a battery in the battle of Chernaya, was bombarded during the assault on Malakhov Kurgan. Tolstoy, despite all the hardships of life and the horrors of the siege, at that time wrote the story "Cutting the Forest", which reflected Caucasian impressions, and the first of the three "Sevastopol stories" - "Sevastopol in December 1854". He sent this story to Sovremennik. It was quickly published and read with interest throughout Russia, making a stunning impression of the horrors that befell the defenders of Sevastopol. The story has been seen Russian emperor Alexander II; he ordered to take care of the gifted officer.

Even during the life of Emperor Nicholas I, Tolstoy intended to publish, together with artillery officers, the “cheap and popular” magazine “Military List”, but Tolstoy failed to implement the project of the magazine: “My Sovereign, the Emperor, graciously deigned to allow our articles to be printed in Invalid for the project” - bitterly ironic Tolstoy about this.

For the defense of Sevastopol, Tolstoy was awarded the Order of St. Anna 4th degree with the inscription "For Courage", medals "For the Defense of Sevastopol 1854-1855" and "In Memory of the War of 1853-1856". Subsequently, he was awarded two medals "In memory of the 50th anniversary of the defense of Sevastopol": silver as a participant in the defense of Sevastopol and bronze as the author of Sevastopol Tales.

Tolstoy, enjoying the reputation of a brave officer and surrounded by the splendor of fame, had every chance of a career. However, his career was blighted by writing several satirical songs stylized as soldiers. One of these songs was dedicated to the failure during the battle near the Chernaya River on August 4 (16), 1855, when General Read, having misunderstood the order of the commander-in-chief, attacked the Fedyukhin Heights. A song called “Like the fourth number, it was not easy to take the mountains to take us away,” which touched on a number of important generals, was a huge success. For her, Lev Nikolaevich had to answer to the assistant chief of staff A. A. Yakimakh. Immediately after the assault on August 27 (September 8), Tolstoy was sent by courier to St. Petersburg, where he completed Sevastopol in May 1855. and wrote "Sevastopol in August 1855", published in the first issue of Sovremennik for 1856, already with the full signature of the author. "Sevastopol Tales" finally strengthened his reputation as a representative of a new literary generation, and in November 1856 the writer left military service forever with the rank of lieutenant.

¶  Traveling in Europe

In St. Petersburg, the young writer was warmly welcomed in high-society salons and in literary circles. He became closest friends with I. S. Turgenev, with whom they lived for some time in the same apartment. Turgenev introduced him to the Sovremennik circle, after which Tolstoy established friendly relations with such famous writers as N. A. Nekrasov, I. S. Goncharov, I. I. Panaev, D. V. Grigorovich, A. V. Druzhinin, V. A. Sollogub.

At this time, "Snowstorm", "Two Hussars" were written, "Sevastopol in August" and "Youth" were completed, the writing of future "Cossacks" was continued.

However, a cheerful and eventful life left a bitter aftertaste in Tolstoy's soul, at the same time he began to have a strong discord with a circle of writers close to him. As a result, "people were disgusted with him, and he himself was disgusted" - and at the beginning of 1857 Tolstoy left Petersburg without any regret and went abroad.

On his first trip abroad, he visited Paris, where he was horrified by the cult of Napoleon I (“Deification of the villain, terrible”), at the same time he attended balls, museums, admired the “sense of social freedom”. However, the presence at the guillotining made such a painful impression that Tolstoy left Paris and went to places associated with French writer and thinker J.-J. Rousseau - on Lake Geneva. In the spring of 1857, I. S. Turgenev described his meetings with Leo Tolstoy in Paris after his sudden departure from St. Petersburg as follows:

Trips to Western Europe - Germany, France, England, Switzerland, Italy (in 1857 and 1860-1861) made a rather negative impression on him. He expressed his disappointment in the European way of life in the story "Lucerne". Tolstoy was disillusioned by the deep contrast between wealth and poverty, which he was able to see through the magnificent outer veil of European culture.

Lev Nikolaevich writes the story "Albert". At the same time, friends never cease to be amazed at his eccentricities: in his letter to I. S. Turgenev in the fall of 1857, P. V. Annenkov told Tolstoy’s project to plant all of Russia with forests, and in his letter to V. P. Botkin, Leo Tolstoy reported how he was very happy the fact that he did not become only a writer, contrary to the advice of Turgenev. However, in the interval between the first and second trips, the writer continued to work on The Cossacks, wrote the story Three Deaths and the novel Family Happiness.

The last novel was published by him in Mikhail Katkov's Russkiy Vestnik. Tolstoy's collaboration with the Sovremennik magazine, which had lasted since 1852, ended in 1859. In the same year, Tolstoy took part in the organization of the Literary Fund. But his life was not limited to literary interests: on December 22, 1858, he almost died on a bear hunt.

Around the same time, he began an affair with a peasant woman, Aksinya Bazykina, and marriage plans are ripening.

On his next trip, he was mainly interested in public education and institutions aimed at raising educational level working population. He closely studied the issues of public education in Germany and France, both theoretically and practically - in conversations with specialists. Of the outstanding people of Germany, he was most interested in Berthold Auerbach as the author of the dedicated folk life"Schwarzwald Tales" and as a publisher of folk calendars. Tolstoy paid him a visit and tried to get closer to him. In addition, he also met with the German teacher Diesterweg. During his stay in Brussels, Tolstoy met Proudhon and Lelewel. In London, he visited A. I. Herzen, was at a lecture by Charles Dickens.

Tolstoy's serious mood during his second trip to the south of France was also facilitated by the fact that his beloved brother Nikolai died of tuberculosis almost in his arms. The death of his brother made a huge impression on Tolstoy.

Gradually, criticism for 10-12 years cools towards Leo Tolstoy, until the very appearance of War and Peace, and he himself did not seek rapprochement with writers, making an exception only for Afanasy Fet. One of the reasons for this alienation was the quarrel between Leo Tolstoy and Turgenev, which occurred at a time when both prose writers were visiting Fet at the Stepanovka estate in May 1861. The quarrel almost ended in a duel and spoiled the relationship between the writers for a long 17 years.

¶  Treatment in the Bashkir nomad camp Karalyk

In May 1862, Lev Nikolayevich, suffering from depression, on the recommendation of doctors, went to the Bashkir farm Karalyk, Samara province, to be treated with a new and fashionable at that time method of koumiss treatment. Initially, he was going to be in the Postnikov koumiss clinic near Samara, but, having learned that at the same time many high-ranking officials were to arrive ( secular society, which the young count could not stand), went to the Bashkir nomad camp Karalyk, on the Karalyk River, 130 versts from Samara. There Tolstoy lived in a Bashkir wagon (yurt), ate lamb, sunbathed, drank koumiss, tea, and also had fun playing checkers with the Bashkirs. The first time he stayed there for a month and a half. In 1871, when he had already written "War and Peace", he returned there due to deteriorating health. He wrote about his impressions as follows: “The melancholy and indifference have passed, I feel myself coming into a Scythian state, and everything is interesting and new ... Much is new and interesting: the Bashkirs, who smell of Herodotus, and the Russian peasants, and the villages, especially charming in their simplicity and kindness of the people.

Fascinated by Karalyk, Tolstoy bought an estate in these places, and already the next summer, 1872, he spent with his whole family in it.

¶  Pedagogical activity

In 1859, even before the liberation of the peasants, Tolstoy was actively engaged in organizing schools in his Yasnaya Polyana and throughout the Krapivensky district.

The Yasnaya Polyana school belonged to the number of original pedagogical experiments: in the era of admiration for the German pedagogical school, Tolstoy resolutely rebelled against any regulation and discipline in the school. According to him, everything in teaching should be individual - both the teacher and the student, and their mutual relations. In the Yasnaya Polyana school, the children sat where they wanted, for as long as they wanted, and for as long as they wanted. There was no set curriculum. The teacher's only job was to keep the class interested. The lessons went well. They were led by Tolstoy himself with the help of several permanent teachers and a few random ones, from the closest acquaintances and visitors.

Since 1862, Tolstoy began to publish the pedagogical journal Yasnaya Polyana, where he himself was the main contributor. Not experiencing the vocation of a publisher, Tolstoy managed to publish only 12 issues of the magazine, the last of which appeared with a lag in 1863. In addition to theoretical articles, he also wrote a number of stories, fables and adaptations adapted for elementary school. Put together, Tolstoy's pedagogical articles made up an entire volume of his collected works. At the time, they went unnoticed. No one paid attention to the sociological basis of Tolstoy's ideas about education, to the fact that Tolstoy saw in education, science, art, and the successes of technology only facilitated and improved ways of exploiting the people by the upper classes. Not only that: from Tolstoy's attacks on European education and "progress" many have deduced the conclusion that Tolstoy is a "conservative."

Soon Tolstoy left pedagogy. Marriage, the birth of his own children, plans related to writing the novel "War and Peace" pushed back his pedagogical activities for ten years. Only in the early 1870s did he begin to create his own "Azbuka" and published it in 1872, and then released the "New ABC" and a series of four "Russian books for reading", approved as a result of long ordeals by the Ministry of Public Education as manuals for elementary schools. In the early 1870s, classes at the Yasnaya Polyana school were again restored for a short time.

The experience of the Yasnaya Polyana school was subsequently useful to some domestic teachers. So S. T. Shatsky, creating in 1911 his own school-colony "Cheerful Life", repelled from the experiments of Leo Tolstoy in the field of pedagogy of cooperation.

¶  Social activities of Leo Tolstoy in the 1860s

Upon his return from Europe in May 1861, Leo Tolstoy was offered to become a mediator in the 4th section of the Krapivensky district of the Tula province. Unlike those who looked at the people as a younger brother who needed to be raised to their own level, Tolstoy thought, on the contrary, that the people are infinitely higher than cultural classes and that the masters need to borrow the heights of the spirit from the peasants, therefore, having accepted the position of an intermediary, he actively defended the land the interests of the peasants, often violating the royal decrees. “Mediation is interesting and exciting, but it’s not good that all the nobility hated me with all the strength of their souls and thrust me des bâtons dans les roues (French spokes in wheels) from all sides.” The work as an intermediary expanded the range of the writer's observations on the life of the peasants, giving him material for artistic creativity.

In July 1866, Tolstoy spoke at a court-martial as the defender of Vasil Shabunin, company clerk of the Moscow Infantry Regiment stationed near Yasnaya Polyana. Shabunin hit the officer, who ordered to punish him with rods for being drunk. Tolstoy proved Shabunin's insanity, but the court found him guilty and sentenced him to death penalty. Shabunin was shot. This episode produced great impression on Tolstoy, because in this terrible phenomenon he saw a merciless force, which was a state based on violence. On this occasion, he wrote to his friend, publicist P.I. Biryukov:

¶  The heyday of creativity

During the first 12 years after his marriage, he created War and Peace and Anna Karenina. At the turn of this second era literary life Tolstoy are conceived back in 1852 and completed in 1861-1862, The Cossacks, the first of the works in which the talent of the mature Tolstoy was most realized.

The main interest of creativity for Tolstoy manifested itself "in the 'history' of characters, in their continuous and complex movement, development." His goal was to show the ability of the individual to moral growth, improvement, opposition to the environment based on the strength of his own soul.

✓  "War and Peace"

The release of "War and Peace" was preceded by work on the novel "The Decembrists" (1860-1861), to which the author repeatedly returned, but which remained unfinished. And the share of "War and Peace" was an unprecedented success. An excerpt from the novel entitled "1805" appeared in the "Russian Messenger" of 1865; in 1868, three of its parts were published, followed soon by the other two. The first four volumes of War and Peace quickly sold out, and a second edition was needed, which was released in October 1868. The fifth and sixth volumes of the novel were published in one edition, already printed in an increased edition.

