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In Search of Happiness

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In the years before the Russian Revolution exploded in 1917,

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political opposition was stamped on.

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Outspoken radicals were either shot, imprisoned or exiled.

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But there was one voice in Russia, a furious critic of the evil

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and injustice of the Tsarist state who was never silenced.

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Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy.

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Why did Tolstoy, a hugely successful novelist,

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assume this provocative role?

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Why did he become such a thorn in the side of Imperial Russia?

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Perhaps there's a clue in his childhood...

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"It was my brother Nicolenka who announced to us that he

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"possessed a secret by means of which when it was disclosed,

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"all men would become happy. There'd be no diseases, no troubles,

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"no-one would be angry with anyone, all would love each other."

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"This secret, as he told us, was written by him on a green stick

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"which he buried by the road on the edge of a certain ravine."

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This utopian story captivated Tolstoy as a child

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and haunted him for the rest of his life.

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By the time he was 40, Tolstoy had written one of the greatest novels of all time.

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But during his next 40 years, it wasn't literature that

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preoccupied him, but a relentless, ruthless, all-consuming desire

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to discover what was written on the little green stick.

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By the beginning of the 1870s, thanks to War And Peace,

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Tolstoy was established as Russia's greatest living writer.

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He was fast becoming a wealthy man. Life was good.

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He was in love with his wife. He already had four children and there was another on the way.

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Yet strangely, he was ill at ease with himself,

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with who he was and the way he lived.

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This land-owning aristocrat was beginning to ask fundamental

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questions about the stark inequality of Russian society, the poverty of

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the vast peasant underclass, and the iron rule of the Imperial regime.

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In 1871, he decided to make the long journey across Russia

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and down the great Volga River to the eastern region of Samara

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and the empty wilderness of the Russian Steppe beyond.

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Why did Tolstoy come here?

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TRANSLATION: Tolstoy loved the Steppe.

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This enormous expanse, and the people who had not been spoilt by serfdom.

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There were no serfs here.

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All the peasants were tenants in their own right.

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Tolstoy grew up in a rural village.

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He knew peasants and he sympathised with them.

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He was always concerned for them.

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Tolstoy fell in love with the land and with the people of Samara,

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and despite Sofia's reservations, he decided to buy a large plot,

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and in the summer of 1873,

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he insisted on bringing the whole of his family

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with an entourage of servants here for their annual summer holiday.

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This bedstead memorial marks the place

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where their simple farmhouse stood.

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This place became his retreat, his inspiration,

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and you can see just why he was so captivated by it.

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This country, he said, is beautiful.

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It is just emerging from its virginity.

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Just below the site of the farm, Victor, our guide,

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arranged a typical Bashkiri feast of lamb and fermented horse milk.

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This is the famous Kumis.

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This is the mare's milk that was drunk by Tolstoy.

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In fact, he came here in pursuit of this particular beverage, actually.

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-Cheers.

-Cheers.

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I really have. Look, I've really drunk it.

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This is not pretending.

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This is like something in the Arab world, they call it loveat.

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That's yoghurt which is fermented yoghurt.

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This is really like milk, but it is fermented.

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It tastes very fizzy and rather sour.

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I don't know if it's to everyone's tastes,

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but I've got this in common with Tolstoy. I like this.

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The first summer Tolstoy brought the family here

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was especially hot and dry.

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In fact, the region was in the grip of a terrible drought and famine.

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TRANSLATION: Lev Tolstoy wrote a letter from his farm here

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to his publishers about the famine in Samara which was

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published in the main Moscow newspaper.

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Because of that letter, all of Russia

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and the entire world was alerted to the famine in the Samara region.

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He was single-handedly responsible for famine relief.

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The state realised it should do something, but it was so inefficient,

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and apart from anything else it was so inefficient, the Tsarist regime.

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Tolstoy, who was a good landowner, good army officer,

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he went to Samara.

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He actually made sure that food got to the actual people who needed it.

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He raised money. He wrote letters to the English papers

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and alerted the world to the famine in Russia.

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This simple wooden cross on this remote highway, is a modest

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memorial to the thousands who died in the terrible

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famines of the 1870s and '80s.

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For Tolstoy, the Steppe of Samara was both a refuge and a revelation.

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An escape from his formal life, his life as a writer

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and as a landowner, into a world in which the authority of church,

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government and social hierarchy were just words in the wind.

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At first glance, it might seem hard to see the link between the moral,

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political and religious tumult bubbling in Tolstoy's mind

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and the romantic novel that he was beginning to compose that summer in Samara.

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As much as anything he wrote, Tolstoy's masterpiece,

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Anna Karenina, is a profoundly autobiographical work,

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and even the introspective, tragic heroine

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shares a great deal with her creator.

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At the beginning of Anna Karenina, Anna, the wife of a St Petersburg

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civil servant, travels to Moscow to visit her brother and his family.

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Unexpectedly, she encounters a young cavalry officer,

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called Vronski, first at the train station and then at a ball.

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On the way home on the train, she tries to read a novel, a romantic English novel,

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to distract herself from the growing sense of guilt that in some way

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she has behaved improperly with this man.

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Anna read attentively, but there was no pleasure in reading.

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No pleasure in entering into other people's lives and adventures.

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She was too eager to live herself.

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Tolstoy was like Anna.

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He was reluctant to commit to fantasy.

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He was too involved with real life.

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As he began to write this story, the characters

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and events that emerged began to bear a striking resemblance

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to the people, events and conflicts in his own life.

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If War And Peace was a book about who Tolstoy was,

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perhaps Anna Karenina was a book about who Tolstoy had become.

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I've always believed there is a bigger difference between

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War And Peace and Anna Karenina than has generally been acknowledged.

