The very first biography of Leo Tolstoy. Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy


Born (August 28 (September 9), 1828, Yasnaya Polyana, Tula province, Russian Empire - November 7 (20), 1910, Astapovo station, Ryazan province, Russian Empire) - one of the most widely known Russian writers and thinkers, revered by many as one of the world's greatest writers. Member of the defense of Sevastopol. Enlightener, publicist, religious thinker, whose authoritative opinion caused 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). The writer, recognized during his lifetime as the head of Russian literature, whose work marked a new stage in the development of Russian and world realism, becoming a kind of bridge between the traditions of the classical novel of the 19th century and the literature of the 20th century. Leo Tolstoy had a huge impact on the evolution of European humanism, as well as on the development of realistic traditions in world literature. The works of Leo Tolstoy were screened and staged numerous times in the USSR and abroad; his plays have been staged many times around the world. He is best known for such works as the novel "War and Peace", the novel "Anna Karenina", the trilogy "Childhood", "Adolescence", "Youth", the story "Kreutzer Sonata", the cycle of stories "Sevastopol Tales", etc.

Origin

He came from a noble family, known, according to legendary sources, since 1351. His paternal ancestor, Count Pyotr Andreevich Tolstoy, is known for his role in the investigation of Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich, for which he was appointed head of the Secret Chancellery. The features of the great-grandson of Peter Andreevich, Ilya Andreevich, are given in War and Peace to the most 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, which did not allow him to serve under Nikolai. 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. To put his frustrated affairs in order, Nikolai Ilyich, like Nikolai Rostov, married a no longer very young princess from the Volkonsky family; the marriage was happy. They had four sons: Nikolay, Sergey, Dmitry, Leo and daughter Maria. Tolstoy's maternal grandfather, Catherine's general, 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 remarkable gift for storytelling. In addition to the Volkonskys, Leo Tolstoy was closely related to some other aristocratic families: the princes Gorchakov, Trubetskoy and others.

Childhood

Writer's father. Unknown artist. Paper, watercolor. 1820s 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. Was the fourth child; he had three older brothers: Nikolai (1823-1860), Sergei (1826-1904) and Dmitry (1827-1856). In 1830 sister Maria (1830-1912) was born. His mother died with the birth of his last daughter, when he 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 related to family property, litigation) 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 Nikolayevich remained until 1840, when Countess Osten-Saken died, and 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 Boyhood and Youth about the aspirations of Irteniev and Nekhlyudov for self-improvement was taken by Tolstoy from the history of his own ascetic attempts of that time. All this, as he wrote in his story "Boyhood", led to the fact that Tolstoy developed "a habit of constant moral analysis", as it seemed to him, "destroying the freshness of feeling and clarity of mind."

Education

The house where Leo Tolstoy was born, 1898. In 1854, the house was sold by order of the writer for export to the village of Dolgoye. Broken down in 1913

1898 In 1854, the house was sold by order of the writer for export to the village of Dolgoe. Broken in 1913. 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 he 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, where Lobachevsky worked at the mathematical faculty, and Kovalevsky at the Vostochny. On October 3, 1844, Leo Tolstoy was enrolled as a student of the category of Oriental literature as a native. At the entrance exams, in particular, he showed excellent results in the obligatory "Turkish-Tatar language" for admission.

The only image of the writer's mother. 1810s 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 result was three), and Lev Nikolayevich was awarded a transfer 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,” Tolstaya writes in her “Materials to biographies of L. N. 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 work - a comparison of Catherine's "Instruction" with Montesquieu's "Esprit des lois". ... 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. While in the Kazan hospital, he began to keep a diary, where, imitating Franklin, he set himself goals and rules for self-improvement and noted successes and failures in completing these tasks, analyzed his shortcomings and train of thought, the motives of his actions.

The beginning of literary activity

Yasnaya Polyana, where the writer lived most of his life. In 1847, after completing Catherine's "Instruction" and moving on to writing philosophical articles, Lev Nikolayevich was so carried away by this occupation that, in order for nothing to interfere with this, he leaves his studies at the university and leaves for the village of Yasnaya Polyana, which he inherited by division; his activities there are partly described in The Morning of the Landowner: Tolstoy tried to establish relations with the peasants in a new way. His attempt to somehow smooth over the guilt of the nobility before the people dates back to the same year when Grigorovich's "Anton Goremyk" and the beginning of Turgenev's "Notes of a Hunter" appeared. In his diary, Tolstoy sets himself a huge number of goals and rules; managed to follow only a small number of them. Among the successful ones are serious studies in English, music, and 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 Demidych, a serf, but Lev Nikolayevich himself often conducted classes. In mid-October 1848, Tolstoy left for Moscow, settling in the area where many of his relatives and friends lived - in the Arbat area. He stayed at Ivanova's house on Nikolo-Peskovskiy Lane. In Moscow, he was going to start preparing for the candidate's exams, however, 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 hotly, impetuously, and not always thinking about his moves, he often lost. Having left for St. Petersburg in February 1849, he spends 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. L. N. Tolstoy in his youth, maturity, old age.