"War and Peace" has become a unique phenomenon both in Russian and foreign literature. This work has absorbed all the depth and secrecy of the psychological novel with the scope and multi-figures of the epic fresco. The writer, according to V. Ya. Lakshin, turned to "a special state of the people's consciousness in the heroic time of 1812, when people from different segments of the population united in resistance to foreign invasion", which, in turn, "created the ground for the epic."

The author showed the national Russian traits in the “hidden warmth of patriotism”, in disgust for ostentatious heroism, in a calm faith in justice, in modest dignity and courage. ordinary soldiers. He portrayed Russia's war with the Napoleonic troops as a nationwide war. The epic style of the work is conveyed through the fullness and plasticity of the image, the branching and intersection of destinies, incomparable pictures of Russian nature.

In Tolstoy's novel, the most diverse strata of society are widely represented, from emperors and kings to soldiers, all ages and all temperaments in the space of the reign of Alexander I.

Tolstoy was pleased with his own work, but already in January 1871 he sent a letter to A. A. Fet: “How happy I am ... that I will never write verbose rubbish like “War” again.” However, Tolstoy hardly crossed out the importance of his previous creations. To the question of Tokutomi Roca (English) Russian. in 1906, which Tolstoy loves most of his work, the writer answered: “The novel“ War and Peace ”.”

✓  "Anna Karenina"

No less dramatic and serious work was the novel about tragic love"Anna Karenina" (1873-1876). Unlike the previous work, there is no place in it for the infinitely happy intoxication with the bliss of being. In the almost autobiographical novel of Levin and Kitty, there are still joyful experiences, but in the depiction of Dolly's family life there is already more bitterness, and there is so much anxiety in the unhappy end of the love of Anna Karenina and Vronsky. mental life that this novel is essentially a transition to the third period of Tolstoy's literary activity, the dramatic one.

It has less simplicity and clarity of spiritual movements characteristic of the heroes of "War and Peace", more heightened sensitivity, inner alertness and anxiety. The characters of the main characters are more complex and sophisticated. The author sought to show the subtlest nuances of love, disappointment, jealousy, despair, spiritual enlightenment.

The problematics of this work directly led Tolstoy to the ideological turning point of the late 1870s.

✓  Other works

In March 1879, in Moscow, Leo Tolstoy met Vasily Petrovich Shchegolyonok, and in the same year, at his invitation, he came to Yasnaya Polyana, where he stayed for about a month and a half. The dandy told Tolstoy a lot of folk tales, epics and legends, of which more than twenty were written down by Tolstoy (these records were published in vol. XLVIII of the Anniversary edition of Tolstoy's works), and the plots of some Tolstoy, if he did not write down on paper, then remembered: six written by Tolstoy works are sourced from the stories of Schegolyonok (1881 - “What people are alive for”, 1885 - “Two old men” and “Three elders”, 1905 - “Roots Vasiliev” and “Prayer”, 1907 - “The old man in the church”). In addition, Tolstoy diligently wrote down many sayings, proverbs, individual expressions and words told by Schegolyonok.

Tolstoy's new worldview was most fully expressed in his works "Confession" (1879-1880, published in 1884) and "What is my faith?" (1882-1884). To the theme of the Christian beginning of love, devoid of any self-interest and rising above sensual love in the struggle with the flesh, Tolstoy dedicated the story The Kreutzer Sonata (1887-1889, published in 1891) and The Devil (1889-1890, published in 1911). In the 1890s, trying to theoretically substantiate his views on art, he wrote a treatise "What is art?" (1897-1898). But the main artistic work of those years was his novel Resurrection (1889-1899), the plot of which was based on a genuine court case. Sharp criticism of church rites in this work became one of the reasons for the excommunication of Tolstoy by the Holy Synod from the Orthodox Church in 1901. The highest achievements of the early 1900s were the story "Hadji Murad" and the drama "The Living Corpse". In "Hadji Murad" the despotism of Shamil and Nicholas I is equally exposed. In the story, Tolstoy glorified the courage of the struggle, the strength of resistance and love of life. The play "The Living Corpse" became evidence of Tolstoy's new artistic quest, objectively close to Chekhov's drama.

✓  Literary criticism of Shakespeare's works

In his critical essay "On Shakespeare and Drama", based on a detailed analysis of some of the most popular works of Shakespeare, in particular, "King Lear", "Othello", "Falstaff", "Hamlet", etc., Tolstoy sharply criticized Shakespeare's abilities like a playwright. At the performance of Hamlet, he experienced "special suffering" for this "false semblance of works of art."

¶  Participation in the Moscow Census

L. N. Tolstoy took part in the Moscow census of 1882. He wrote about it this way: “I suggested using the census in order to find out poverty in Moscow and help her with business and money, and to make sure that there were no poor in Moscow.”

Tolstoy believed that the interest and significance of the census for society is that it gives it a mirror in which you want it, you don’t want it, the whole society and each of us will look. He chose one of the most difficult sites for himself, Protochny Lane, where there was a rooming house, among the Moscow squalor, this gloomy two-story building was called the Rzhanov Fortress. Having received an order from the Duma, Tolstoy, a few days before the census, began to bypass the site according to the plan that was given to him. Indeed, the dirty rooming house, filled with destitute, desperate people who had sunk to the very bottom, served as a mirror for Tolstoy, reflecting the terrible poverty of the people. Under the fresh impression of what he saw, L. N. Tolstoy wrote his famous article "On the census in Moscow." In this article, he pointed out that the purpose of the census was scientific, and was a sociological study.

Despite Tolstoy's declared good intentions of the census, the population was suspicious of this event. On this occasion, Tolstoy wrote: “When they explained to us that the people had already found out about the rounds of the apartments and were leaving, we asked the owner to lock the gate, and we ourselves went to the yard to persuade the people who were leaving.” Lev Nikolaevich hoped to arouse sympathy for urban poverty in the rich, to raise money, to recruit people who wanted to contribute to this cause, and together with the census to go through all the dens of poverty. In addition to fulfilling the duties of a copyist, the writer wanted to enter into communication with the unfortunate, find out the details of their needs and help them with money and work, expulsion from Moscow, placing children in schools, old men and women in shelters and almshouses.

¶  Leo Tolstoy in Moscow

As Muscovite Alexander Vaskin writes, Leo Tolstoy came to Moscow more than one hundred and fifty times.

The general impressions made by him from his acquaintance with Moscow life were, as a rule, negative, and the reviews about the social situation in the city were sharply critical. So, on October 5, 1881, he wrote in his diary:

Many buildings associated with the life and work of the writer have been preserved on Plyushchikha, Sivtsev Vrazhek, Vozdvizhenka, Tverskaya, Nizhny Kislovsky lane, Smolensky Boulevard, Zemledelchesky lane, Voznesensky lane and, finally, Dolgokhamovnichesky lane (modern Leo Tolstoy street) and others. The writer often visited the Kremlin, where the family of his wife, Bersa, lived. Tolstoy liked to walk around Moscow on foot, even in winter. The last time the writer came to Moscow was in 1909.

In addition, along Vozdvizhenka Street, 9, there was the house of Lev Nikolaevich's grandfather, Prince Nikolai Sergeevich Volkonsky, bought by him in 1816 from Praskovya Vasilievna Muravyova-Apostol (daughter of Lieutenant General V.V. Grushetsky, who built this house, the wife of the writer Senator I. M. Muravyov-Apostol, mother of the three Decembrist brothers Muravyov-Apostol). Prince Volkonsky owned the house for five years, which is why the house is also known in Moscow as main house the estates of the princes Volkonsky or as the "house of the Bolkonskys". The house is described by Leo Tolstoy as the house of Pierre Bezukhov. This house was well known to Lev Nikolaevich - he often visited young balls here, where he courted the charming Princess Praskovya Shcherbatova: “I went to the Ryumins with boredom and drowsiness, and suddenly it washed over me. P[raskovya] Sh[erbatova] charm. It hasn't been fresher for a long time." In Anna Karenina, he endowed Kitty Shcherbatskaya with the features of the beautiful Praskovya.

In 1886, 1888 and 1889, Leo Tolstoy walked three times from Moscow to Yasnaya Polyana. On the first such journey, his companions were political figure Mikhail Stakhovich and Nikolai Ge (son of the artist N. N. Ge). In the second - also Nikolai Ge, and from the second half of the way (from Serpukhov) A.N. Dunaev and S.D. Sytin (publisher's brother) joined. During the third journey, Lev Nikolaevich was accompanied by a new friend and like-minded 25-year-old teacher Evgeny Popov.

¶  Spiritual crisis and preaching

In his work "Confession" Tolstoy wrote that from the end of the 1870s he often began to be tormented by insoluble questions: "Well, all right, you will have 6,000 acres in the Samara province - 300 heads of horses, and then?"; in the sphere of literature: "Well, well, you will be more glorious than Gogol, Pushkin, Shakespeare, Moliere, all the writers in the world - so what!". Starting to think about raising children, he asked himself: “why?”; discussing “how the people can achieve prosperity,” he “suddenly said to himself: what does it matter to me?” In general, he "felt that what he stood on had given way, that what he had lived for was gone." The natural result was the thought of suicide:

In order to find an answer to the questions and doubts that constantly worried him, Tolstoy first of all took up the study of theology and wrote and published in 1891 in Geneva his “Study of Dogmatic Theology”, in which he criticized the “Orthodox Dogmatic Theology” of Metropolitan Macarius (Bulgakov). He had conversations with priests and monks, went to the elders in Optina Pustyn (in 1877, 1881 and 1890), read theological treatises, talked with the elder Ambrose, K. N. Leontiev, an ardent opponent of Tolstoy's teachings. In a letter to T. I. Filippov dated March 14, 1890, Leontiev reported that during this conversation he said to Tolstoy: “It’s a pity, Lev Nikolaevich, that I have little fanaticism. But it would be necessary to write to Petersburg, where I have connections, that you be exiled to Tomsk and that neither the countess nor your daughters would even be allowed to visit you, and that they would send you little money. And then you are positively harmful. To this, Lev Nikolayevich exclaimed with fervor: “Darling, Konstantin Nikolayevich! Write, for God's sake, to be exiled. This is my dream. I do my best to compromise myself in the eyes of the government, and I get away with everything. Please write." In order to study the original sources of Christian teaching in the original, he studied ancient Greek and Hebrew (in the study of the latter he was helped by the Moscow Rabbi Shlomo Minor). At the same time, he kept an eye on the Old Believers, became close to the peasant preacher Vasily Syutaev, talked with Molokans, Stundists. Lev Nikolaevich sought the meaning of life in the study of philosophy, in acquaintance with the results of the exact sciences. He tried to simplify as much as possible, to live a life close to nature and agricultural life.

Gradually Tolstoy refuses whims and comforts rich life(simplification), does a lot of manual labor, dresses in the simplest clothes, becomes a vegetarian, gives his large fortune to his family, renounces literary property rights. On the basis of a sincere desire for moral improvement, the third period of Tolstoy's literary activity is being created, hallmark which is the denial of all established forms of state, social and religious life.

At the beginning of the reign of Alexander III, Tolstoy wrote to the emperor with a request to pardon the regicides in the spirit of the gospel forgiveness. Since September 1882, a secret supervision was established for him to clarify relations with sectarians; in September 1883, he refuses to serve as a juror, citing incompatibility with his religious worldview. Then he received a ban on public speaking on the death of Turgenev. Gradually, the ideas of Tolstoyanism begin to penetrate society. At the beginning of 1885, a precedent was set in Russia for refusing military service, citing Tolstoy's religious beliefs. A significant part of Tolstoy's views could not be openly expressed in Russia and was presented in full only in foreign editions of his religious and social treatises.