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Think of the beginning of Anna Karenina, the epigraph...

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"Vengeance is mine, said the Lord, I will repay."

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Vengeance is there at the beginning. Suicide is there at the end.

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And we know in biographical terms, that Tolstoy got the idea

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from the sad fate of a poor woman who threw herself under a train

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not too far from Yasnaya Polyana, and he was taken in as the local JP,

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and he had to view the mangled corpse there in the mortuary

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and be there while they carried out the post-mortem,

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and it stuck in his mind.

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There is a darker tone about Anna Karenina. There is more violence.

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There is more pessimism.

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It's not the sunny uplands that happened at the end of War And Peace.

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Anna Karenina intertwines the unfolding tragedy of Anna

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and her lover Vronski with a second troubled romance,

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between Kitty Scherbatsky and the landowner called Dimitri Levin.

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Levin is an awkward, tormented country-loving nobleman

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who agonises over his duty to his peasants

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and insists on labouring in the fields

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alongside them, which is exactly what Tolstoy had begun to do.

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How far would you say Levin is a sort of surrogate,

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how far does Levin embody the ideas that Tolstoy had?

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There's a pretty strong hint there in the name itself... Levin, Lev Tolstoy.

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We also know that there are many scenes in Anna Karenina

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which are lifted straight out of his life,

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like all the hay-making scenes and this kind of thing.

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There is no doubt at all that Dimitri Levin is Tolstoy,

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and here's another example, by the way, of how the autobiographical

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element shines through.

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It's the moment when Kitty and Levin have their first baby,

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and it's given to the father, to Levin,

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and do you know what his reaction is?

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His attitude says, "I looked at this writhing little infant

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"and I thought, how vulnerable,

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"oh, the awful things that are going to happen to you in your life."

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How could anyone take such a pessimistic attitude?

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The book is autobiographical,

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not only in the way it describes Tolstoy.

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Kitty's sister, Dolly, is an impressively honest

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portrait of Sofia at the time of writing.

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Sofia's diaries from the period are largely silent, and not surprisingly.

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She'd already given birth to eight babies on this very sofa,

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and three of these children died while Anna Karenina was being written.

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For all his failings as a husband and a father,

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Tolstoy in Anna Karenina

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manages with extraordinary sensitivity to give Sofia a voice.

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"Yes, it comes to this, she thought,

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"looking back at her 15 years of married life.

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"Nothing but pregnancy, sickness, mind dulled

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"and indifferent to everything, and most of all, the disfigurement.

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"The birth, the agony, the hideous agonies, that last moment,

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"then nursing the baby, the sleepless nights, the fearful pains.

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"Dolly shuddered at the mere recollection of the pain she had endured from sore nipples,

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"which she'd suffered with almost every baby.

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"Then the childrens' illnesses and the everlasting anxiety.

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"And on top of it all, the death of these children

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"and the cruel memory that never ceased to tear

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"her mother's heart at the death of her last born who died of croup.

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"She recalled the funeral

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"and the general indifference around the little pink coffin

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"and her own heart-rending,

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"lonely anguish as she gazed at the pale little

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"forehead, part fringed with curls,

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"and the half-open wondering little mouth.

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"The last thing she'd seen as the pink lid with the embroidered cross was closed over him."

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After an early flurry of writing, Tolstoy found the completion

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of Anna Karenina increasingly onerous, and developed a love/hate

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relationship with a story that had become too close for comfort.

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He wrote to a friend...

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"How I long to clear this sordid tale away from my desk."

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Where Anna Karenina's story ends is now

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a commuter suburb about 40 minutes out of Moscow.

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A typically anonymous Soviet-style town -

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functional, concrete and unprepossessing.

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It's changed its name since Anna Karenina was written,

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but it had an equally dour reputation in Tolstoy's day

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as a remote stopping-off point on what was called the road of tears.

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Natalia Sopfikova runs a small museum in the town.

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TRANSLATION: Tolstoy on several, maybe eight, occasions passed through on the railway.

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when he travelled to the Samara Steppe for his Kumis treatment.

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Of course, he knew this place. The road through the town was famous in Russia as the road

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of woe and tears, because this was the route along which prisoners

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were taken to Siberia.

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The prisoners were brought to this station, where they could say

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farewell to their relatives who saw them off on their journey.

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It was the last station

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to which the relatives were allowed to travel.

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I remember that when I studied it at school,

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I read this novel from cover to cover without stopping.

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War And Peace is of course an epic...a more voluminous work.

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Anna Karenina was closer to us

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because it was more true to life, let's put it that way.

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And of course, as a woman, I can understand Anna, who lived with a husband

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who was much older than she, and for that matter, a husband she did not love.

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It was a marriage of convenience.

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But as a mother, I do not understand Anna,

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because she gave up her son for the sake of the man she loved.

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It's a very difficult situation.

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"She tried to fling herself below the wheels of the first

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"carriage as it reached her, but the red bag which she tried

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"to drop out of her hand delayed her and she was too late.

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"She missed the moment.

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"She had to wait for the next carriage.

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"A feeling such as she had known when about to take the first

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"plunge in bathing came upon her, and she crossed herself.

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"That familiar gesture brought back into her soul

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"a whole series of girlish and childish memories.

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"Suddenly, the darkness that had covered everything for her was torn apart.

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"A life rose up before her for an instant,

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"with all its bright past joys. But she did not take her eyes from the wheels of the second

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"carriage, and exactly at the moment where the space between

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"the wheels came opposite her, she dropped the red bag, and drawing

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"her head back into her shoulders, fell on her hands under the carriage,

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"and likely, as though she would rise up again at once, dropped to her knees.