Later he came to Moscow, where he often spent time gambling, which often had a negative effect on his financial situation. 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 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 setting with a gifted but misguided German musician, whom he later described in Alberta. In 1849, Lev Nikolaevich settled the musician Rudolf in his Yasnaya Polyana, with whom he played four hands on the piano. Carried away by music at that time, he played 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 Taneyev, who made a musical notation of this musical work (the only one composed by Tolstoy). A lot of time was also spent on carousing, playing and hunting. Leo Tolstoy kept his diary from a young age until the end of his life. Notebook entries 1891-1895 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, the brother of Lev Nikolayevich Nikolayevich, who served in the Caucasus, arrived in Yasnaya Polyana, who invited his younger brother to join the 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 there were obstacles in the form of a lack of necessary papers that were difficult to obtain, and Tolstoy lived for about 5 months in complete seclusion 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. Tolstoy and his brother Nikolai, 1851.

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 a slight change in details, she is depicted in all her semi-wild originality in The Cossacks. The same "Cossacks" also convey a picture of the inner life of a young gentleman who fled from Moscow life. In the Cossack village, Tolstoy began to write, and in July 1852 he sent to the editors of the then most popular magazine Sovremennik the first part of the future autobiographical trilogy, Childhood, signed only with the initials LN. Leo Tolstoy also attached a letter to the manuscript, which 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 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, he noted: This talent is new and seems to be reliable. - N. A. Nekrasov, Poln. coll. op. and letters, vol. 10, Moscow Pravda 1952, p. 179. The manuscript, by an as yet unknown author, was published in September of the same year. Meanwhile, the beginning and inspired author takes up the continuation of the tetralogy "Four Epochs of Development", the last part of which - "Youth" - never took place. He is considering writing "The Morning of the Landowner" (the finished story was only a fragment of "The Novel of the Russian Landowner"), "Raid", "Cossacks". Published in Sovremennik on September 18, 1852, Childhood, signed with the modest initials L.N., was an extraordinary success; after the publication of the author, they immediately began to rank among the leading figures of the young literary school, along with Turgenev, Goncharov, Grigorovich, Ostrovsky, who already enjoyed loud literary fame at that time. 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 field 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 career

As a cadet, Lev Nikolaevich remained for two years in the Caucasus, where he participated in many skirmishes with the highlanders and exposed to the dangers of military Caucasian life. He had the right to the George Cross, but never received it. During the Crimean War, which broke out at the end of 1853, Tolstoy transferred to the Danube army, participated in the battle of Oltenitsa and the siege of Silistria, and from November 1854 to the end of August 1855 was in Sevastopol.

Stele in memory of a participant in the defense of Sevastopol in 1854-1855. L. N. Tolstoy at the fourth bastion 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. The story was quickly published and read with interest by all of Russia, making a stunning impression with a picture of the horrors that befell the defenders of Sevastopol. The story was seen by Russian Emperor Alexander II; he ordered to take care of the gifted officer. For the defense of Sevastopol, Tolstoy was awarded the Order of St. Anne with the inscription "For Honor", medals "For the Defense of Sevastopol 1854-1855" and "In Memory of the War of 1853-1856." Subsequently, he was awarded two more medals "In memory of the 50th anniversary of the defense of Sevastopol." Tolstoy, enjoying the reputation of a brave officer and surrounded by the splendor of fame, had every chance of a career. Nevertheless, he managed to ruin everything for himself by writing several satirical songs stylized as soldiers. One of these songs was dedicated to the failure of the military operation on August 4, 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.

Travel Europe

In St. Petersburg, Lev Nikolayevich was warmly welcomed in high-society salons and in literary circles. He became closest friends with Ivan Sergeevich 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 Nekrasov, Goncharov, Panaev, Grigorovich, Druzhinin, 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 leaves 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 got sick of him and he got sick of himself" - and at the beginning of 1857 Tolstoy, without any regret, left Petersburg 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 attends balls, museums, he admires the “sense of social freedom”. However, the presence at the guillotining made such a heavy impression that Tolstoy left Paris and went to places associated with the French writer and thinker Rousseau - 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: “Indeed, Paris is not at all in harmony with its spiritual system; He is a strange man, I have never met such people and do not quite understand. A mixture of a poet, a Calvinist, a fanatic, a baric - something reminiscent of Rousseau, but more honest than Rousseau - a highly moral and at the same time unsympathetic creature. - I. S. Turgenev, Poln. coll. op. and letters. Letters, vol. III, p. 52.