There was no unanimity in relation to Tolstoy's works of art written during this period. So, in a long series of short stories and legends, intended mainly for popular reading(“What makes people alive”, etc.), Tolstoy, in the opinion of his unconditional admirers, reached the pinnacle of artistic power. At the same time, according to people who reproach Tolstoy for turning from an artist into a preacher, these artistic teachings, written with a specific purpose, were rudely tendentious. The high and terrible truth of The Death of Ivan Ilyich, according to fans, which puts this work on a par with the main works of the genius of Tolstoy, according to others, is deliberately harsh, it sharply emphasized the soullessness of the upper strata of society in order to show the moral superiority of a simple "kitchen peasant » Gerasim. The Kreutzer Sonata (written in 1887-1889, published in 1890) also caused opposite reviews - an analysis of marital relations made us forget about the amazing brightness and passion with which this story was written. The work was banned by censorship, it was printed thanks to the efforts of S. A. Tolstaya, who achieved a meeting with Alexander III. As a result, the story was published in a censored form in the Collected Works of Tolstoy by the personal permission of the tsar. Alexander III was pleased with the story, but the queen was shocked. On the other hand, the folk drama The Power of Darkness, in the opinion of Tolstoy's admirers, became a great manifestation of his artistic power: in the narrow framework of the ethnographic reproduction of Russian peasant life, Tolstoy managed to fit so many universal features that the drama went around all the stages of the world with tremendous success.

During the famine of 1891-1892. Tolstoy organized institutions in the Ryazan province to help the starving and the needy. He opened 187 canteens, in which 10 thousand people were fed, as well as several canteens for children, firewood was distributed, seeds and potatoes were distributed for sowing, horses were bought and distributed to farmers (almost all farms became horseless in a famine year), in the form of donations was collected almost 150,000 rubles.

The treatise “The Kingdom of God is within you ...” was written by Tolstoy with short breaks for almost 3 years: from July 1890 to May 1893. The treatise, which aroused the admiration of the critic V.V. Stasov (“the first book of the XIX century”) and I.E. Repin (“this thing of terrifying power”) could not be published in Russia due to censorship, and it was published abroad. The book began to be illegally distributed in a huge number of copies in Russia. In Russia itself, the first legal edition appeared in July 1906, but even after that it was withdrawn from sale. The treatise was included in the collected works of Tolstoy, published in 1911, after his death.

In the last major work, the novel Resurrection, published in 1899, Tolstoy condemned judicial practice and high society life, portrayed the clergy and worship as worldly and united with secular power.

On December 6, 1908, Tolstoy wrote in his diary: "People love me for those trifles - War and Peace, etc., which seem very important to them."

In the summer of 1909, one of the visitors to Yasnaya Polyana expressed his delight and gratitude for the creation of War and Peace and Anna Karenina. Tolstoy replied: “It’s like someone came to Edison and said:“ I really respect you for the fact that you dance the mazurka well. I attribute meaning to my completely different books (religious ones!).” In the same year, Tolstoy described the role of his works of art as follows: "They draw attention to my serious things."

Some critics of the last stage of Tolstoy's literary activity declared that his artistic strength had suffered from the predominance of theoretical interests and that now Tolstoy needed creativity only to propagate his socio-religious views in a public form. On the other hand, Vladimir Nabokov, for example, denies that Tolstoy has preaching specifics and notes that the strength and universal meaning of his work have nothing to do with politics and simply crowd out his teaching: “In essence, Tolstoy the thinker has always been occupied by only two topics: Life and death. And no artist can escape these themes.” It has been suggested that in his work What is Art? The Tolstoy part completely denies and partly significantly diminishes the artistic significance of Dante, Raphael, Goethe, Shakespeare, Beethoven, etc., he directly comes to the conclusion that “the more we give ourselves to beauty, the more we move away from good”, affirming the priority of the moral component creativity over aesthetics.

¶  Excommunication

After his birth, Leo Tolstoy was baptized into Orthodoxy. Nevertheless, despite his attitude towards the Orthodox Church, he, like most representatives of the educated society of his time, was indifferent to religious issues in his youth and youth. But in the mid-1870s, he showed an increased interest in the teachings and worship of the Orthodox Church: “I read everything I could about the teachings of the church, ... strictly followed, for more than a year, all the prescriptions of the church, observing all fasts and attending all church services” , the result of which was a complete disappointment in the church faith. The second half of 1879 became a turning point in the direction of the teachings of the Orthodox Church for him. In the 1880s, he took the position of an unambiguously critical attitude towards church doctrine, the clergy, and official churchness. The publication of some of Tolstoy's works was banned by both spiritual and secular censorship. In 1899, Tolstoy's novel "Resurrection" was published, in which the author showed the life of various social strata of contemporary Russia; the clergy were depicted mechanically and hastily performing rituals, and some took the cold and cynical Toporov for a caricature of K. P. Pobedonostsev, the chief procurator of the Holy Synod.

Leo Tolstoy applied his teachings primarily in relation to his own way of life. He denied ecclesiastical interpretations of immortality and rejected ecclesiastical authority; he did not recognize the rights of the state, since it is built (in his opinion) on violence and coercion. He criticized the church teaching, according to which “life as it is here on earth, with all its joys, beauties, with all the struggle of the mind against darkness, is the life of all the people who lived before me, my whole life with my inner struggle and victories of the mind there is life that is not true, but life that has fallen, hopelessly spoiled; life is true, sinless - in faith, that is, in imagination, that is, in madness. Leo Tolstoy did not agree with the teaching of the church that a person from his birth, in essence, is vicious and sinful, since, in his opinion, such a teaching “cuts down everything that is best in human nature.” Seeing how the church quickly lost its influence on the people, the writer, according to K. N. Lomunov, came to the conclusion: "Everything that lives is independent of the church."

In February 1901, the Synod finally inclined to the idea of ​​publicly condemning Tolstoy and declaring him outside the church. Metropolitan Anthony (Vadkovsky) played an active role in this. As it appears in the cameras-furier magazines, on February 22, Pobedonostsev was with Nicholas II in winter palace and talked to him for about an hour. Some historians believe that Pobedonostsev came to the tsar directly from the Synod with a ready definition.

On February 24 (old style), 1901, the official organ of the synod “Church Gazette published under the Holy Governing Synod” published “Determination of the Holy Synod of February 20-22, 1901 No. 557, with a message to the faithful children of the Greek Orthodox Church about Count Leo Tolstoy.

A world-famous writer, Russian by birth, Orthodox by his baptism and upbringing, Count Tolstoy, in the seduction of his proud mind, boldly rebelled against the Lord and His Christ and His holy heritage, clearly before everyone renounced the Mother, the Church, who nurtured and raised him Orthodox, and devoted his literary activity and the talent given to him from God to spread among the people teachings that are contrary to Christ and the Church, and to exterminate in the minds and hearts of people the faith of the fathers, the Orthodox faith, which established the universe, by which our ancestors lived and were saved and by which Until now, Holy Rus' has held out and been strong.

In his writings and letters, in many scattered by him and his disciples all over the world, especially within the borders of our dear Fatherland, he preaches, with the zeal of a fanatic, the overthrow of all the dogmas of the Orthodox Church and the very essence of the Christian faith; rejects the personal living God, glorified in the Holy Trinity, the Creator and Provider of the universe, denies the Lord Jesus Christ, the God-man, Redeemer and Savior of the world, who suffered for us for the sake of men and for our salvation and rose from the dead, denies the seedless conception according to humanity of Christ the Lord and virginity before of the birth and after the birth of the Most Pure Theotokos, Ever-Virgin Mary, does not recognize the afterlife and retribution, rejects all the sacraments of the Church and the grace-filled action of the Holy Spirit in them, and, scolding the most sacred objects of faith of the Orthodox people, did not shudder to mock the greatest of the sacraments, the holy Eucharist. All this is preached by Count Tolstoy continuously, in word and writing, to the temptation and horror of the entire Orthodox world, and thus undisguisedly, but clearly before everyone, consciously and intentionally, he himself rejected himself from any communion with the Orthodox Church.

Former same to his admonition attempts were unsuccessful. Therefore, the Church does not consider him a member and cannot count him until he repents and restores his communion with her. Therefore, bearing witness to his falling away from the Church, we pray together that the Lord grant him repentance into the mind of truth. We pray, merciful Lord, do not want the death of sinners, hear and have mercy and turn him to Your holy Church. Amen.

According to theologians, including Doctor of Historical Sciences, Candidate of Theology, Doctor of Church History Priest Georgy Orekhanov, the decision of the Synod regarding Tolstoy is not a curse on the writer, but a statement of the fact that he own will no longer a member of the Church. In addition, the synodal act of February 20-22 stated that Tolstoy could return to the Church if he repented. Metropolitan Anthony (Vadkovsky), who at that time was a leading member of the Holy Synod, wrote to Sofya Andreevna Tolstoy: “All of Russia mourns for your husband, we mourn for him. Do not believe those who say that we are seeking his repentance for political purposes.” Nevertheless, the writer, his entourage and the Russian public felt that this definition was an unjustifiably cruel act. For example, when Tolstoy arrived in Optina Hermitage, when asked why he did not go to the elders, he replied that he could not go, as he was excommunicated.

In his Response to the Synod, Leo Tolstoy confirmed his break with the church: “The fact that I renounced the church that calls itself Orthodox is absolutely fair. But I renounced it not because I rebelled against the Lord, but on the contrary, only because I wanted to serve him with all the strength of my soul. Tolstoy objected to the accusations brought against him in the Synod's decision: “The Synod's decision in general has many shortcomings. It is illegal or deliberately ambiguous; it is arbitrary, unfounded, untrue and, moreover, contains slander and incitement to bad feelings and actions. In the text of the "Response to the Synod" Tolstoy elaborates on these theses, recognizing a number of significant differences between the dogmas of the Orthodox Church and his own understanding the teachings of Christ.

The synodal definition aroused the indignation of a certain part of society; Numerous letters and telegrams were sent to Tolstoy expressing sympathy and support. At the same time, this definition provoked a flood of letters from another part of society - with threats and abuse.

In November 1909, he wrote down a thought that indicated his broad understanding of religion:

At the end of February 2001, the great-grandson of Count Vladimir Tolstoy, who manages the museum-estate of the writer in Yasnaya Polyana, sent a letter to Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Rus' with a request to revise the synodal definition. In response to the letter, the Moscow Patriarchate stated that the decision to excommunicate Leo Tolstoy from the Church, made exactly 105 years ago, cannot be reconsidered, since (according to the Secretary for Church Relations Mikhail Dudko), this would be wrong in the absence of a person against whom ecclesiastical courts apply. In March 2009, Vladimir Tolstoy expressed his opinion on the significance of the synodal act: “I studied the documents, read the newspapers of that time, got acquainted with the materials of public discussions around the excommunication. And I got the feeling that this act gave a signal for a total split in Russian society. The royal family, and the highest aristocracy, and the local nobility, and the intelligentsia, and the raznochinsk strata, and ordinary people also split. The crack went through the body of the entire Russian, Russian people.

¶  Departure from Yasnaya Polyana, death and funeral

On the night of October 28 (November 10), 1910, L. N. Tolstoy, fulfilling his decision to live last years according to his views, he secretly left Yasnaya Polyana forever, accompanied only by his doctor D.P. Makovitsky. At the same time, Tolstoy did not even have a definite plan of action. He began his last journey at Shchyokino station. On the same day, having changed trains at the Gorbachevo station, I reached the city of Belev, Tula province, after that, in the same way, but on another train to the Kozelsk station, hired a coachman and went to Optina Pustyn, and from there the next day to Shamordinsky monastery, where he met his sister, Maria Nikolaevna Tolstaya. Later, Tolstoy's daughter Alexandra Lvovna secretly arrived in Shamordino.