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"At the same instant, she was terror stricken at what she was doing.

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"'Where am I? What am I doing? What for?

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"She tried to get up to drop backwards, but something huge

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"and merciless struck her on the head and rolled her on her back.

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"'Lord, forgive me all,' she said, feeling it impossible to struggle."

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Very often when writers are finishing a book,

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they are visited by depressions and fears.

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Virginia Wolf famously killed herself having finished a book.

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She just couldn't stand the idea of finishing,

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and I think that's one of the reasons that Tolstoy's holding off.

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He knows that when he finishes this book, something is going

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to happen in his life, so he can't really finish it.

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On the one hand, he's becoming utterly disillusioned with the whole art of fiction.

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On the other hand, he's asking himself,

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he's now deep into a middle-age crisis,

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"What am I going to do with myself when this book's finished?"

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By the time Tolstoy completed Anna Karenina, he was 50

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and increasingly preoccupied with the meaning of his own existence.

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That summer, he and his friend

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and editor Nikolai Strakhov made a pilgrimage here to

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the monastery of Optina Pustin, about 140 miles from Yasnaya Polyana.

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Optina Pustin today is a compelling place to visit.

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In the 19th century, it was one of the most important and influential

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Russian monasteries, but then it was closed and vandalised by

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the communists who deported or executed the entire religious community.

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By the middle of the 20th century, Optina Pustin is a derelict ruin.

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However, today, the church - and, indeed, the whole monastery -

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is being rebuilt by a new generation of fiercely devout monks

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in a striking demonstration of modern Russia's

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Orthodox Christian revival.

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When Tolstoy first came here to Optina back in the summer of 1877,

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there was a similar atmosphere of religious enthusiasm under way.

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At the time of his first visit, he was incredibly devout,

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and coming to the end of Anna Karenina,

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he was in this state of profound depression, and he wanted answers.

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He desperately wanted to find an answer to the meaning of life.

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He didn't like the idea that it was meaningless.

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He wanted there to be meaning, particularly to his own life,

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and so he was someone who at that point was

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observing all the fasts and going regularly to church.

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So I think his quest was very sincere on that first occasion.

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Like many thousands of Russians from all over the country,

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Tolstoy came to Optina to meet an extraordinary starex,

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or religious elder, by the name of Amvrosi.

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Pilgrims came specially to consult Amvrosi,

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who was treated as a cross between a clairvoyant and a saint.

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The monastery nominated Father Selaphil to talk to me

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about the still-delicate subject of Lev Tolstoy.

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TRANSLATION: Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy was an incredibly complex,

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tragic man. Many people found him hard to understand.

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This was a man who was unsettled throughout his life,

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forever in torment.

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His childhood and his youth had passed in a moral and sinful decline.

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His soul was in pain. He was seeking answers to many questions.

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He was looking for a more spiritual life.

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So the monks saw him as a sick person, a weary,

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languishing person, with a scorched heart.

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A man you could say who has clotted blood on his lips.

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It's not clear exactly what occurred in the conversation

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between Tolstoy and Amvrosi,

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but certainly this visit to Optina monastery marks the beginning

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of a profound religious journey and the unflinching soul-searching

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that was to turn Tolstoy's - and his family's - life upside down.

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"26th August, 1882.

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"It was 20 years ago when I was young and happy that I started

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"writing the story of my love for Leovoytchka in these diaries.

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"There is virtually nothing but love in them, in fact.

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"20 years later, here I am, sitting up all night on my own, reading

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"and mourning its loss. For the first time in my life,

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"he has run off to sleep alone in the study.

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"We were quarrelling about such silly things.

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"I accused him of taking no interest in the children

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"and not helping me look after Illya, who is sick.

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"Today, he shouted at the top of his voice that his dearest wish

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"was to leave his family.

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"I shall carry the memory of that heartfelt,

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"heart-rending cry to my grave.

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"I pray for death, for without his love, I cannot survive.

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"I knew this the moment his love for me died."

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Was there a moment in their relationship

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when it began to go bad?

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To understand their relationship, you have to understand

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the change in Tolstoy's mood.

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It was not she or the family that changed. It was Tolstoy who changed.

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Tolstoy walked away from their family.

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The family, instead of being an ideal, became an obstacle.

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An obstacle for a man who viewed himself

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not as a writer anymore.

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TRANSLATION: Tolstoy wrote in the last years of his life

0:23:280:23:32

that it was shameful to write in an artistic manner.

0:23:320:23:35

He was ashamed of his literary work.

0:23:350:23:37

When he was asked about Anna Karenina, he pretended not to remember

0:23:370:23:41

what work he was being asked about.

0:23:410:23:44

"What is that? Is it some tale about a lady who loved an officer?"

0:23:440:23:49

He abandoned his literary past. He abandoned his ideal as a family man.

0:23:530:23:59

That's how depression and spiritual conversion affect.

0:23:590:24:03

Sofia was saying he became a very different person.

0:24:040:24:08

"I did not marry this man."

0:24:080:24:10

She was someone who we have to have a lot of sympathy for.

0:24:110:24:14

It was very difficult living with him,

0:24:140:24:17

but she also had her own shortcomings.

0:24:170:24:20

They were both people with flaws. She was dogmatic in her own way too.

0:24:200:24:25

She was a famously humourless person, but her whole life had been

0:24:250:24:30

bound up with her husband's, so it was understandably extremely painful

0:24:300:24:35

for her that everything that had given her happiness, which was having

0:24:350:24:38

a part in copying his works and being part of his creative life,

0:24:380:24:43

that had all been sort of thrown out, and it meant nothing to him anymore.