Trips to Western Europe - Germany, France, England, Switzerland, Italy (in 1857 and 1860-61) made a rather negative impression on him. He expressed his disappointment in the European way of life in the story "Lucerne". Tolstoy was disappointed by the sharp 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 autumn of 1857, P. V. Annenkov tells Tolstoy’s project to plant all of Russia with forests, and in his letter to V. P. Botkin, Leo Tolstoy reports 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 is not limited to literary interests: on December 22, 1858, he almost dies on a bear hunt. Around the same time, he began an affair with a peasant woman, Aksinya Bazykina, and marriage plans were ripening. On his next trip, he was mainly interested in public education and institutions aimed at raising the educational level of the working population. He closely studied the issues of public education in Germany and France, both theoretically and practically, and through conversations with specialists. Of the outstanding people of Germany, he was most interested in Auerbach as the author of the Black Forest Tales dedicated to folk life 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 Herzen, was at a lecture by 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 in his arms. The death of his brother made a huge impression on Tolstoy. Among the stories and essays he wrote in the late 1850s are "Lucerne" and "Three Deaths". Gradually, criticism for 10-12 years cools towards Leo Tolstoy, until the very appearance of "War and Peace", and he himself does 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 Nikolaevich, suffering from depression, on the recommendation of doctors, went to the Bashkir farm Karalyk, Samara province, for a new and fashionable method of therapy for that time - koumiss treatment. Initially, he wanted to be treated at 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), he 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, Lev Nikolaevich came again due to deteriorating health. Lev Nikolaevich lived not in the village itself, but in a wagon near it. He wrote: “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 for the simplicity and kindness of the people” . In the same year, fascinated by Karalyk, Tolstoy decided to set up his new estate in these places. He buys from Colonel N.P. Tuchkov estates in the Buzuluk district of the Samara province, near the villages of Gavrilovka and Patrovka (now the Alekseevsky district), in the amount of 2,500 acres for 20,000 rubles. The summer of 1872, Lev Nikolaevich spent already in his estate with his whole family. A few sazhens from the house there was a felt wagon in which the family of the Bashkir Muhammadshah lived, who made koumiss for Lev Nikolayevich and his guests. In his new estate, Tolstoy created many of the chapters of the famous novel Anna Karenina, which he completed in 1877.

Pedagogical activity

Main article: Pedagogical doctrine of L.N. Tolstoy

Tolstoy returned to Russia shortly after the liberation of the peasants and became a mediator. In contrast to those who looked at the people as a younger brother who must be raised to their own level, Tolstoy thought, on the contrary, that the people are infinitely higher than the cultural classes and that the masters must borrow the heights of spirit from the peasants. He was actively engaged in organizing schools in his Yasnaya Polyana and in the entire Krapivensky district. The Yasnaya Polyana school belonged to the number of original pedagogical attempts: 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, he began to publish the pedagogical journal Yasnaya Polyana, where he himself was the main employee. In addition to theoretical articles, Tolstoy also wrote a number of stories, fables and adaptations. 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 leaves pedagogy. Marriage, the birth of his own children, plans related to writing the novel "War and Peace" postpone his pedagogical activities for ten years. Only in the early 1870s did he begin to create his own "Azbuka" and publish it in 1872, and then publish 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. Classes at the Yasnaya Polyana school are resumed for a short time. It is known that the Yasnaya Polyana school had a certain influence on other domestic teachers. For example, S. T. Shatsky initially took it as a model when creating his own school “Cheerful Life” in 1911.

Acting as a defender in court

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. Shabunin was shot. This case made a great impression on Tolstoy, because in this terrible case he saw a merciless force, which was a state based on violence. On this occasion, he wrote to his friend, publicist P.I. Biryukov: “This incident had much more influence on my whole life than all the seemingly more important events of life: loss or improvement of fortune, success or failure in literature, even the loss of loved ones.”

The heyday of creativity

During the first 12 years after his marriage, he creates War and Peace and Anna Karenina. At the turn of this second era of Tolstoy's literary life, there are Cossacks, conceived back in 1852 and completed in 1861-1862, the first of the works in which Tolstoy's talent 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.

Cover of the 1873 edition The release of "War and Peace" was preceded by 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 in both Russian and world 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 depicted the role of the Russian people in the decisive eras of national life, revealed a special state of people's consciousness in the heroic time of 1812, a time when people from various segments of the population were able to unite in resistance to foreign invasion, which created the basis for the epic. The author showed the national Russian traits in the “hidden warmth of patriotism”, in disgust for ostentatious heroics, in a calm faith in justice, in the modest dignity and courage of 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, all classes of society are represented, from emperors and kings to soldiers, all ages and all temperaments in the space of the whole reign of Alexander I.

