Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- 24 The Tsar Visits London, 1874
- 25 Dostoevsky in Bad Ems
- 26 Sophia Perovskaya, Radicalism and the Russian People
- 27 A Mystic in the Desert
- 28 The Tsar at the Front
- 29 The Death of Nekrasov
- 30 A Visit to a Monastery
- 31 Tolstoy Apologizes
- 32 “Prophet, Prophet”: Dostoevsky's Pushkin Speech
- 33 A Death and a Marriage
- 34 Two Conspirators
- 35 Bombs and Blood
- 36 The Trial
- 37 Two Appeals
- 38 A Spectacle on Semenovsky Square
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
31 - Tolstoy Apologizes
from PART THREE - THREE AND EPILOGUE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- 24 The Tsar Visits London, 1874
- 25 Dostoevsky in Bad Ems
- 26 Sophia Perovskaya, Radicalism and the Russian People
- 27 A Mystic in the Desert
- 28 The Tsar at the Front
- 29 The Death of Nekrasov
- 30 A Visit to a Monastery
- 31 Tolstoy Apologizes
- 32 “Prophet, Prophet”: Dostoevsky's Pushkin Speech
- 33 A Death and a Marriage
- 34 Two Conspirators
- 35 Bombs and Blood
- 36 The Trial
- 37 Two Appeals
- 38 A Spectacle on Semenovsky Square
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
Summary
In August 1878, several months after Dostoevsky and Soloviev returned from the Optina Monastery, Tolstoy and Turgenev rode together in Tolstoy's carriage over a dirt road heading for his estate at Yasnaya Polyana. It was the first time the two had been together since they had quarreled seventeen years earlier. The initiative for reconciliation came from Tolstoy. That April he had written to Turgenev: “Let us shake hands and, please, forgive me thoroughly for all that I was guilty of towards you … If you can forgive me, I offer you all the friendship of which I am capable.At our age, there is only one good – loving relations with people.”
Tolstoy had been prompted to write the letter by the effects of a prolonged spiritual crisis which he was then undergoing and which he later described in detail in his My Confession. At the very end of the previous decade, while in a strange town one night, he had experienced a horrifying fear of death. There seemed to be no specific cause for this night of anxiety and fear, spent in a strange inn, and after returning to Yasnaya Polyana he seemed to regain his inner balance. But gradually by the middle of the seventies the fear of death began to haunt him more and more, and it gradually transformed his life. Three months after his forty-seventh birthday he wrote to a friend that he felt old age had begun for him.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Russia in the Age of Alexander II, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky , pp. 205 - 213Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2002