On the morning of October 31 (November 13), L. N. Tolstoy and his companions set off from Shamordino to Kozelsk, where they boarded train No. 12, Smolensk - Ranenburg, which had already approached the station, next to eastbound. We did not have time to buy tickets when boarding; having reached Belev, we bought tickets to the Volovo station, where we intended to transfer to some train heading south. Those who accompanied Tolstoy later also testified that the journey had no specific purpose. After the meeting, they decided to go to his niece, E. S. Denisenko, in Novocherkassk, where they wanted to try to get foreign passports and then go to Bulgaria; if this fails, go to the Caucasus. However, on the way, L. N. Tolstoy felt worse - the cold turned into lobar pneumonia and the escorts were forced to interrupt the trip on the same day and take the sick Tolstoy out of the train at the first large station near the settlement. This station was Astapovo (now Leo Tolstoy, Lipetsk region).

The news of Leo Tolstoy's illness caused a great stir both in the highest circles and among the members of the Holy Synod. On the state of his health and the state of affairs, encrypted telegrams were systematically sent to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Moscow Gendarmerie Directorate. railways. An emergency secret meeting of the Synod was convened, at which, on the initiative of Chief Procurator Lukyanov, the question was raised about the attitude of the church in the event of the sad outcome of Lev Nikolayevich's illness. But the issue has not been positively resolved.

Six doctors tried to save Lev Nikolaevich, but he only replied to their offers to help: "God will arrange everything." When asked what he himself wants, he said: "I want no one to bother me." His last meaningful words, which he uttered a few hours before his death to his eldest son, which he could not make out from excitement, but which the doctor Makovitsky heard, were: “Seryozha ... the truth ... I love a lot, I love everyone ... ".

On November 7 (20), at 6:50 a.m., after a week of severe and painful illness (suffocated), Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy died in the house of the head of the station, I. I. Ozolin.

When Leo Tolstoy came to Optina Pustyn before his death, Elder Varsonofy was the abbot of the monastery and the head of the skete. Tolstoy did not dare to go to the skete, and the elder followed him to the Astapovo station in order to give him the opportunity to reconcile with the Church. He had spare Holy Gifts, and he received instructions: if Tolstoy whispered in his ear just one word “I repent”, he had the right to take communion. But the elder was not allowed to see the writer, just as his wife and some of his closest relatives from among the Orthodox believers were not allowed to see him.

On November 9, 1910, several thousand people gathered in Yasnaya Polyana for the funeral of Leo Tolstoy. Among those gathered were the writer's friends and admirers of his work, local peasants and Moscow students, as well as representatives of government agencies and local police sent to Yasnaya Polyana by the authorities, who feared that the farewell ceremony for Tolstoy might be accompanied by anti-government statements, and perhaps even turns into a demonstration. In addition, in Russia it was the first public funeral of a famous person, which was supposed to take place not according to the Orthodox rite (without priests and prayers, without candles and icons), as Tolstoy himself wished. The ceremony was peaceful, as noted in police reports. Mourners, observing full order, with quiet singing, Tolstoy's coffin was escorted from the station to the estate. People lined up, silently entered the room to say goodbye to the body.

On the same day, the newspapers published the resolution of Nicholas II on the report of the Minister of the Interior on the death of Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy: “I sincerely regret the death of the great writer, who, during the heyday of his talent, embodied in his works images of one of the glorious years of Russian life. May the Lord God be his merciful judge."

On November 10 (23), 1910, Leo Tolstoy was buried in Yasnaya Polyana, on the edge of a ravine in the forest, where, as a child, he and his brother were looking for a “green stick” that kept the “secret” how to make all people happy. When the coffin with the deceased was lowered into the grave, all those present reverently knelt down.

In January 1913, a letter was published by Countess S. A. Tolstaya dated December 22, 1912, in which she confirmed the news in the press that a funeral was performed at her husband’s grave by a certain priest in her presence, while she denied rumors about that the priest was not real. In particular, the countess wrote: “I also declare that Lev Nikolayevich never expressed a desire not to be buried before his death, but earlier he wrote in his diary of 1895, as if a testament:“ If possible, then (bury) without priests and funeral . But if this is unpleasant for those who will bury, then let them bury as usual, but as cheaply and simply as possible. The priest, who voluntarily wished to violate the will of the Holy Synod and secretly bury the excommunicated count, turned out to be Grigory Leontyevich Kalinovsky, a priest of the village of Ivankov, Pereyaslavsky district, Poltava province. Soon he was dismissed from his post, but not for the illegal funeral of Tolstoy, but “in view of the fact that he is under investigation for the drunken murder of a peasant, and the aforementioned priest Kalinovsky’s behavior and moral qualities rather disapproving, that is, a bitter drunkard and capable of all sorts of dirty deeds, ”as reported in agent gendarmerie reports.

✓  Report of the head of the St. Petersburg security department, Colonel von Cotten, to the Minister of the Interior Russian Empire
“In addition to the reports of November 8, I report to Your Excellency information about the unrest of young students that took place on November 9 this ... on the occasion of the day of the burial of the deceased Leo Tolstoy. At 12 noon, a memorial service for the late L. N. Tolstoy was served in the Armenian Church, which was attended by about 200 people praying, mostly Armenians, and a small part of the student youth. At the end of the memorial service, the worshipers dispersed, but a few minutes later students and female students began to arrive at the church. It turned out that on entrance doors University and the Higher Women's Courses, announcements were posted that a memorial service for Leo Tolstoy would take place on November 9 at one o'clock in the afternoon in the aforementioned church. The Armenian clergy performed a panikhida for the second time, by the end of which the church could no longer accommodate all the worshipers, a significant part of whom stood on the porch and in the courtyard at the Armenian Church. At the end of the memorial service, all who were on the porch and in the churchyard sang "Eternal Memory" ... "

The death of Leo Tolstoy was reacted not only in Russia, but all over the world. In Russia, student and worker demonstrations were held with portraits of the deceased, which became a response to the death of the great writer. To honor the memory of Tolstoy, the workers of Moscow and St. Petersburg stopped the work of several plants and factories. There were legal and illegal gatherings, meetings, leaflets were issued, concerts and evenings were canceled, theaters and cinemas were closed at the time of mourning, bookshops and shops were suspended. Many people wanted to take part in the funeral of the writer, but the government, fearing spontaneous unrest, prevented this in every possible way. People could not carry out their intention, so Yasnaya Polyana was literally bombarded with telegrams of condolence. The democratic part of Russian society was outraged by the behavior of the government, long years bullying Tolstoy, forbidding his works, and, finally, preventing the honoring of his memory.

§ Family

Lev Nikolaevich with youthful years was acquainted with Lyubov Alexandrovna Islavina, in marriage Bers (1826-1886), loved to play with her children Lisa, Sonya and Tanya. When the daughters of the Berses grew up, Lev Nikolayevich thought about marrying his eldest daughter Lisa, hesitated for a long time until he made a choice in favor of the middle daughter Sophia. Sofya Andreevna agreed when she was 18 years old, and the count was 34 years old, and on September 23, 1862, Lev Nikolaevich married her, having previously confessed to his premarital affairs.

For some time in his life, the brightest period begins - he is truly happy, largely due to the practicality of his wife, material well-being, outstanding literary creativity and, in connection with it, all-Russian and world fame. In the person of his wife, he found an assistant in all matters, practical and literary - in the absence of a secretary, she several times rewrote his drafts. However, very soon happiness is overshadowed by the inevitable small disagreements, fleeting quarrels, mutual misunderstanding, which only worsened over the years.

For his family, Leo Tolstoy proposed a certain “life plan”, according to which he intended to give part of the income to the poor and schools, and to significantly simplify his family’s lifestyle (life, food, clothes), while also selling and distributing “everything superfluous”: piano, furniture, carriages. His wife, Sofya Andreevna, was clearly not satisfied with such a plan, on the basis of which the first serious conflict and the beginning of her "undeclared war" for a secure future for her children. And in 1892, Tolstoy signed a separate act and transferred all the property to his wife and children, not wanting to be the owner. However, together they lived in great love for almost fifty years.

In addition, his older brother Sergei Nikolaevich Tolstoy was going to marry Sofya Andreevna's younger sister, Tatyana Bers. But Sergei's unofficial marriage to the gypsy singer Maria Mikhailovna Shishkina (who had four children from him) made it impossible for Sergei and Tatyana to marry.

In addition, the father of Sofya Andreevna, medical doctor Andrey Gustav (Evstafievich) Bers, even before his marriage to Islavina, had a daughter, Varvara, from Varvara Petrovna Turgeneva, the mother of Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev. By mother, Varya was the sister of Ivan Turgenev, and by father - S. A. Tolstoy, thus, together with marriage, Leo Tolstoy acquired kinship with I. S. Turgenev.

From the marriage of Lev Nikolaevich with Sofia Andreevna, 9 sons and 4 daughters were born, five of thirteen children died in childhood.

  1. Sergei (1863-1947), composer, musicologist. The only one of all the writer's children who survived the October Revolution who did not emigrate. Cavalier of the Order of the Red Banner of Labor.
  2. Tatiana (1864-1950). Since 1899 she has been married to Mikhail Sukhotin. In 1917-1923 she was the curator of the Yasnaya Polyana Museum Estate. In 1925 she emigrated with her daughter. Daughter Tatyana Sukhotina-Albertini (1905-1996).
  3. Ilya (1866-1933), writer, memoirist. In 1916 he left Russia and went to the USA.
  4. Lev (1869-1945), writer, sculptor. Since 1918 in exile - in France, Italy, then in Sweden.
  5. Maria (1871-1906). Since 1897 she has been married to Nikolai Leonidovich Obolensky (1872-1934). Died of pneumonia. Buried in the village Kochaki of the Krapivensky district (modern Tul. region, Shchekinsky district, village of Kochaki).
  6. Peter (1872-1873)
  7. Nicholas (1874-1875)
  8. Barbara (1875-1875)
  9. Andrei (1877-1916), official for special assignments under the Tula governor. Member of the Russo-Japanese War. He died in Petrograd from a general blood poisoning.
  10. Mikhail (1879-1944). In 1920 he emigrated and lived in Turkey, Yugoslavia, France and Morocco. He died on October 19, 1944 in Morocco.
  11. Alexey (1881-1886)
  12. Alexandra (1884-1979). From the age of 16 she became an assistant to her father. Head of the military medical detachment during the First World War. In 1920, the Cheka was arrested in the case of the "Tactical Center", sentenced to three years, after her release she worked in Yasnaya Polyana. In 1929 she emigrated from the USSR, in 1941 she received US citizenship. She died on September 26, 1979 in the state of New York at the age of 95, the last of all the children of Leo Tolstoy, more than 150 years after the birth of her father.
  13. Ivan (1888-1895).

As of 2010 in total there were more than 350 descendants of Leo Tolstoy (including both living and already deceased), who lived in 25 countries of the world. Most of them are descendants of Leo Tolstoy, who had 10 children. Since 2000, Yasnaya Polyana has hosted meetings of the writer's descendants every two years.