« Anna Karenina» A more 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 in the unhappy end of the love of Anna Karenina and Vronsky, there is so much anxiety of spiritual life that in general this novel is essentially a transition to the third period of literary activities of Tolstoy, dramatic. It has less simplicity and clarity of spiritual movements, characteristic of the heroes of "War and Peace", but more heightened sensitivity, inner alertness and anxiety. And the characters of the main characters are more complex and sophisticated. The psychological state of the main character, the finest nuances of her feelings, love, disappointment, jealousy, despair and spiritual enlightenment are shown more subtly. The problematics of this work directly led Tolstoy to the ideological “turning point” of the late 1870s.

Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy (1828-1910) - Russian writer, publicist, thinker, educator, was a corresponding member of the Imperial Academy of Sciences. Considered one of the world's greatest writers. His works have been repeatedly screened at world film studios, and plays are staged on world stages.

Childhood

Leo Tolstoy was born on September 9, 1828 in Yasnaya Polyana, Krapivinsky district, Tula province. Here was the estate of his mother, which she inherited. The Tolstoy family had very branched noble and count roots. In the higher aristocratic world, there were relatives of the future writer everywhere. Whom only was not in his relatives - an adventurer and an admiral, a chancellor and an artist, a maid of honor and the first secular beauty, a general and a minister.

Leo's father, Nikolai Ilyich Tolstoy, was a man with a good education, took part in the foreign campaigns of the Russian military against Napoleon, fell into French captivity, from where he escaped, and retired as a lieutenant colonel. When his father died, solid debts were inherited, and Nikolai Ilyich was forced to get a bureaucratic job. To save his frustrated financial component of the inheritance, Nikolai Tolstoy was legally married to Princess Maria Nikolaevna, who was no longer young and came from the Volkonsky family. Despite a small calculation, the marriage turned out to be very happy. The couple had 5 children. The brothers of the future writer Kolya, Seryozha, Mitya and sister Masha. The lion was the fourth among all.

After the last daughter, Maria, was born, the mother began to have "delivery fever." She died in 1830. Leo was not even two years old then. What a wonderful storyteller she was. Perhaps this is where such an early love of Tolstoy for literature came from. Five children were left without a mother. Their upbringing had to deal with a distant relative, T.A. Ergolskaya.

In 1837, the Tolstoys left for Moscow, where they settled on Plyushchikha. The older brother, Nikolai, was going to enter the university. But very soon and quite unexpectedly, the father of the Tolstoy family died. His financial affairs were not completed, and the three smallest children had to return to Yasnaya Polyana to be raised by Yergolskaya and his paternal aunt, Countess Osten-Saken A. M. It was here that Leo Tolstoy spent his entire childhood.

The young years of the writer

After the death of Aunt Osten-Saken in 1843, the children were waiting for another move, this time to Kazan under the guardianship of their father's sister P. I. Yushkova. Leo Tolstoy received his primary education at home, his teachers were the good-natured German Reselman and the French tutor Saint-Thomas. In the autumn of 1844, following his brothers, Lev became a student at the Kazan Imperial University. At first he studied at the Faculty of Oriental Literature, later transferred to the Faculty of Law, where he studied for less than two years. He understood that this was absolutely not the occupation to which he would like to devote his life.

In the early spring of 1847, Leo dropped out of school and went to Yasnaya Polyana, which he inherited. At the same time, he began to keep his famous diary, adopting this idea from Benjamin Franklin, whose biography he was well acquainted with at the university. Just like the wisest American politician, Tolstoy set certain goals for himself and tried with all his might to fulfill them, analyzed his failures and victories, actions and thoughts. This diary went with the writer through his whole life.

In Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy tried to build new relationships with the peasants, and also engaged in:

  • learning English;
  • jurisprudence;
  • pedagogy;
  • music;
  • charity.

In the autumn of 1848, Tolstoy traveled to Moscow, where he planned to prepare for and pass his candidate's exams. Instead, a completely different secular life opened up for him, with its excitement and card games. In the winter of 1849, Leo moved from Moscow to St. Petersburg, where he continued to lead revelry and a wild lifestyle. In the spring of this year, he began taking exams for a candidate of rights, but, having changed his mind about going to the last exam, he returned to Yasnaya Polyana.