0:24:430:24:48

In the early 1880s, Tolstoy began pouring his energies

0:24:480:24:52

into a series of soul-searching, religious and philosophical tracts.

0:24:520:24:58

He turned his back on the dogma of the Russian Orthodox Church

0:24:580:25:02

and even went so far as to produce his own version of the gospels.

0:25:020:25:06

He decided to start translating the gospels himself, and what he did

0:25:080:25:13

actually was just to merge the four gospels into one, and this was

0:25:130:25:18

his own kind of Tolstoyan gospel,

0:25:180:25:21

and he jettisoned everything that didn't really meet

0:25:210:25:24

his approval, which was most of it, actually.

0:25:240:25:27

All the miracles, for example,

0:25:270:25:29

everything that was vaguely metaphysical had no place.

0:25:290:25:34

The only thing that really survived was everything

0:25:340:25:37

that Jesus actually said.

0:25:370:25:39

He thought that was all right, and his religious philosophy,

0:25:390:25:43

it actually boiled down to the sermon on the mount.

0:25:430:25:46

This was no abstract philosophy.

0:25:480:25:50

Tolstoy was determined to live by the gospels. He'd always admired the peasants,

0:25:500:25:56

but increasingly he aspired to be like them.

0:25:560:26:00

He laboured in the fields, he dressed like them, he even learnt

0:26:000:26:03

to make his own boots, and what's more,

0:26:030:26:06

he attempted to give them land.

0:26:060:26:09

However, his acts of charity only provoked distrust

0:26:090:26:14

among the peasants and infuriated his wife.

0:26:140:26:16

In 1881, the Tolstoy family moved to Moscow,

0:26:190:26:22

at least for the winter months.

0:26:220:26:24

Tolstoy left Yasnaya Polyana reluctantly, for the sake of

0:26:240:26:28

the children's education, and was utterly miserable.

0:26:280:26:31

Witnessing the poverty in the city only intensified

0:26:330:26:36

his aspirations for a simpler life.

0:26:360:26:40

"5th October, 1881.

0:26:420:26:44

"Keep only as many servants as are necessary to help us

0:26:440:26:47

"change things and to instruct us,

0:26:470:26:50

"and then only while we train ourselves to do without them."

0:26:500:26:54

"Live all together, the men in one room, the women and the girls in another.

0:26:540:27:00

"Sell or give away anything superfluous -

0:27:000:27:03

"the piano, furniture, carriages. The one aim is happiness.

0:27:030:27:08

"One's own and that of one's family.

0:27:080:27:11

"This happiness consists of being content with little

0:27:110:27:15

"and doing good to others."

0:27:150:27:17

Despite these high ideals, this is still the same Tolstoy who wrote

0:27:190:27:23

those self-improving diary entries as a student back in Kazan,

0:27:230:27:28

promising to study but ending up in the brothel.

0:27:280:27:31

The more Tolstoy became obsessed with religion and morality

0:27:340:27:37

and living an aesthetic life, the more he found himself at odds

0:27:370:27:41

with the world, and, increasingly, with his family.

0:27:410:27:44

It's not a happy story.

0:27:460:27:48

He retreated bit by bit into the interior until he's left

0:27:480:27:53

on a small island of, I don't know, self-righteousness

0:27:530:27:57

and unrealistic expectations and disappointments.

0:27:570:28:01

It's a very sad story, but you know what he couldn't do?

0:28:010:28:04

He couldn't love anyone. That's the great tragedy of Tolstoy.

0:28:040:28:08

The only conclusion he comes to in the whole of his work

0:28:080:28:12

is that the only answer for humanity is love.

0:28:120:28:15

We must love each other,

0:28:150:28:17

and that will eventually solve all our problems. And yet there

0:28:170:28:20

wasn't anyone in Russian culture less capable of loving than Tolstoy.

0:28:200:28:25

And yet it's at this very moment that Tolstoy forms the closest friendship of his life.

0:28:270:28:32

In 1883 he received an unexpected visit from a young man

0:28:320:28:38

by the name of Vladimir Chertkov.

0:28:380:28:40

Chertkov was a handsome, wealthy cavalry officer rumoured to be

0:28:400:28:45

an illegitimate half-brother of the Tsar, who gave up

0:28:450:28:48

his military career and society position

0:28:480:28:51

after converting to evangelical Christianity.

0:28:510:28:55

It was as if the two men almost instantly fell in love.

0:28:550:28:59

Tolstoy and Chertkov remained intensely close until Tolstoy's

0:29:020:29:07

death, exchanging over 1,000 letters over the next 27 years.

0:29:070:29:12

"November, 1884.

0:29:140:29:16

"I would like to live with you, and if we are still alive,

0:29:160:29:19

"I shall live with you.

0:29:190:29:22

"Never cease to love me as I love you."

0:29:220:29:24

Chertkov worked relentlessly to preserve,

0:29:270:29:30

print and promote the work and ideas of Tolstoy.

0:29:300:29:33

In particular, he enabled the translation

0:29:330:29:36

and circulation of his writing outside Russia.

0:29:360:29:40

In 1897, Chertkov became heavily involved in campaigning

0:29:410:29:46

alongside Tolstoy for a pacifist sect called the Doukhobors.

0:29:460:29:51

A Christian group that Tolstoy had first

0:29:510:29:53

encountered in the wilderness of Samara.

0:29:530:29:56

It was a dangerous high-profile campaign that earned Chertkov ten years of exile

0:29:590:30:05

and turned Tolstoy into an enemy of the state.

0:30:050:30:09

The campaign also propelled Tolstoy into writing his final least-known full-length novel, Resurrection.

0:30:090:30:17

Resurrection is a novel that needs to be resurrected.