✓  Tolstoy's views on family and family in Tolstoy's work

Leo Tolstoy, both in his personal life and in his work, assigned the central role to the family. According to the writer, the main institution human life is not the state or the church, but the family. From the very beginning of his creative activity, Tolstoy was absorbed in thoughts about the family and dedicated his first work, Childhood, to this. Three years later, in 1855, he writes the story "Marker's Notes", where the writer's craving for gambling and women can already be seen. The same is reflected in his novel "Family Happiness", in which the relationship between a man and a woman is strikingly similar to the marital relationship between Tolstoy himself and Sofya Andreevna. During the period of happy family life (1860s), which created a stable atmosphere, spiritual and physical balance and became a source of poetic inspiration, two of the writer's greatest works were written: "War and Peace" and "Anna Karenina". But if in "War and Peace" Tolstoy firmly defends the value of family life, being convinced of the fidelity of the ideal, then in "Anna Karenina" he already expresses doubts about its attainability. When relations in his personal family life became more difficult, these aggravations were expressed in such works as The Death of Ivan Ilyich, The Kreutzer Sonata, The Devil and Father Sergius.

Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy paid great attention to the family. His reflections are not limited to the details of marital relations. In the trilogy "Childhood", "Adolescence" and "Youth", the author gave a vivid artistic description of the world of a child, in whose life an important role is played by the child's love for his parents, and vice versa - the love he receives from them. In "War and Peace" Tolstoy has already most fully revealed different types family relationships and love. And in "Family Happiness" and "Anna Karenina" various aspects of love in the family are simply lost behind the power of "eros". Critic and philosopher N. N. Strakhov after the release of the novel "War and Peace" noted that all of Tolstoy's previous works can be classified as preliminary studies, culminating in the creation of a "family chronicle".

§  Philosophy

The religious and moral imperatives of Leo Tolstoy were the source of the Tolstoy movement, built on two fundamental theses: "simplification" and "non-resistance to evil by violence." The latter, according to Tolstoy, is recorded in a number of places in the Gospel and is the core of the teachings of Christ, as, indeed, of Buddhism. The essence of Christianity, according to Tolstoy, can be expressed in a simple rule: "Be kind and do not resist evil with violence" - "The Law of Violence and the Law of Love" (1908).

The most important basis of Tolstoy's teachings were the words of the Gospel "Love your enemies" and the Sermon on the Mount. The followers of his teachings - the Tolstoyans - honored the five commandments proclaimed by Lev Nikolaevich: do not be angry, do not commit adultery, do not swear, do not resist evil with violence, love your enemies as your neighbor.

Among the adherents of the doctrine, and not only, Tolstoy's books “What is my faith”, “Confession”, etc. were very popular. Various ideological currents influenced Tolstoy’s life teaching: Brahmanism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Islam, as well as the teachings of moral philosophers (Socrates, late Stoics, Kant, Schopenhauer).

Tolstoy developed a special ideology of non-violent anarchism (it can be described as Christian anarchism), which was based on a rationalistic understanding of Christianity. Considering coercion to be evil, he concluded that it was necessary to abolish the state, but not through a revolution based on violence, but through voluntary refusal each member of society from the performance of any public duties, whether it be military service, paying taxes, etc. L. N. Tolstoy believed: “Anarchists are right in everything: both in denying the existing, and in asserting that, with existing morals, nothing may be worse than the violence of power; but they are grossly mistaken in thinking that anarchy can be established by revolution.

The ideas of nonviolent resistance outlined by L. N. Tolstoy in his work “The Kingdom of God is within you” influenced Mahatma Gandhi, who corresponded with the Russian writer.

According to the historian of Russian philosophy V.V. Zenkovsky, the great philosophical significance of Leo Tolstoy, and not only for Russia, is in his desire to build a culture on a religious basis and in his personal example of liberation from secularism. In Tolstoy's philosophy, he notes the coexistence of heteropolar forces, the "sharp and unobtrusive rationalism" of his religious and philosophical constructions, and the irrationalistic insurmountability of his "panmoralism": "Although Tolstoy does not believe in the Deity of Christ, Tolstoy believed His words in the way that only those who who sees God in Christ”, “follows him as God”. One of the key features of Tolstoy's worldview lies in the search for and expression of "mystical ethics", to which he considers it necessary to subordinate all secularized elements of society, including science, philosophy, art, considers it "blasphemy" to put them on the same level with good. The ethical imperative of the writer explains the lack of contradiction between the titles of the chapters of the book "The Way of Life": " To a reasonable person it is impossible not to recognize God” and “God cannot be known by reason”. In contrast to the patristic, and later Orthodox, identification of beauty and goodness, Tolstoy emphatically declares that "goodness has nothing to do with beauty." In the book Reading Circle, Tolstoy quotes John Ruskin: “Art is only in its proper place when its goal is moral perfection. If art does not help people to discover the truth, but only provides a pleasant pastime, then it is a shameful, not sublime thing. On the one hand, Zenkovsky characterizes Tolstoy's divergence with the church not so much as a reasonably justified result, but as a "fatal misunderstanding", since "Tolstoy was an ardent and sincere follower of Christ." Tolstoy explains the denial of the church's view of dogma, the Divinity of Christ and His Resurrection by the contradiction between "rationalism, internally completely inconsistent with its mystical experience." On the other hand, Zenkovsky himself notes that “already in Gogol, for the first time, the theme of the internal heterogeneity of the aesthetic and moral sphere is raised; for reality is alien to the aesthetic principle.

§  Bibliography

Of the writings of Leo Tolstoy, 174 of his works of art have survived, including unfinished compositions and rough sketches. Tolstoy himself considered 78 of his works to be completely finished works; only they were printed during his lifetime and were included in collected works. The remaining 96 of his works remained in the archive of the writer himself, and only after his death they saw the light.

The first of his published works is the story "Childhood", 1852. The first lifetime published book of the writer - "Military stories of Count L. N. Tolstoy" 1856, St. Petersburg; in the same year, his second book, Childhood and Adolescence, was published. The last work of art published during Tolstoy's lifetime is the artistic essay "Grateful Soil", dedicated to Tolstoy's meeting with a young peasant in Meshchersky on June 21, 1910; The essay was first published in 1910 in the Rech newspaper. A month before his death, Leo Tolstoy worked on the third version of the story "There are no guilty in the world."

¶  Lifetime and posthumous editions of collected works

In 1886, the wife of Lev Nikolaevich for the first time published the collected works of the writer. For literary science, a milestone was the publication of the Complete (Jubilee) Collected Works of Tolstoy in 90 volumes (1928-58), which included many new literary texts, letters and diaries of the writer.

In addition, and later, collected works of his works were repeatedly published: in 1951-1953, "Collected Works in 14 volumes" (Moscow, Goslitizdat), in 1958-1959, "Collected Works in 12 volumes" (Moscow, Goslitizdat), in 1960- 1965 "Collected works in 20 volumes" (Moscow, ed. "Fiction"), in 1972 "Collected works in 12 volumes" (Moscow, ed. "Fiction"), in 1978-1985 "Collected works in 22 volumes (in 20 books) "(Moscow, ed. "Fiction"), in 1980 "Collected works in 12 volumes" (Moscow, ed. "Sovremennik"), in 1987 "Collected works in 12 volumes "(Moscow, ed. "Pravda").

¶  Translations of Tolstoy

During the time of the Russian Empire, for 30 years before the October Revolution, 10 million copies of Tolstoy's books were published in Russia in 10 languages. Over the years of the existence of the USSR, Tolstoy's works were published in the Soviet Union in an amount of over 60 million copies in 75 languages.

Translation of the complete works of Tolstoy into Chinese was carried out by Cao Ying, the work took 20 years.

¶  Worldwide recognition. Memory

Four museums dedicated to the life and work of Leo Tolstoy have been created on the territory of Russia. The estate of Tolstoy Yasnaya Polyana, together with all the surrounding forests, fields, gardens and lands, has been turned into a museum-reserve, its branch is the museum-estate of L. N. Tolstoy in the village of Nikolskoye-Vyazemskoye. Under the protection of the state is Tolstoy's manor house in Moscow (Leo Tolstoy St., 21), which, on the personal instructions of V. I. Lenin, was turned into memorial museum. Also turned into a museum house at the station Astapovo, Moscow-Kursk-Donbass railway. (now Lev Tolstoy station, Moscow railway), where the writer died. The largest of the museums of Tolstoy, as well as the center of research work on the study of the life and work of the writer is State Museum L. N. Tolstoy in Moscow (Prechistenka st., 11/8). Many schools, clubs, libraries and other cultural institutions are named after the writer in Russia. His name is the district center and the railway station (former Astapovo) Lipetsk region; district and district center of the Kaluga region; the village (formerly Stary Yurt) of the Grozny region, where Tolstoy visited in his youth. In many Russian cities there are squares and streets named after Leo Tolstoy. Monuments to the writer have been erected in different cities of Russia and the world. In Russia, monuments to Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy were erected in a number of cities: in Moscow, in Tula (as a native of the Tula province), in Pyatigorsk, Orenburg.

§  Significance and influence of Tolstoy's work

The nature of the perception and interpretation of Leo Tolstoy's work, as well as the nature of his influence on individual artists and on the literary process, was largely determined by the characteristics of each country, its historical and artistic development. So, the French writers perceived him, first of all, as an artist who opposed naturalism and was able to combine a truthful depiction of life with spirituality and high moral purity. English writers relied on his work in the fight against the traditional "Victorian" hypocrisy, they saw in him an example of high artistic courage. In the United States, Leo Tolstoy became a mainstay for writers who asserted acute social themes in art. In Germany, his anti-militarist speeches acquired the greatest importance; German writers studied his experience in a realistic depiction of the war. The writers of the Slavic peoples were impressed by his sympathy for the "small" oppressed nations, as well as the national-heroic theme of his works.

Leo Tolstoy had a huge impact on the evolution of European humanism, on the development of realistic traditions in world literature. His influence affected the work of Romain Rolland, François Mauriac and Roger Martin du Gard in France, Ernest Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe in the USA, John Galsworthy and Bernard Shaw in England, Thomas Mann and Anna Zegers in Germany, August Strindberg and Arthur Lundqvist in Sweden, Rainer Rilke in Austria, Eliza Orzeszko, Bolesław Prus, Yaroslav Ivashkevich in Poland, Maria Puimanova in Czechoslovakia, Lao She in China, Tokutomi Roca in Japan, and each of them experienced this influence in their own way.

Western humanist writers, such as Romain Rolland, Anatole France, Bernard Shaw, the brothers Heinrich and Thomas Mann, listened attentively to the accusing voice of the author in his works Resurrection, Fruits of Enlightenment, Kreutzer Sonata, Death of Ivan Ilyich ". Tolstoy's critical worldview penetrated their consciousness not only through his journalism and philosophical works, but also through his works of art. Heinrich Mann said that the works of Tolstoy were for the German intelligentsia an antidote to Nietzscheism. For Heinrich Mann, Jean-Richard Blok, Hamlin Garland, Leo Tolstoy was a model of great moral purity and intransigence towards social evil and attracted them as an enemy of the oppressors and a defender of the oppressed. The aesthetic ideas of Tolstoy's worldview are somehow reflected in Romain Rolland's book People's Theater”, in articles by Bernard Shaw and Boleslav Prus (treatise “What is Art?”) and in Frank Norris's book “The Novelist's Responsibility”, in which the author repeatedly refers to Tolstoy.

For Western European writers of the generation of Romain Rolland, Leo Tolstoy was an older brother, a teacher. It was the center of attraction for democratic and realistic forces in the ideological and literary struggle of the beginning of the century, but also the subject of daily heated debate. At the same time, for later writers, the generation of Louis Aragon or Ernest Hemingway, Tolstoy's work became part of the cultural wealth that they assimilated in their youth. Today, many foreign prose writers, who do not even consider themselves students of Tolstoy and do not define their attitude towards him, at the same time assimilate elements of his creative experience, which has become the common property of world literature.

Leo Tolstoy was nominated 16 times for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1902-1906. and 4 times for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1901, 1902 and 1909.