Here he continued to lead an almost metropolitan lifestyle - cards and hunting. Nevertheless, in 1849, Lev Nikolayevich opened a school for the children of peasants in Yasnaya Polyana, where he sometimes taught himself, but mostly the lessons were taught by the serf Foka Demidovich.

Military service

At the end of 1850, Tolstoy began work on his first work, the famous Childhood trilogy. At the same time, Lev received an offer from his older brother Nikolai, who served in the Caucasus, to join the military service. The elder brother was an authority for Leo. After the death of his parents, he became the writer's best and most faithful friend and mentor. At first, Lev Nikolaevich thought about the service, but a large gambling debt in Moscow accelerated the decision. Tolstoy left for the Caucasus and in the autumn of 1851 he entered the service of a cadet in an artillery brigade near Kizlyar.

Here he continued to work on the work "Childhood", which he finished writing in the summer of 1852 and decided to send it to the most popular literary magazine of that time, Sovremennik. He signed with the initials "L. N. T.” and attached a small letter along with the manuscript:

“I look forward to your verdict. He will either encourage me to write more or make me burn everything.”

At that time, N. A. Nekrasov was the editor of Sovremennik, and he immediately recognized the literary value of the Childhood manuscript. The work was published and was a huge success.

The military life of Lev Nikolaevich was too eventful:

  • more than once he was in danger in skirmishes with the mountaineers commanded by Shamil;
  • when the Crimean War began, he transferred to the Danube army and took part in the battle of Oltenitsa;
  • participated in the siege of Silistria;
  • in the battle of Chernaya he commanded a battery;
  • during the assault on Malakhov Kurgan came under bombardment;
  • held the defense of Sevastopol.

For military service, Lev Nikolaevich received the following awards:

  • Order of St. Anne 4th degree "For Bravery";
  • medal "In memory of the war of 1853-1856";
  • Medal "For the Defense of Sevastopol 1854-1855"

The brave officer Leo Tolstoy had every chance of a military career. But he was only interested in writing. During the service, he did not stop writing and sending his stories to Sovremennik. The Sevastopol Tales, published in 1856, finally approved him as a new literary trend in Russia, and Tolstoy left military service forever.

Literary activity

He returned to St. Petersburg, where he made close acquaintances with N. A. Nekrasov, I. S. Turgenev, I. S. Goncharov. During his stay in St. Petersburg, he released several of his new works:

  • "Blizzard",
  • "Youth",
  • Sevastopol in August
  • "Two Hussars".

But very soon the secular life got sick of him, and Tolstoy decided to travel around Europe. He visited Germany, Switzerland, England, France, Italy. All the advantages and disadvantages he saw, the emotions he received, he described in his works.

Returning from abroad in 1862, Lev Nikolaevich married Sofya Andreevna Bers. The brightest period began in his life, his wife became his absolute assistant in all matters, and Tolstoy could calmly do his favorite thing - composing works that later became world masterpieces.

Years of work on the work Title of the work
1854 "Boyhood"
1856 "Morning of the landowner"
1858 "Albert"
1859 "Family happiness"
1860-1861 "Decembrists"
1861-1862 "Idyll"
1863-1869 "War and Peace"
1873-1877 "Anna Karenina"
1884-1903 "Diary of a Madman"
1887-1889 "Kreutzer Sonata"
1889-1899 "Sunday"
1896-1904 "Hadji Murad"

Family, death and memory

In marriage with his wife and love, Lev Nikolayevich lived for almost 50 years, they had 13 children, five of whom died while still young. There are a lot of descendants of Lev Nikolaevich all over the world. Once every two years they gather in Yasnaya Polyana.

In life, Tolstoy always adhered to his certain principles. He wanted to be as close to the people as possible. He was very fond of ordinary people.

In 1910, Lev Nikolaevich left Yasnaya Polyana, setting off on a journey that would correspond to his life views. Only his doctor went with him. There were no specific goals. He went to Optina Hermitage, then to the Shamorda Monastery, then he went to his niece in Novocherkassk. But the writer became ill, after suffering a cold, pneumonia began.

In the Lipetsk region, at the Astapovo station, Tolstoy was removed from the train, taken to the hospital, six doctors tried to save his life, but Lev Nikolayevich quietly answered their proposals: "God will arrange everything." After a whole week of heavy and painful shortness of breath, the writer died at the house of the head of the station on November 20, 1910 at the age of 82.

The estate in Yasnaya Polyana, together with the natural beauty that surrounds it, is a museum-reserve. Three more museums of the writer are located in the village of Nikolskoye-Vyazemskoye, in Moscow and at the Astapovo station. Moscow also has the State Museum of Leo Tolstoy.