0:30:200:30:23

It has been submerged

0:30:230:30:25

and nearly forgotten about, and I'd recommend anyone to read this.

0:30:250:30:29

It's a very powerful novel indeed.

0:30:290:30:31

It did begin badly in the artistic sense because he's writing for the wrong reasons.

0:30:310:30:36

This story he wrote for peculiar motives.

0:30:370:30:41

Tolstoy wrote Resurrection in order to raise a large sum of money to save the Doukhobors.

0:30:420:30:48

They were threatened with imprisonment and execution

0:30:480:30:52

because of their refusal to fight in the Imperial Army.

0:30:520:30:56

Tolstoy funded their escape to Canada.

0:30:560:30:59

It was a lovely compromise arrived at by the Tsar.

0:30:590:31:02

You know, I cannot excuse these people from military service,

0:31:020:31:06

I will let them go abroad, but I'm not paying for it, so Tolstoy paid for it.

0:31:060:31:10

Elaine Podovnokov, a modern day member of the Doukhobor community,

0:31:120:31:16

has moved back to Russia to work as a teacher,

0:31:160:31:20

and she and her family are now building a log house

0:31:200:31:22

in Yasnaya Polyana village, not far from the Tolstoy estate.

0:31:220:31:26

Then my mum and dad are the fourth...

0:31:260:31:29

Looking back, what did the Doukhobors represent?

0:31:290:31:32

What was it about them that made them so appealing to Tolstoy?

0:31:320:31:35

There were two main issues, I think,

0:31:350:31:38

and that is that they would not kill another human being even in warfare.

0:31:380:31:42

They felt that every human being was a temple of the living god,

0:31:420:31:46

that a piece of God lived inside each human being.

0:31:460:31:49

That was one, and the other one was that God did not only live within the confines of a church

0:31:490:31:55

and that there were godly people because the ultimate church

0:31:550:31:59

was the body that housed the spirit of the living god.

0:31:590:32:03

Is there a community in Canada

0:32:030:32:05

who know that they owe their lives to Leo Tolstoy?

0:32:050:32:09

Yes. Yes.

0:32:090:32:10

When we study, we have our Sunday schools or Sunday classes,

0:32:100:32:15

while we're studying the Doukhobor history in Russia,

0:32:150:32:19

we always studied Leo Tolstoy as someone, as a benefactor,

0:32:190:32:22

and he was considered like... semi-god, because everybody knew that in his young years

0:32:220:32:29

he lived differently, and that was another lesson for us.

0:32:290:32:32

That you could at any time in your life get a new awareness

0:32:320:32:36

of what life was all about and change your way of living.

0:32:360:32:39

Spiritual evolution is the central theme of Resurrection.

0:32:420:32:46

An aristocratic juror is confronted in the dock with a woman he once seduced and ruined.

0:32:460:32:53

The woman has now been wrongfully charged with murder.

0:32:540:32:58

Guilt forces him to offer to marry her and campaign for her release.

0:32:580:33:04

When he fails, he follows her and her fellow convicts as they're exiled to Siberia.

0:33:040:33:12

The book was a furious attack on the penal system, the government

0:33:120:33:15

and, most pointedly, the Orthodox Church.

0:33:150:33:19

So what was it that he did in Resurrection which so offended the church that he was excommunicated?

0:33:210:33:26

What did he not do?! Everything he wrote in Resurrection would have found the disapproval of the church.

0:33:260:33:32

It's shown to be utterly useless in all these things

0:33:320:33:35

and just a tool of government completely incapable of any reform

0:33:350:33:39

and just as guilty as anyone else in allowing the system to go ahead

0:33:390:33:45

whereby people can be sent to prison,

0:33:450:33:48

can be punished savagely and so on.

0:33:480:33:51

Whenever the church comes up, it's satirised.

0:33:510:33:56

"The priest carefully took a spoonful from the chalice

0:34:000:34:03

"and put a piece of bread soaked in wine

0:34:030:34:06

"deep into the mouths of all the children in turn,

0:34:060:34:09

"and then the deacon wiped their mouths

0:34:090:34:11

"whilst singing a cheerful song about children eating God's body and drinking his blood.

0:34:110:34:18

"After this the priest took the chalice behind the screen,

0:34:180:34:22

"drank all the blood that was left over and ate up all the bits of God's body.

0:34:220:34:27

"Scrupulously sucked his moustaches dry, wiped his mouth

0:34:270:34:31

"and the chalice, and then he walked out briskly through the screen.

0:34:310:34:35

"To the creaking of his calfskin boots

0:34:350:34:37

"and their thin souls. He was a picture of contentment."

0:34:370:34:43

The church is condemned. The church is shown to be useless.

0:34:440:34:48

Everything else is condemned.

0:34:480:34:50

The judiciary and the army and the government,

0:34:500:34:53

cos Tolstoy's well into the stage where he rejects all forms of organisation and government.

0:34:530:34:59

Tolstoy's ideas are very relevant now. The more we read him,

0:34:590:35:04

the more we study him or reread him,

0:35:040:35:07

the more totally we feel that

0:35:070:35:11

we need to look at our life now through the eyes of Tolstoy.

0:35:110:35:16

We should read and reread the Resurrection now

0:35:160:35:22

because the novel seems very contemporary.

0:35:220:35:25

The problems which Tolstoy addressed there are our problems.

0:35:250:35:30

What is meaningful? What is moral? What is worthless?

0:35:300:35:35

The impossible contrast between the rich and the poor.

0:35:350:35:41

All that was the problem at the turn of the 19th/20th century,

0:35:410:35:46

and the problems remain today.

0:35:460:35:49

Tolstoy's mockery and contempt for the Orthodox Church

0:35:560:36:00

eventually forced a reaction.