§  Writers, thinkers and religious figures about Tolstoy

  • French writer and member of the French Academy André Maurois claimed that Leo Tolstoy is one of the three greatest writers in the history of culture (along with Shakespeare and Balzac).
  • The German writer, Nobel Prize winner in literature Thomas Mann said that the world did not know another artist in whom the epic, Homeric beginning would be as strong as that of Tolstoy, and that the elements of the epic and indestructible realism live in his works.
  • The Indian philosopher and politician Mahatma Gandhi spoke of Tolstoy as honest man of his time, who never tried to hide the truth, to embellish it, not being afraid of either spiritual or secular power, backing up his preaching with deeds and making any sacrifices for the sake of truth.
  • The Russian writer and thinker Fyodor Dostoevsky said in 1876 that only Tolstoy shines with the fact that, in addition to the poem, "knows to the smallest accuracy (historical and current) the depicted reality."
  • Russian writer and critic Dmitry Merezhkovsky wrote about Tolstoy: “His face is the face of humanity. If the inhabitants of other worlds asked our world: who are you? - humanity could answer by pointing to Tolstoy: here I am.
  • The Russian poet Alexander Blok spoke of Tolstoy: "Tolstoy is the greatest and only genius of modern Europe, the highest pride of Russia, a man whose only name is fragrance, a writer of great purity and holiness."
  • The Russian writer Vladimir Nabokov wrote in his English Lectures on Russian Literature: “Tolstoy is an unsurpassed Russian prose writer. Leaving aside his predecessors Pushkin and Lermontov, all the great Russian writers can be built in this sequence: the first is Tolstoy, the second is Gogol, the third is Chekhov, the fourth is Turgenev.
  • Russian religious philosopher and the writer Vasily Rozanov about Tolstoy: "Tolstoy is only a writer, but not a prophet, not a saint, and therefore his teaching does not inspire anyone."
  • The famous theologian Alexander Men said that Tolstoy is still the voice of conscience and a living reproach for people who are sure that they live in accordance with moral principles.

§  Criticism

Many newspapers and magazines of all political trends wrote about Tolstoy during his lifetime. Thousands of critical articles and reviews have been written about him. His early works found appreciation in revolutionary democratic criticism. However, "War and Peace", "Anna Karenina" and "Resurrection" did not receive real disclosure and coverage in contemporary criticism. His novel "Anna Karenina" was not well received by the critics of the 1870s; the ideological system of the novel remained undiscovered, as well as its amazing artistic power. At the same time, Tolstoy himself, not without irony, wrote: “If myopic critics think that I wanted to describe only what I like, how Oblonsky dine and what kind of shoulders Karenina has, then they are mistaken.”

¶  Literary criticism

The first in the press to respond favorably to Tolstoy's literary debut was the critic of Fatherland Notes S. S. Dudyshkin in 1854 in an article devoted to the stories "Childhood" and "Boyhood". However, two years later, in 1856, the same critic wrote a negative review of the book edition of Childhood and Boyhood, Military Tales. In the same year, a review of N. G. Chernyshevsky on these books of Tolstoy appeared, in which the critic draws attention to the writer's ability to depict human psychology in its contradictory development. In the same place, Chernyshevsky writes about the absurdity of reproaches to Tolstoy by S. S. Dudyshkin. In particular, objecting to the critic's remark that Tolstoy does not depict female characters in his works, Chernyshevsky draws attention to the image of Lisa from The Two Hussars. In 1855-1856, one of the theorists of "pure art" P. V. Annenkov also highly appreciated Tolstoy's work, noting the depth of thought in the works of Tolstoy and Turgenev and the fact that Tolstoy's thought and its expression by means of art are merged together. At the same time, another representative of "aesthetic" criticism, A. V. Druzhinin, in reviews of "The Snowstorm", "Two Hussars" and "Military Stories" described Tolstoy as a deep connoisseur of social life and a subtle researcher of the human soul. Meanwhile, the Slavophile K. S. Aksakov in 1857 in the article “Review of Modern Literature” found in the work of Tolstoy and Turgenev, along with “truly beautiful” works, the presence of unnecessary details, because of which “the general line is lost, connecting them into one whole ".

In the 1870s, P. N. Tkachev, who believed that the writer’s task was to express the liberating aspirations of the “progressive” part of society in his work, in his article “Salon Art”, dedicated to the novel “Anna Karenina”, spoke sharply negatively about the work of Tolstoy.

N. N. Strakhov compared the novel "War and Peace" in its scale with the work of Pushkin. The genius and innovation of Tolstoy, according to the critic, manifested itself in the ability of "simple" means to create a harmonious and comprehensive picture of Russian life. The writer's inherent objectivity allowed him to "deeply and truthfully" depict the dynamics of the characters' inner life, which is not subject to any initially given schemes and stereotypes in Tolstoy. The critic also noted the author's desire to find the best features in a person. What Strakhov especially appreciates in the novel is that the writer is interested not only in the spiritual qualities of the individual, but also in the problem of supra-individual - family and communal - consciousness.

The philosopher K. N. Leontiev, in the pamphlet Our New Christians published in 1882, expressed doubts about the socio-religious viability of the teachings of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. According to Leontiev, Dostoevsky's Pushkin speech and Tolstoy's story "What makes people alive" show the immaturity of their religious thinking and the insufficient familiarity of these writers with the content of the works of the Church Fathers. Leontiev believed that Tolstoy's "religion of love", adopted by the majority of "neo-Slavophiles", distorts the true essence of Christianity. Leontiev's attitude to Tolstoy's works of art was different. The novels "War and Peace" and "Anna Karenina" the critic announced greatest works world literature "for the last 40-50 years". Considering the main drawback of Russian literature to be the “humiliation” of Russian reality that goes back to Gogol, the critic believed that only Tolstoy managed to overcome this tradition, depicting “higher Russian society ... finally in a human way, that is, impartially, and in places with obvious love". N. S. Leskov in 1883 in the article “Count L. N. Tolstoy and F. M. Dostoevsky as Heresiarchs (The Religion of Fear and the Religion of Love)” criticized Leontiev’s pamphlet, convicting him of “convenience”, ignorance of patristic sources and misunderstanding the only argument chosen from them (which Leontiev himself admitted).

N. S. Leskov shared the enthusiastic attitude of N. N. Strakhov to the works of Tolstoy. Contrasting Tolstoy's "religion of love" with K. N. Leontiev's "religion of fear", Leskov believed that it was the former that was closer to the essence of Christian morality.

Later, Tolstoy's work was highly appreciated, unlike most democratic critics, by Andreevich (E. A. Solovyov), who published his articles in the journal of "legal Marxists" Life. In the late Tolstoy, he especially appreciated the “inaccessible truth of the image”, the realism of the writer, tearing the veils “from the conventions of our cultural and social life”, revealing “its lie, covered with lofty words” (“Life”, 1899, No. 12).

Critic I. I. Ivanov in literature late XIX centuries found "naturalism", dating back to Maupassant, Zola and Tolstoy and being an expression of a general moral decline.

In the words of K. I. Chukovsky, “in order to write“ War and Peace ”- just think with what terrible greed it was necessary to pounce on life, grab everything around with eyes and ears, and accumulate all this immeasurable wealth ...” (article “Tolstoy as artistic genius", 1908).

The representative of the developed at the turn of XIX-XX centuries Marxist literary criticism V. I. Lenin believed that Tolstoy in his works was the spokesman for the interests of the Russian peasantry.

The Russian poet and writer, Nobel Prize in Literature winner Ivan Bunin in his study "The Liberation of Tolstoy" (Paris, 1937) characterized Tolstoy's artistic nature as a tense interaction of "animal primitiveness" and a refined taste for the most complex intellectual and aesthetic quests.

¶  Religious criticism

Opponents and critics of Tolstoy's religious views were Church historian Konstantin Pobedonostsev, Vladimir Solovyov, Christian philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev, historian-theologian Georgy Florovsky, candidate of theology John of Kronstadt.

¶  Criticism of the social views of the writer

In Russia, the opportunity to openly discuss in the press the social and philosophical views of the late Tolstoy appeared in 1886 in connection with the publication in the 12th volume of his collected works of an abridged version of the article “So what should we do?”.

The controversy around the 12th volume was opened by A. M. Skabichevsky, condemning Tolstoy for his views on art and science. H. K. Mikhailovsky, on the contrary, expressed support for Tolstoy's views on art: “In the XII volume of the Works of gr. Tolstoy much is said about the absurdity and illegitimacy of the so-called "science for the sake of science" and "art for the sake of art" ... Gr. Tolstoy says a lot of things that are true in this sense, and in relation to art, this is in the highest degree significantly in the mouth of a first-class artist.

Romain Rolland, William Howells, Emile Zola responded to Tolstoy's article abroad. Later, Stefan Zweig, highly appreciating the first, descriptive part of the article (“... hardly ever social criticism more ingeniously demonstrated on an earthly phenomenon than in the depiction of these rooms of beggars and degraded people”), at the same time he noted: “but as soon as, in the second part, the utopian Tolstoy passes from diagnosis to therapy and tries to preach objective methods of correction, each concept becomes vague , the contours fade, thoughts, urging one another, stumble. And this confusion grows from problem to problem.”

V. I. Lenin in the article “L. N. Tolstoy and the Modern Labor Movement" wrote about Tolstoy's "powerless curses" against capitalism and "the power of money". According to Lenin, Tolstoy's critique of the modern order "reflects a turning point in the views of millions of peasants who have just emerged from serfdom and saw that this freedom means new horrors of ruin, starvation, homeless life ...". Earlier, in Leo Tolstoy as a Mirror of the Russian Revolution (1908), Lenin wrote that Tolstoy was ridiculous, like a prophet who discovered new recipes for the salvation of mankind. But at the same time, he is great as a spokesman for the ideas and moods that had developed among the Russian peasantry at the time of the onset of the bourgeois revolution in Russia, and also that Tolstoy is original, since his views express the features of the revolution as a peasant bourgeois revolution. In the article "L. N. Tolstoy" (1910) Lenin points out that the contradictions in Tolstoy's views reflect "contradictory conditions and traditions that determined the psychology of various classes and strata of Russian society in the post-reform but pre-revolutionary era."

G. V. Plekhanov in his article "Confusion of Ideas" (1911) highly appreciated Tolstoy's criticism of private property.

V. G. Korolenko in 1908 wrote about Tolstoy that his beautiful dream about the establishment of the first centuries of Christianity can have a strong effect on simple souls, but the rest cannot follow him to this "dreamed" country. According to Korolenko, Tolstoy knew, saw and felt only the very bottom and the very heights of the social system, and it is easy for him to refuse "one-sided" improvements, such as a constitutional system.

Maxim Gorky was enthusiastic about Tolstoy as an artist, but condemned his teachings. After Tolstoy spoke out against the Zemstvo movement, Gorky, expressing the dissatisfaction of his like-minded people, wrote that Tolstoy was captured by his idea, separated from Russian life and stopped listening to the voice of the people, hovering too high above Russia.

Sociologist and historian M. M. Kovalevsky said that Tolstoy's economic doctrine ( main idea which is borrowed from the Gospels), shows only that the social doctrine of Christ, perfectly adapted to simple manners, rural and pastoral life of Galilee, cannot serve as a rule for the behavior of modern civilizations.

A detailed polemic with the teachings of Tolstoy is contained in the study of the Russian philosopher I. A. Ilyin "On resistance to evil by force" (Berlin, 1925).

§  Tolstoy in the cinema

In 1912, the young director Yakov Protazanov made a 30-minute silent film, The Departure of the Great Old Man, based on testimonies about last period life of Leo Tolstoy using documentaries. In the role of Leo Tolstoy - Vladimir Shaternikov, in the role of Sophia Tolstoy - British-American actress Muriel Harding, who used the pseudonym Olga Petrova. The film was received very negatively by the writer's relatives and his entourage and was not released in Russia, but was shown abroad.