To be one of the best writers in world history is an honorable right, and Leo Tolstoy deserved it, leaving behind a huge creative legacy. Stories, novellas, novels, which are presented in a whole series of volumes, were appreciated not only by the writer's contemporaries, but also by his descendants. What is the secret of this brilliant author, who was able to fit in his life and ""?

In contact with

Writer's childhood

Where was the future novelist born? Pen Master came into being in September 9, 1828 in the estate of his mother Yasnaya Polyana, located in Tula province. The family of Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy was large. father had county title and mother was born Princess Volkonskaya. When he was two years old, his mother died, and after another 7 years, his father.

Leo was the fourth child in a noble family, so he was not deprived of the attention of relatives. The literary genius never thought of his losses with heartache. On the contrary, only warm memories of his childhood were preserved, because his mother and father were very affectionate with him. In the work of the same name, the author idealizes his childhood and writes that it was the most wonderful time of his life.

The little count received education at home, where he was invited French and German teachers. After leaving school, Leo was fluent in three languages, and also had extensive knowledge in various fields. In addition, the young man was fond of musical creativity, he could play the works of his favorite composers for a long time: Schumann, Bach, Chopin and Mozart.

Young years

In 1843 a young man becomes student of the Imperial Kazan University, chooses the Faculty of Oriental Languages, however, later changes his specialty due to poor academic performance and begins to practice law. Unable to complete the course. The young count returns to his estate in order to become real farmer.

But here, too, failure awaits him: frequent trips completely distract the owner from the important affairs of the estate. Keeping your diary- the only occupation that was done with amazing scrupulousness: a habit that lasted a lifetime and became the foundation of most future works.

Important! The unfortunate student did not become inactive for a long time. Having allowed himself to be persuaded by his brother, he went to serve as a cadet to the south, after which, after spending some time in the Caucasian mountains, he received a transfer to Sevastopol. There, from November 1854 to August 1855, the young count participated in.

Early work

The rich experience gained on the battlefields, as well as in the era of the Junkers, prompted the future writer to create the first literary works. Even in the years of service as a cadet, having a lot of free time, the count begins to work on his first autobiographical story. "Childhood".

Natural observation, a special flair were clearly reflected in the style: the author wrote about what was close, understandable not only to him alone. Life and creativity merge together.

In the story "Childhood" every boy or young man would recognize himself. The story was originally a short story and was published in a magazine. "Contemporary" in 1852. It is noteworthy that already the first story was splendidly received by critics, and the young novelist was compared with Turgenev, Ostrovsky and Goncharov, which was already a real recognition. All these masters of the word were already quite famous and loved by the people.

What works did Leo Tolstoy write at that time?

The young count, feeling that he has finally found his calling, continues to work. Brilliant stories come out of the pen one after another, stories that instantly become popular due to their originality and amazing realistic approach to reality: "Cossacks" (1852), "Boyhood" (1854), "Sevastopol Tales" (1854 - 1855), "Youth" (1857).

AT literary world a new writer is rushing in Lev Tolstoy, which strikes the reader's imagination with detailed details, does not hide the truth and applies a new writing technique: the second collection "Sevastopol stories" written from the point of view of the soldiers to bring the story even closer to the reader. The young author is not afraid to openly, frankly write about the horrors and contradictions of war. The characters are not heroes from paintings and canvases of artists, but ordinary people who are able to perform real feats in order to save the lives of others.

Belong to something literary movement or to be a supporter of a particular philosophical school, Lev Nikolaevich refused, declaring himself anarchist. Later, the master of the word in the course of a religious search will take the right path, but for now, the whole world lay before the young, successful genius, and he did not want to be one of many.

Family status

In Russia, where he lived and was born, Tolstoy returns after a wild trip to Paris without a penny in his pocket. Here took place marriage to Sofya Andreevna Bers, daughter of a doctor. This woman was main companion in life Tolstoy, became his support to the very end.

Sophia expressed her readiness to be a secretary, wife, mother of his children, girlfriend and even a cleaner, although the estate, for which servants were a common thing, was always kept in exemplary order.

The count's title constantly obliged households to observe a certain status. Over time, the husband and wife diverged in religious views: Sophia did not understand and did not accept the attempts of a loved one to create their own philosophical dogma and follow it.

Attention! Only the eldest daughter of the writer Alexandra supported her father's undertakings: in 1910 they made a pilgrimage trip together. Other children adored dad as a great storyteller, although a rather strict parent.

According to the recollections of descendants, the father could scold the little dirty trick, but after a moment he would put him on his knees, regret, writing an amusing story on the go. In the literary arsenal of the famous realist there are many children's works recommended for study at preschool and primary school age - these are "Book for reading" and "ABC". The first work contains stories by L.N. Tolstoy for the 4th grade of the school, which was organized in the Yasnaya Polyana estate.