0:36:000:36:02

In February 1901, Metropolitan Anthony,

0:36:020:36:05

the senior cleric in St Petersburg,

0:36:050:36:08

mounted the pulpit and declared:

0:36:080:36:11

Count Tolstoy, under the seduction of his intellectual pride,

0:36:110:36:15

has devoted his literary activity and the talent given to him by God

0:36:150:36:21

to disseminate in teachings repugnant to Christ and the church,

0:36:210:36:24

and destroying in the minds and hearts of men their national faith.

0:36:240:36:30

But if the church thought that Tolstoy's excommunication

0:36:310:36:35

would undermine his growing popularity in Russia,

0:36:350:36:38

the effect was absolutely the opposite.

0:36:380:36:40

On the day in which the edict was published, Tolstoy was walking here

0:36:400:36:44

in the centre of Moscow, in Lubyanka Square,

0:36:440:36:47

a place now dominated by that infamous building

0:36:470:36:50

which used to be the home of the KGB.

0:36:500:36:52

February 1901 was a period of student protests,

0:36:520:36:56

and a large crowd of demonstrators filled the square.

0:36:560:36:59

Apparently, someone in the crowd spotted Tolstoy,

0:36:590:37:02

who was out walking with a friend, and called out ironically,

0:37:020:37:06

"Look, there goes the devil in human form."

0:37:060:37:09

At which point the whole crowd started cheering and shouting.

0:37:090:37:13

"Long Live Lev Nikolaivic!"

0:37:130:37:16

In the end the situation became so passionate that mounted police had to rescue Tolstoy from the crush.

0:37:160:37:23

Unfortunately for the church,

0:37:230:37:27

Tolstoy's excommunication only served to galvanise public support

0:37:270:37:32

for him, and to draw attention to his ideals and beliefs.

0:37:320:37:37

TRANSLATION: Tolstoy was saying terrible things about the church

0:37:380:37:43

and in so doing

0:37:430:37:45

was perverting a very large number of his contemporaries,

0:37:450:37:49

and so the church, represented by its higher body, The Synod,

0:37:490:37:53

said that in his deeds,

0:37:530:37:55

Tolstoy was demonstrating he was not at one with the church.

0:37:550:38:00

This rejection of Tolstoy by the church

0:38:000:38:04

was a rare and extraordinary act

0:38:040:38:06

to take against such an eminent Russian figure,

0:38:060:38:09

and his excommunication is still very much a live issue today.

0:38:090:38:15

Once again, church and state are closely, even intimately aligned,

0:38:150:38:20

and Tolstoy's descendants have failed in their attempt to get

0:38:200:38:24

the church to reconsider its position.

0:38:240:38:28

TRANSLATION: In 2001, the church did not respond to my letter.

0:38:280:38:33

It was not that I had written to some anonymous clergyman.

0:38:330:38:37

I wrote to the then Patriarch, Alexei, and I didn't get a reply from him.

0:38:370:38:42

Well, that in itself was a response.

0:38:420:38:45

A lack of response is an admission of a lack of desire to speak on the subject.

0:38:450:38:49

The church does not wish to admit its mistakes or weaknesses.

0:38:500:38:54

Yes, the conflict has not yet runs its course.

0:38:550:38:58

The culmination of Tolstoy's religious writing

0:39:010:39:05

was a book entitled The Kingdom Of God Is Within You,

0:39:050:39:08

which laid out his philosophy of non-resistance to violence.

0:39:080:39:13

Of course, Gandhi was one of the millions of people who read

0:39:130:39:17

The Kingdom Of God Is Within You, and it had an electrifying impact on him.

0:39:170:39:20

He was living in South Africa and it made him want to set up a Tolstoy farm, for example, there.

0:39:200:39:26

He did that and that was for the Indians there,

0:39:260:39:31

and he'd himself been a victim of the racism there

0:39:310:39:35

and seen the coercive ways of the government,

0:39:350:39:40

and it became a cornerstone of his own philosophy.

0:39:400:39:44

It was a very, very important moment.

0:39:440:39:47

Did Tolstoy absorb all this? Did he realise the impact of these ideas and his views?

0:39:470:39:52

Yeah, and he was absolutely thrilled by this, of course,

0:39:520:39:55

because as much as he wanted to run away and be an ascetic

0:39:550:39:59

and live like a wanderer with nothing but the clothes on his back,

0:39:590:40:04

he also wanted his ideas to be disseminated.

0:40:040:40:08

He actually wanted people to come round to his way of thinking.

0:40:080:40:12

He wanted governments to dissolve.

0:40:120:40:14

He didn't want there to be any more private property

0:40:140:40:18

and as this incredible narcissist,

0:40:180:40:20

he was very convinced that he did know the truth.

0:40:200:40:24

At the point at which Tolstoy

0:40:240:40:27

had achieved something very like sainthood

0:40:270:40:31

on the public and international stage,

0:40:310:40:33

his personal life was in crisis,

0:40:330:40:35

thanks largely to his relationship with Chertkov.

0:40:350:40:39

A man who Sofia Tolstoy now described as the devil himself.

0:40:390:40:45

It's at this moment that a final and tragic act

0:40:450:40:48

of Tolstoy's life begins to unfold.

0:40:480:40:51

"Lev Nikolaivic becomes more intolerable each day

0:40:520:40:55

"because of his heartlessness and his cruelty to me,

0:40:550:40:59

"and it is Chertkov who has brought all this about gradually and consistently.

0:40:590:41:04

"He has done everything in his power to take control of this unfortunate old man.

0:41:040:41:09

"He has separated us.