A Soviet feature film is dedicated to Leo Tolstoy and his family Feature Film directed by Sergei Gerasimov "Leo Tolstoy" (1984). The film tells about the last two years of the writer's life and his death. The main role of the film was played by the director himself, in the role of Sofya Andreevna - Tamara Makarova. In the Soviet TV movie “The Shore of His Life” (1985), about the fate of Nikolai Miklukho-Maclay, the role of Tolstoy was played by Alexander Vokach.

In the 2009 film The Last Sunday by American director Michael Hoffman, the role of Leo Tolstoy was played by Canadian Christopher Plummer, for this work he was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Supporting Actor category. British actress Helen Mirren, whose Russian ancestors were mentioned by Tolstoy in War and Peace, played the role of Sophia Tolstaya and was also nominated for an Oscar for Best Actress.

Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy is one of the greatest novelists in the world. He is not only the world's largest writer, but also a philosopher, religious thinker and educator. You will learn more about all this from this.

But where he really succeeded was in keeping a personal diary. This habit inspired him to write his novels and stories, and also allowed him to form most of his life goals and priorities.

An interesting fact is that this nuance of Tolstoy's biography (keeping a diary) was the result of imitation of the great.

Hobbies and military service

Naturally, Leo Tolstoy had. He was extremely fond of music. His favorite composers were Bach, Handel and Chopin.

From his biography it clearly follows that sometimes he could play works by Chopin, Mendelssohn and Schumann on the piano for several hours in a row.

It is authentically known that the elder brother of Leo Tolstoy, Nikolai, had a great influence on him. He was a friend and mentor of the future writer.

It was Nicholas who invited his younger brother to join military service in the Caucasus. As a result, Leo Tolstoy became a cadet, and in 1854 he was transferred to Sevastopol, where he participated in the Crimean War until August 1855.

Creativity Tolstoy

During the service, Lev Nikolaevich had quite a lot of free time. During this period, he wrote the autobiographical story "Childhood", in which he masterfully described the memories of the first years of his life.

This work was an important event for compiling his biography.

After that, Leo Tolstoy writes the following story - "The Cossacks", in which he describes his army life in the Caucasus.

Work on this work was carried out until 1862, and was completed only after serving in the army.

An interesting fact is that Tolstoy did not stop his writing activity even while participating in the Crimean War.

During this period, from under his pen comes the story "Boyhood", which is a continuation of "Childhood", as well as "Sevastopol stories".

After the end of the Crimean War, Tolstoy leaves the service. Upon arrival home, he already has great fame in the literary field.

His distinguished contemporaries talk about a major acquisition for Russian literature in the person of Tolstoy.

While still young, Tolstoy was distinguished by arrogance and stubbornness, which is clearly visible in him. He refused to belong to one or another philosophical school, and once publicly called himself an anarchist, after which he decided to leave for France in 1857.

He soon developed an interest in gambling. But it didn't last long. When he lost all his savings, he had to return home from Europe.

Leo Tolstoy in his youth

By the way, the passion for gambling is observed in the biographies of many writers.

Despite all the difficulties, he writes the last, third part of his autobiographical trilogy "Youth". It happened in the same 1857.

Since 1862, Tolstoy began to publish the pedagogical journal Yasnaya Polyana, where he himself was the main contributor. However, not having a calling as a publisher, Tolstoy managed to publish only 12 issues.

Family of Leo Tolstoy

On September 23, 1862, a sharp turn takes place in Tolstoy's biography: he marries Sofya Andreevna Bers, who was the daughter of a doctor. From this marriage, 9 sons and 4 daughters were born. Five of the thirteen children died in childhood.

When the wedding took place, Sofya Andreevna was only 18 years old, and Count Tolstoy was 34 years old. An interesting fact is that before his marriage, Tolstoy confessed to his future wife in his premarital affairs.


Leo Tolstoy with his wife Sofia Andreevna

For some time in the biography of Tolstoy, the brightest period begins.

He is truly happy, and largely due to the practicality of his wife, material wealth, outstanding literary creativity and, in connection with it, all-Russian and even worldwide fame.

In the person of his wife, Tolstoy found an assistant in all matters, practical and literary. In the absence of a secretary, it was she who several times copied his drafts cleanly.

However, very soon their happiness is overshadowed by the inevitable petty quarrels, fleeting quarrels and mutual misunderstanding, which only gets worse over the years.

The fact is that Leo Tolstoy proposed a kind of “life plan” for his family, according to which he intended to give part of the family income to the poor and schools.

The way of life of his family (food and clothing), he wanted to greatly simplify, while he intended to sell and distribute "everything superfluous": pianos, furniture, carriages.


Tolstoy with his family at the tea table in the park, 1892, Yasnaya Polyana

Naturally, his wife, Sofya Andreevna, was clearly not satisfied with such an ambiguous plan. On the basis of this, their first serious conflict broke out, which served as the beginning of an "undeclared war" to secure the future of their children.

In 1892, Tolstoy signed a separate act and, not wanting to be the owner, transferred all the property to his wife and children.

It must be said that Tolstoy's biography is in many ways extraordinarily contradictory precisely because of his relationship with his wife, with whom he lived for 48 years.

Tolstoy's works

Tolstoy is one of the most prolific writers. His works are large-scale not only in terms of volume, but also in terms of the meanings that he touches on them.

Most popular works Tolstoy are considered "War and Peace", "Anna Karenina" and "Resurrection".

"War and Peace"

In the 1860s, Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy lived with his entire family in Yasnaya Polyana. It was here that his very famous novel"War and Peace".

Initially, part of the novel was published in the Russian Messenger under the title "1805".

After 3 years, 3 more chapters appear, thanks to which the novel was completely over. He was destined to become the most outstanding creative result in Tolstoy's biography.

Both critics and the public have long discussed the work "War and Peace". The subject of their disputes were the wars described in the book.

Thoughtful but still fictional characters were also sharply discussed.


Tolstoy in 1868

The novel also became interesting because it featured 3 meaningful satirical essays on the laws of history.

Among all other ideas, Leo Tolstoy tried to convey to the reader that the position of a person in society and the meaning of his life are derivatives of his daily activities.

"Anna Karenina"

After Tolstoy wrote War and Peace, he began work on his second, no less famous novel, Anna Karenina.

The writer contributed many autobiographical essays to it. This is easy to see when looking at the relationship between Kitty and Levin, the main characters in Anna Karenina.

The work was published in parts between 1873-1877, and was very highly appreciated by both critics and society. Many have noticed that Anna Karenina is practically Tolstoy's autobiography, written in the third person.

For his next work, Lev Nikolaevich received fabulous fees for those times.

"Resurrection"

In the late 1880s, Tolstoy wrote the novel Resurrection. Its plot was based on a genuine court case. It is in the "Resurrection" that the author's sharp views on church rites are clearly indicated.

By the way, this work was one of the reasons that led to a complete break between the Orthodox Church and Count Tolstoy.

Tolstoy and religion

Despite the fact that the works described above were a tremendous success, this did not bring any joy to the writer.

He was in a depressed state and experienced a deep inner emptiness.

In this regard, the next stage in Tolstoy's biography was a continuous, almost convulsive search for the meaning of life.

Initially, Lev Nikolayevich looked for answers to questions in the Orthodox Church, but this did not bring him any results.

Over time, he began to criticize in every possible way both the Orthodox Church itself and the Christian religion in general. He began to publish his thoughts on these acute issues in the media outlet.

His main position was that the Christian teaching is good, but Jesus Christ himself seems to be unnecessary. That is why he decided to make his own translation of the Gospel.

At all religious views Tolstoy were extremely complex and confusing. It was some incredible mixture of Christianity and Buddhism, seasoned with various Eastern beliefs.

In 1901, the decision of the Holy Governing Synod on Count Leo Tolstoy was issued.

It was a decree that officially announced that Leo Tolstoy was no longer a member of the Orthodox Church, since his publicly expressed convictions were incompatible with such membership.

The definition of the Holy Synod is sometimes erroneously interpreted as excommunication (anathema) of Tolstoy from the church.

Copyright and conflict with his wife

In connection with his new beliefs, Leo Tolstoy wanted to distribute all his savings and give up his own property in favor of the poor. However, his wife, Sofya Andreevna, expressed a categorical protest in this regard.

In this regard, the main family crisis was outlined in Tolstoy's biography. When Sofya Andreevna found out that her husband had publicly renounced the copyright to all his works (which, in fact, was their main source of income), they began to have violent conflicts.

From Tolstoy's diary:

“She does not understand, and the children do not understand, spending money, that every ruble they live on and earn by books is suffering, my shame. Let it be a shame, but what a weakening of the effect that the preaching of the truth could have had.

Of course, it is not difficult to understand the wife of Lev Nikolayevich. After all, they had 9 children, whom he, by and large, left without a livelihood.

Pragmatic, rational and active Sofya Andreevna could not allow this to happen.

Ultimately, Tolstoy made a formal will, transferring the rights to his youngest daughter, Alexandra Lvovna, who fully sympathized with his views.

At the same time, an explanatory note was attached to the will that in fact these texts should not become someone's property, and V.G. takes over the authority to monitor the processes. Chertkov is a faithful follower and student of Tolstoy, who was supposed to take all the writings of the writer, right down to drafts.

Later work of Tolstoy

Tolstoy's later works were realistic fiction, as well as stories filled with moral content.

In 1886, one of Tolstoy's most famous stories appeared - "The Death of Ivan Ilyich".

Her main character realizes that most he had wasted his life, and the realization came too late.

In 1898, Lev Nikolaevich wrote the equally famous work Father Sergius. In it, he criticized his own beliefs that he had after his spiritual rebirth.

The rest of the works are devoted to the theme of art. These include the play The Living Corpse (1890) and the brilliant story Hadji Murad (1904).

In 1903 Tolstoy wrote little story, which is called "After the ball." It was published only in 1911, after the death of the writer.

last years of life

The last years of his biography, Leo Tolstoy was better known as a religious leader and moral authority. His thoughts were directed towards resisting evil in a non-violent way.

Even during his lifetime, Tolstoy became an idol for the majority. However, despite all his achievements, there were serious flaws in his family life, which were especially aggravated in old age.


Leo Tolstoy with grandchildren

The writer's wife, Sofya Andreevna, did not agree with her husband's views and felt hostility towards some of his followers, who often came to Yasnaya Polyana.

She said: "How can you love humanity, and hate those who are next to you."

All this could not last long.

In the autumn of 1910, Tolstoy, accompanied only by his doctor D.P. Makovitsky leaves Yasnaya Polyana forever. However, he did not have any specific plan of action.

Death of Tolstoy

However, on the way, Leo Tolstoy felt unwell. First, he caught a cold, and then the disease turned into pneumonia, in connection with which he had to interrupt the trip and take the sick Lev Nikolayevich out of the train at the first large station near the village.

This station was Astapovo (now Leo Tolstoy, Lipetsk region).

The rumor about the writer's illness instantly spread throughout the neighborhood and far beyond. Six doctors tried in vain to save the great old man: the disease progressed inexorably.

On November 7, 1910, Leo Tolstoy died at the age of 83. He was buried in Yasnaya Polyana.

“I sincerely regret the death of the great writer, who, during the heyday of his talent, embodied in his works the images of one of the glorious years of Russian life. May the Lord God be his merciful judge."

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Tolstoy Lev Nikolaevich (1828 - 1910) - one of the most famous Russian writers and thinkers, one of the greatest writers in the world, educator, publicist and religious thinker.