How many children did Leo and Sophia have? A total of 13 children were born, three of whom died in infancy.

Maturity and creative flourishing of the writer

From the age of thirty-two, Tolstoy began work on his main work - an epic novel. The first part was published in 1865 in the Russky Vestnik magazine, and in 1869 the final edition of the epic saw the light of day. Most of the 1860s were devoted to this monumental work, which the count repeatedly rewrote, corrected, supplemented, and at the end of his life got so tired of it that he called War and Peace "verbose rubbish." The novel was written in Yasnaya Polyana.

The work, which is four volumes long, turned out to be truly unique. What are its advantages? This is first of all:

  • historical truth;
  • the action in the novel of both realistic and fictional characters, the number of which exceeded a thousand according to philologists;
  • interspersing the plot of three historical essays on the laws of history into the outline; accuracy in the description of life and everyday life.

This is the basis of the novel - the path of a person, his position and the meaning of life is made up of these ordinary actions.

After the success of the military-historical epic, the author begins to work on the novel "Anna Karenina" based on much of his autobiography. In particular, the relationship between Kitty and Levina are partial memories of the life of the author himself with his wife Sophia, a kind of brief biography of the writer, as well as a reflection of the canvas of real events of the Russian-Turkish war.

The novel was published in 1875 - 1877, and almost immediately became the most discussed literary event of that time. The story of Anna, written with amazing warmth, attention to female psychology, made a splash. Before him, only Ostrovsky in his poems addressed the female soul and revealed the rich inner world of the beautiful half of humanity. Naturally, high fees for the work were not long in coming, because every educated person read Tolstoy's Karenina. After the release of this rather secular novel, the author was not at all happy, but was in constant mental torment.

Change of outlook and later literary successes

Many years of life were devoted search for the meaning of life, which led the writer to the Orthodox faith, however, this step only confuses the count. Lev Nikolaevich sees corruption in the church diaspora, complete subordination to personal convictions, which does not correspond to the dogma that his soul longed for.

Attention! Leo Tolstoy becomes an apostate and even publishes the incriminating magazine Posrednik (1883), because of which he is excommunicated and accused of "heresy".

However, Leo does not stop there and tries to follow the path of purification, taking rather bold steps. For example, gives all his possessions to the poor, which Sofya Andreevna categorically opposed. The husband reluctantly transferred all the property to her and gave the copyright to the works, but still did not give up the search for his destiny.

This period of creativity is characterized great religious enthusiasm Treatises and moral stories are being created. What works with religious overtones did the author write? Among the most successful works between 1880 and 1990 were:

  • the story "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" (1886), describing a man near death, who is trying to understand and comprehend his "empty" life;
  • the story "Father Sergius" (1898), aimed at criticizing his own religious quest;
  • the novel "Resurrection", which tells about the moral pain of Katyusha Maslova and the ways of her moral purification.

Completion of life

Having written many works in his life, the count appeared before his contemporaries and descendants as a strong religious leader and spiritual mentor, such as Mahatma Gandhi, with whom he corresponded. The life and work of the writer is permeated by the idea that it is necessary hourly resist evil with all the strength of your soul while demonstrating humility and saving thousands of lives. The master of the word has become a real teacher among the lost souls. Entire pilgrimage trips were organized to the Yasnaya Polyana estate, the students of the great Tolstoy came to “know themselves”, listening to their ideological guru for hours on end, which the writer became in his declining years.

The author-mentor accepted everyone who came with problems, questions and aspirations of the soul, he was ready to distribute his savings and shelter wanderers for any period. Unfortunately, this increased the degree of tension in relations with his wife Sophia and, in the end, resulted in the unwillingness of the great realist to live in his house. Together with his daughter, Lev Nikolaevich went on a pilgrimage to Russia, wanting to travel incognito, but often this was to no avail - they were recognized everywhere.

Where did Lev Nikolaevich die? November 1910 was fatal for the writer: already being ill, he stayed in the house of the head of the railway station, where he died on November 20. Lev Nikolaevich was a real idol. During the funeral of this truly national writer, according to the memoirs of contemporaries, people cried bitterly and followed the coffin in a crowd of thousands. There were so many people, as if they were burying a king.

Society to the depths of the human subconscious, unconscious and refined motives of character, as well as to the great role of everyday life, which determines the whole essence of the individual.

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 the title of count for his service to Tsar Peter. Mother was from the ancient noble family of the Volkonskys. Belonging to a privileged stratum of society influenced the behavior and thoughts of the writer throughout his life. A brief biography of Tolstoy Leo Nikolayevich 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 dog 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 the further creative path of the 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 bathing 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 the classical 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.

