Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- 14 A Fateful Year, 1866
- 15 Nekrasov and Muraviev the Hangman
- 16 The Perovskys and Herzen in Geneva
- 17 Dostoevsky and Anna Snitkina
- 18 Professor Soloviev and his Family
- 19 Tolstoy: a Marriage and a Masterpiece
- 20 A Shot in Paris
- 21 Turgenev and Dostoevsky in Baden-Baden
- 22 The Dostoevskys in Geneva
- 23 Nechaev, Bakunin and the Last Days of Herzen
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
19 - Tolstoy: a Marriage and a Masterpiece
from PART TWO
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- 14 A Fateful Year, 1866
- 15 Nekrasov and Muraviev the Hangman
- 16 The Perovskys and Herzen in Geneva
- 17 Dostoevsky and Anna Snitkina
- 18 Professor Soloviev and his Family
- 19 Tolstoy: a Marriage and a Masterpiece
- 20 A Shot in Paris
- 21 Turgenev and Dostoevsky in Baden-Baden
- 22 The Dostoevskys in Geneva
- 23 Nechaev, Bakunin and the Last Days of Herzen
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
Summary
While Professor Soloviev was writing about Peter the Great, Leo Tolstoy was at his estate working on a different type of historical work, War and Peace.
In the years since the emancipation of the serfs, Tolstoy had married and by the summer of 1866 had three children, Sergei, Tatyana and Ilya. His wife was Sonia Bers, the daughter of a government physician who worked in the Kremlin. Sonia's mother, Lyubov, was only a few years older than Tolstoy himself and as a young boy he apparently had once been infatuated with her. Sonia's father had met Lyubov in the early 1840s when he had interrupted a trip to Turgenev's in order to attend to her when she fell ill. Turgenev's mother had once been his mistress, and they apparently even had an illegitimate child.
In the early and mid-1860s the large Bers family, like the Solovievs, spent their summers in Pokrovskoe, and many a morning in the summer of 1862, Leo Tolstoy walked the eight miles from his rented apartment in Moscow to the Bers' dacha. One of his rivals for the affections of Sonia was a Moscow history professor, Nil Popov, who years later would marry the oldest of the Soloviev girls, Vera.
The young Sonia had rosy cheeks, dark hair and eyes, and was inclined to be serious and introspective. Tolstoy was sixteen years older than this teenager, still had his dark beard, and feared that he was too old and ugly.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Russia in the Age of Alexander II, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky , pp. 113 - 120Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2002