0:41:090:41:11

"He has killed the creative spark in Lev Nikolaivic

0:41:110:41:14

"and has kindled all the protest, castigation and hatred

0:41:140:41:17

"that one sees in these recent articles

0:41:170:41:21

"which his stupid evil genius has reduced him to writing.

0:41:210:41:25

"Yes, if one believes in the devil,

0:41:250:41:28

"he has been embodied in Chertkov, and he has destroyed our life."

0:41:280:41:34

Chertkov had this gift, I would say, to antagonise people.

0:41:350:41:41

To charge them with this negative emotion

0:41:410:41:45

and when he would appear on the scene, there would be conflicts.

0:41:450:41:50

There would be some conspiracies.

0:41:500:41:52

There would be something else. He was evil genius.

0:41:520:41:55

The story of their marriage

0:41:550:41:57

has been described as probably the most unsuccessful

0:41:570:42:01

and vicious and horrible marriage

0:42:010:42:03

in the entire history of literary marriages that we know about.

0:42:030:42:07

It was as bad as that, all the biographers will tell you.

0:42:070:42:11

And those declining years at the end

0:42:110:42:13

when Chertkov gets on the inside of this and excludes her

0:42:130:42:17

right up to the bitter end, really,

0:42:170:42:19

they make terrible reading.

0:42:190:42:21

Sonia seemed to believe that as an old man,

0:42:210:42:25

he was actually having a homoerotic affair with this man Chertkov.

0:42:250:42:30

Nonsense, but it shows their closeness.

0:42:300:42:32

"20th August.

0:42:360:42:38

"Went riding and the sight of the senorial domain so torments me

0:42:380:42:42

"that I'm thinking of running away and hiding.

0:42:420:42:45

"Today, I thought as I record my marriage,

0:42:450:42:49

"that there was something fateful about it.

0:42:490:42:53

"I was never even in love, but I couldn't help getting married."

0:42:540:43:00

In the late summer of 1910, the Tolstoy marriage hit a new low.

0:43:020:43:07

Chertkov had moved into a house near to Yasnaya Polyana,

0:43:070:43:11

and a furious row developed

0:43:110:43:13

over who should have possession of Tolstoy's diaries.

0:43:130:43:17

"9th September 1910.

0:43:180:43:22

"I wrote a letter to Chertkov but haven't posted it yet.

0:43:230:43:26

"This man is the cause of all my suffering

0:43:260:43:29

"and I cannot reconcile myself to him."

0:43:290:43:32

"11th September.

0:43:380:43:41

"Towards evening, she began making scenes.

0:43:410:43:45

"Running into the garden... "tears, screams.

0:43:450:43:48

"It's even got to the stage that when I went after out into the garden,

0:43:480:43:52

"she screamed, 'He's a beast! A murderer! I can't bear to see him!'"

0:43:520:43:56

"24th September.

0:44:040:44:06

"After dinner she began to reproach me and say that I shouted at her and that I ought to pity her.

0:44:060:44:11

"I remained silent. She went to her room and now it's after ten o' clock

0:44:110:44:16

"and she hasn't come out, and I'm depressed."

0:44:160:44:19

"A letter from Chertkov with reproaches and accusations.

0:44:210:44:26

"They are tearing me to pieces.

0:44:260:44:28

"I sometimes think I should go away from them all."

0:44:290:44:31

Finally, at the end of October, one night he was trying to sleep.

0:44:330:44:38

He heard his wife going through his papers on his desk in the next room.

0:44:380:44:41

He woke up. He couldn't go back to sleep,

0:44:410:44:45

and somewhat spontaneously decided to go,

0:44:450:44:49

although we know that during the week before he was really talking about it

0:44:490:44:54

very actively with those around him.

0:44:540:44:57

So there was definitely a build-up.

0:44:570:44:59

You feel like it's really...almost when you read all of the accounts,

0:44:590:45:03

it almost feels it's inevitable he's going to leave.

0:45:030:45:06

Do we know what happened on that night,

0:45:060:45:09

before she fell asleep, what happened?

0:45:090:45:13

Tolstoy was in bed, so she entered his bedroom,

0:45:130:45:16

just looked at Tolstoy, and then she went to his study,

0:45:160:45:20

and Tolstoy, he couldn't sleep that night, so he didn't sleep well,

0:45:200:45:25

and so he heard she was in his study

0:45:250:45:27

looking through the papers.

0:45:270:45:30

Then she came back to her bedroom and so she fell asleep,

0:45:300:45:36

and Tolstoy...all of a sudden he understood

0:45:360:45:39

he couldn't stay any longer here in this house and decided to go away.

0:45:390:45:45

This flight is so often depicted as spontaneous and it was not.

0:45:470:45:51

Tolstoy already for years

0:45:530:45:55

received letters from his followers

0:45:550:45:58

urging him to flee.

0:45:580:45:59

They expected a full concurrence of Tolstoy's words and deeds.

0:46:000:46:06

If he renounced luxury, and there was no luxury in Tolstoy's household...

0:46:060:46:11

if you visited Yasnaya Polyana you know, they lived like English middle class.

0:46:110:46:15

So but if he renounced property he has to separate himself

0:46:150:46:20

from his property and family.

0:46:200:46:23

So this was expected from him, and she lived under the pressure

0:46:230:46:29

for many years and in fear of their final separation and flight.

0:46:290:46:36

She knew it would take place and Tolstoy in his diaries says that

0:46:360:46:42

he wants her to give him an excuse to go away,

0:46:420:46:47

and finally maybe she did give this excuse

0:46:470:46:51

because of her fear and because of her spying on him.

0:46:510:46:57

"October 28th.

0:46:570:46:59

"Went to bed at 11.30.