The classic of Russian literature, Leo Tolstoy, was born on September 9, 1828, into the noble family of Nikolai Tolstoy and his wife Maria Nikolaevna. The father and mother of the future writer were nobles and belonged to revered families, so the family lived comfortably in their own estate, Yasnaya Polyana, located in the Tula region.

Leo Tolstoy spent his childhood in the family estate. In these places, for the first time, he saw the course of life of the working people, heard the abundance of old legends, parables, fairy tales, and here his first attraction to literature arose. Yasnaya Polyana is a place to which the writer returned at all stages of his life, drawing wisdom, beauty, and inspiration.

Despite his noble origin, Tolstoy had to learn the bitterness of orphanhood since childhood, because the mother of the future writer died when the boy was only two years old. The father passed away not much later, when Leo was seven years old. First, the grandmother took custody of the children, and after her death - aunt Palageya Yushkova, who took the four children of the Tolstoy family with her to Kazan.

growing up

Six years of living in Kazan became the informal years of the writer's growing up, because at this time his character and worldview are formed. In 1844, Leo Tolstoy entered Kazan University, first at the eastern department, then, not finding himself in the study of Arabic and Turkish, at the Faculty of Law.

The writer did not show significant interest in studying law, but he understood the need for a diploma. After passing the exams externally, in 1847 Lev Nikolayevich received the long-awaited document and returned to Yasnaya Polyana, and then to Moscow, where he began to engage in literary work.

Military service

Not having time to finish the two conceived stories, in the spring of 1851 Tolstoy went to the Caucasus with his brother Nikolai and began military service. The young writer takes part in the military operations of the Russian army, acts among the defenders of the Crimean peninsula, liberates his native land from Turkish and Anglo-French troops. Years of service gave Leo Tolstoy invaluable experience, knowledge of the life of ordinary soldiers and citizens, their characters, heroism, aspirations.

The years of service are vividly reflected in Tolstoy's stories "The Cossacks", "Hadji Murad", as well as in the stories "Degraded", "Cutting the Forest", "Raid".

Literary and social activities

Returning to St. Petersburg in 1855, Leo Tolstoy was already well-known in literary circles. Remembering the respectful attitude towards serfs in his father's house, the writer strongly supports the abolition of serfdom, clarifying this issue in the stories "Polikushka", "Morning of the landowner", etc.

In an effort to see the world, in 1857 Lev Nikolayevich went on a trip abroad, visiting the countries of Western Europe. Getting acquainted with the cultural traditions of the peoples, the master of the word fixes the information in his memory in order to display the most important moments in his work later.

Actively engaged in social activities, Tolstoy opens a school in Yasnaya Polyana. The writer strongly criticizes corporal punishment, which was widely practiced at that time in educational institutions in Europe and Russia. In order to improve the educational system, Lev Nikolaevich publishes a pedagogical magazine called Yasnaya Polyana, and in the early 70s he compiled several textbooks for younger students, including Arithmetic, ABC, Books for Reading. These developments were effectively used in the education of several more generations of children.

Personal life and creativity

In 1862, the writer connected his fate with the daughter of the doctor Andrei Bers, Sophia. The young family settled in Yasnaya Polyana, where Sofya Andreevna diligently tried to provide an atmosphere for her husband's literary work. At this time, Leo Tolstoy is actively working on the creation of the epic "War and Peace", and also, reflecting life in Russia after the reform, writes the novel "Anna Karenina".

In the 1980s, Tolstoy moved with his family to Moscow, seeking to educate his growing children. Observing the hungry life of ordinary people, Lev Nikolayevich contributes to the opening of about 200 free tables for those in need. Also at this time, the writer publishes a number of relevant articles about the famine, vividly condemning the policies of the rulers.

The period of literature of the 80-90s includes: the story "The Death of Ivan Ilyich", the drama "The Power of Darkness", the comedy "The Fruits of Enlightenment", the novel "Sunday". For a bright attitude against religion and autocracy, Leo Tolstoy is excommunicated from the church.

last years of life

In 1901-1902 the writer was seriously ill. For the purpose of a speedy recovery, the doctor strongly recommends a trip to the Crimea, where Leo Tolstoy spends six months. The prose writer's last trip to Moscow took place in 1909.

Beginning in 1881, the writer seeks to leave Yasnaya Polyana and retire, but remains, not wanting to hurt his wife and children. On October 28, 1910, Leo Tolstoy still decides to take a conscious step and live the rest of the years in a simple hut, refusing all honors.

An unexpected illness on the road becomes an obstacle to the writer's plans and he spends his last seven days of his life in the house of the head of the station. The day of death of an outstanding literary and public figure was November 20, 1910.

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