Short biography of Tolstoy

Write short biography of Tolstoy difficult enough, as he lived a long and very diverse life.

In principle, all short biographies can be called "short" only conditionally. Nevertheless, we will try to convey in a concise form the main points of the biography of Leo Tolstoy.

Childhood and youth

The future writer was born in Yasnaya Polyana, Tula province, in a wealthy aristocratic family. Entered Kazan University, but then left it.

At the age of 23 he went to war with Chechnya and Dagestan. Here he began to write the trilogy "Childhood", "Boyhood", "Youth".

In the Caucasus, he participated in hostilities as an artillery officer. During the Crimean War, he went to Sevastopol, where he continued to fight. After the end of the war, he left for St. Petersburg and published Sevastopol Tales in the Sovremennik magazine, which clearly reflected his outstanding writing talent.

In 1857 Tolstoy went on a trip to Europe. From his biography it clearly follows that this trip disappointed the thinker.

From 1853 to 1863 wrote the story "Cossacks", after which he decided to interrupt his literary activity and become a landowner, doing educational work in the village. To this end, he left for Yasnaya Polyana, where he opened a school for peasant children and created his own system of pedagogy.

Creativity Tolstoy

In 1863-1869 he wrote the fundamental work War and Peace. It was this work that brought him worldwide fame. In 1873-1877, the novel Anna Karenina was published.

Portrait of Leo Tolstoy

In the same years, the writer's worldview was fully formed, which later resulted in the religious movement "Tolstoyism". Its essence is indicated in the works: “Confession”, “What is my faith?” and the Kreutzer Sonata.

From Tolstoy's biography it is clearly seen that the teaching of "Tolstoyism" is set forth in the philosophical and religious works "Study of Dogmatic Theology", "Combination and Translation of the Four Gospels". The main emphasis in these works is on the moral improvement of man, the exposure of evil and non-resistance to evil by violence.

Later, a dilogy was published: the drama "The Power of Darkness" and the comedy "The Fruits of Enlightenment", then a series of stories-parables about the laws of being.

From all over Russia and the world, admirers of the writer's work came to Yasnaya Polyana, whom they treated as a spiritual mentor. In 1899, the novel Resurrection was published.

The last works of the writer are the stories "Father Sergius", "After the Ball", "The Posthumous Notes of the Elder Fyodor Kuzmich" and the drama "The Living Corpse".

Tolstoy and the Church

Tolstoy's confessional journalism gives a detailed idea of ​​his emotional drama: drawing pictures of social inequality and idleness of the educated strata, Tolstoy in a harsh form posed questions of the meaning of life and faith to society, criticized everything state institutions, reaching the denial of science, art, court, marriage, the achievements of civilization.

Tolstoy's social declaration is based on the idea of ​​Christianity as a moral doctrine, and the ethical ideas of Christianity are comprehended by him in a humanistic key, as the basis of the universal brotherhood of people.

In a brief biography of Tolstoy, it makes no sense to mention the numerous harsh statements of the writer about the church, but they can be easily found in various sources.

In 1901, a resolution of the Most Holy Governing Synod was issued, which officially announced that Count Leo Tolstoy was no longer a member of the Orthodox Church, since his (publicly expressed) convictions were incompatible with such membership.

This caused a huge public outcry, since Tolstoy's popular authority was extremely great, although everyone knew very well the writer's critical mood in relation to the Christian church.

Last days and death

On October 28, 1910, Tolstoy secretly left Yasnaya Polyana from his family, fell ill on the way and was forced to leave the train at the small Astapovo railway station of the Ryazan-Ural Railway.

Here, seven days later, in the house of the head of the station, he died at the age of 82.

We hope that a brief biography of Tolstoy will interest you for further study of his creative heritage. And the last thing: maybe you didn’t know this, but in mathematics there is Tolstoy’s riddle, the author of which is himself great writer. We highly recommend checking it out.

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Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy
Born: September 9, 1828
Died: November 10, 1910

Biography

Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy was born on August 28 (September 9 n.s.) in the Yasnaya Polyana estate of the Tula province. By origin, he belonged to the most ancient aristocratic families of Russia. Got home education and upbringing.

After the death of his parents (mother died in 1830, father in 1837), the future writer with three brothers and a sister moved to Kazan, to the guardian P. Yushkova. At the age of sixteen, he entered Kazan University, first at the Faculty of Philosophy in the category of Arabic-Turkish literature, then studied at the Faculty of Law (1844 - 47). In 1847, without completing the course, he left the university and settled in Yasnaya Polyana, which he received as his father's inheritance.

The future writer spent the next four years in search: he tried to reorganize the life of the peasants of Yasnaya Polyana (1847), lived a secular life in Moscow (1848), at St. deputy meeting (autumn 1849).

In 1851 he left Yasnaya Polyana for the Caucasus, the place of service of his older brother Nikolai, and volunteered to take part in hostilities against the Chechens. Episodes of the Caucasian War are described by him in the stories "Raid" (1853), "Cutting down the forest" (1855), in the story "Cossacks" (1852 - 63). He passed the cadet exam, preparing to become an officer. In 1854, being an artillery officer, he transferred to the Danube army, which acted against the Turks.

In the Caucasus Tolstoy began to work in earnest literary creativity, writes the story "Childhood", which was approved by Nekrasov and published in the journal "Contemporary". Later, the story "Boyhood" (1852 - 54) was printed there.

Shortly after the start of the Crimean War Tolstoy at his personal request, he was transferred to Sevastopol, where he participated in the defense of the besieged city, showing rare fearlessness. Awarded with the Order St. Anna with the inscription "For Courage" and medals "For the Defense of Sevastopol". In "Sevastopol Tales" he created a mercilessly reliable picture of the war, which made a huge impression on Russian society. In the same years he wrote the last part of the trilogy - "Youth" (1855 - 56), in which he declared himself not just a "poet of childhood", but a researcher human nature. This interest in man and the desire to understand the laws of mental and spiritual life will continue in his future work.

In 1855, having arrived in Petersburg, Tolstoy became close to the staff of the Sovremennik magazine, met Turgenev, Goncharov, Ostrovsky, Chernyshevsky.

In the autumn of 1856 he retired Military career- not mine ... "- he writes in his diary) and in 1857 went on a six-month trip abroad to France, Switzerland, Italy, Germany.

In 1859 he opened a school for peasant children in Yasnaya Polyana, where he taught classes himself. He helped open more than 20 schools in the surrounding villages. In order to study the organization of school affairs abroad in 1860 - 1861 Tolstoy made a second trip to Europe, visited schools in France, Italy, Germany, and England. In London, he met Herzen, attended a lecture by Dickens.

In May 1861 (the year of the abolition of serfdom) he returned to Yasnaya Polyana, assumed the position of mediator and actively defended the interests of the peasants, resolving their disputes with the landowners about the land, for which the Tula nobility, dissatisfied with his actions, demanded his removal from office. In 1862 the Senate issued a decree dismissing Tolstoy. A secret surveillance of him by the III Section began. In the summer, the gendarmes carried out a search in his absence, confident that they would find a secret printing house, which the writer allegedly acquired after meetings and long conversations with Herzen in London.

In 1862 life Tolstoy, his life was streamlined for many years: he married the daughter of a Moscow doctor, Sofya Andreevna Bers, and a patriarchal life began on his estate as the head of an ever-increasing family. thick raised nine children.

The 1860s - 1870s were marked by the appearance of two works by Tolstoy, which immortalized his name: "War and Peace" (1863 - 69), "Anna Karenina" (1873 - 77).

In the early 1880s, the Tolstoy family moved to Moscow to educate their growing children. From this time of winter Tolstoy spent in Moscow. Here, in 1882, he participated in the census of the Moscow population, became closely acquainted with the life of the inhabitants of the city's slums, which he described in the treatise "So what should we do?" (1882 - 86), and concluded: "... You can't live like that, you can't live like that, you can't!"

New worldview Tolstoy expressed in the work "Confession" (1879), where he spoke about the revolution in his views, the meaning of which he saw in the break with the ideology of the noble class and the transition to the side of the "simple working people". This fracture has led Tolstoy to the denial of the state, official church and property. The consciousness of the meaninglessness of life in the face of inevitable death led him to believe in God. He bases his teaching on the moral precepts of the New Testament: the demand for love for people and the preaching of non-resistance to evil by force constitute the meaning of the so-called "Tolstoyism", which is becoming popular not only in Russia, but also abroad.

During this period, he came to a complete denial of his previous literary activity, engaged in physical labor, plowed, sewed boots, switched to vegetarian food. In 1891 he publicly renounced copyright on all his writings written after 1880.

Influenced by friends and true admirers of his talent, as well as personal need for literary activity Tolstoy in the 1890s changed his negative attitude to art. During these years he created the drama "The Power of Darkness" (1886), the play "The Fruits of Enlightenment" (1886 - 90), the novel "Resurrection" (1889 - 99).

In 1891, 1893, 1898 he participated in helping the peasants of the starving provinces, organized free canteens.

In the last decade, as always, he has been engaged in intense creative work. The story "Hadji Murad" (1896 - 1904), the drama "The Living Corpse" (1900), the story "After the Ball" (1903) were written.

At the beginning of 1900 he wrote a number of articles exposing the entire system of state administration. The government of Nicholas II issued a decree according to which the Holy Synod (the highest church institution in Russia) excommunicated Tolstoy from the church, which caused a wave of indignation in society.

In 1901 Tolstoy lived in the Crimea, was treated after a serious illness, often met with Chekhov and M. Gorky.

In the last years of his life, when Tolstoy drew up his will, he found himself at the center of intrigue and strife between the "Tolstoyites", on the one hand, and his wife, who defended the well-being of her family and children, on the other. Trying to bring his way of life in line with his beliefs and burdened by the lordly way of life in the estate. On November 10, 1910, Tolstoy secretly left Yasnaya Polyana. The health of the 82-year-old writer could not stand the trip. He caught a cold and, falling ill, died on November 20 on the way at the Astapovo station of the Ryazan-Ural railway.

Buried at Yasnaya Polyana.

Novels

1859 - Family happiness
1884 - Decembrists
1873 - War and Peace
1875 - Anna Karenina

Trilogy: Childhood, Boyhood and Youth

1852 - Childhood
1854 - Boyhood
1864 - Youth

Tale

1856 - Two hussars
1856 - Morning of the landowner
1858 - Albert
1862 - Idyll
1862 - Polikushka
1863 - Cossacks
1886 - Death of Ivan Ilyich
1903 - Notes of a madman
1891 - Kreutzer Sonata
1911 - Devil
1891 - Mother
1895 - Master and worker
1912 - Father Sergius
1912 - Hadji Murad

stories

1851 - History of yesterday
1853 - Raid
1853 - Christmas night
1854 - Uncle Zhdanov and Chevalier Chernov
1854 - How Russian soldiers die
1855 - Marker notes
1855 - Wood cutting
1856 - The cycle "Sevastopol stories"
1856 - Blizzard
1856 - Demoted
1857 - Lucerne
1859 - Three deaths
1887 - Surat coffee shop
1891 - Francoise
1911 - Who is right?
1894 - Karma
1894 - Dream of a young king
1911 - After the ball
1911 - Fake Coupon
1911 - Alyosha Pot
1905 - Poor people
1906 - Korney Vasiliev
1906 - Berries
1906 - For what?
1906 - Divine and Human
1911 - What I saw in a dream
1906 - Father Vasily
1908 - The power of childhood
1909 - Conversation with a passerby
1909 - Traveler and peasant
1909 - Songs in the village
1909 - Three days in the countryside
1912 - Khodynka
1911 - Unintentionally
1910 - Grateful soil

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