0:46:590:47:01

"Slept till after two.

0:47:010:47:03

"Woke up. I heard the opening of doors and footsteps.

0:47:030:47:07

"I saw through the crack a bright light in the study

0:47:080:47:11

"and heard rustling.

0:47:110:47:14

"It was Sofia Andreevna looking for something and probably reading.

0:47:140:47:19

"I wanted to go back to sleep, but couldn't.

0:47:190:47:22

"I gasped for breath, counted my pulse...

0:47:220:47:26

"97...

0:47:260:47:27

"I couldn't go on lying there, and suddenly I took the final decision to leave."

0:47:280:47:34

So he came to the stables, he brought the doctor with him,

0:47:360:47:39

he went to the coachman's house first and then came here?

0:47:390:47:43

Yeah, and came here with the coachman.

0:47:430:47:46

He was waiting in the special part of the stables where the carriages were.

0:47:460:47:50

But on the way to the stables,

0:47:500:47:53

walking through the apple tree orchards, he lost his hat,

0:47:530:47:59

and he was going back to the house,

0:47:590:48:01

but fortunately he met his doctor, who had in his pocket another hat.

0:48:010:48:07

So what was his mood here at this time?

0:48:080:48:10

He was very nervous. He was very tense.

0:48:100:48:13

He worried about his wife, Sofie Andreevna.

0:48:130:48:15

He was thinking was she awake or not.

0:48:150:48:18

He wanted to go away as soon as possible.

0:48:180:48:22

TRANSLATION: In the end this was a King Lear moment,

0:48:230:48:27

the departure of Tolstoy. It was a genuine Shakespearean drama.

0:48:270:48:32

When during that cold night in October he left on his own,

0:48:320:48:37

lost his hat, tripped and fell, then he had to cross a ravine.

0:48:370:48:42

They are all terrifying details, but by this time, he was clearly ill.

0:48:420:48:47

Speaking from a kind of elevated perspective,

0:48:470:48:54

this was an artist finding a way to complete a great life.

0:48:540:48:58

Having left the house in the dead of night you'd imagine

0:49:050:49:10

that Tolstoy would have tried to travel discreetly, but not at all.

0:49:100:49:14

He boarded a train and proceeded to lecture the entire carriage

0:49:140:49:19

on pacifism and non-violence.

0:49:190:49:22

His destination was back here.

0:49:250:49:27

Back at the monastery of Optina Pustyn,

0:49:270:49:31

where he'd begun his spiritual quest over 30 years earlier.

0:49:310:49:35

He arrived at the monastery guest house

0:49:350:49:38

and announced to the monk on duty,

0:49:380:49:40

"I am Lev Nikolaivic Tolstoy, excommunicated by the church.

0:49:400:49:44

"I have come to talk to your elders."

0:49:440:49:48

The following day Tolstoy left Optina Pustyn

0:49:500:49:54

to visit a nearby convent,

0:49:540:49:56

where his sister Maria now lived as a nun.

0:49:560:50:02

When he met her in the cell, he burst into tears.

0:50:020:50:05

All that he wanted now was a chance to live in solitude.

0:50:050:50:09

Apparently, they even discussed how he could rent one of the small lodges in the monastery grounds.

0:50:090:50:15

But clearly, Tolstoy had not made he mind up what to do.

0:50:150:50:19

At four o' clock the next morning,

0:50:190:50:22

he once again disappeared into the night.

0:50:220:50:25

One of the most extraordinary aspects

0:50:290:50:31

of Tolstoy's journey of escape

0:50:310:50:33

was the mass of detail in which it was recorded and commented on,

0:50:330:50:37

both in the diaries of Tolstoy

0:50:370:50:39

and of the doctor Macaviski, who accompanied him.

0:50:390:50:42

As well as in the correspondence of his children and friends.

0:50:420:50:46

However, amazingly, one thing that no-one is clear about

0:50:460:50:49

is exactly where this 82-year-old man thought he was going.

0:50:490:50:53

There are a number of theories,

0:50:530:50:55

but perhaps the truth was that there was no plan.

0:50:550:50:59

As he embarked on yet another arduous journey

0:50:590:51:02

in cramped smoky railway carriages,

0:51:020:51:05

it's hardly surprising that he was taken ill.

0:51:050:51:10

He appears to have caught a chill and developed a fever.

0:51:100:51:14

Eventually, Dr Macaviski decided they should leave the train

0:51:140:51:17

at the next station, wherever it was,

0:51:170:51:20

as Count Tolstoy was no longer well enough to continue.

0:51:200:51:24

Here at Astapovo, a tiny rural station in the middle of nowhere,

0:51:340:51:40

Tolstoy was helped up the platform to the station master's house,

0:51:400:51:44

where he was offered first a room

0:51:440:51:46

and eventually the whole house by the awestruck railwaymen.

0:51:460:51:52

Astonishingly, events that unfolded at Astapovo over the next few days

0:51:520:51:57

were captured on film.

0:51:570:51:59

"3rd November. Astapovo.

0:52:100:52:12

"Had a bad night.

0:52:140:52:18

"Lay for two days in a fever.

0:52:180:52:20

"Chertkov came on the second.

0:52:230:52:25

"They say that Sofia Andreevna has, too.

0:52:250:52:29

"So much for my plan."

0:52:290:52:31

"2nd November 1910.

0:52:390:52:43

"I received a telegram at 7.30 this morning.

0:52:430:52:45

"Lev Nikolaivic ill in Astapovo.

0:52:450:52:49

"Tanya, the nurse and I all left for Astapovo for a special train."

0:52:490:52:55

Sofia only asked and begged everyone who was walking into the house

0:52:570:53:03

to let Tolstoy know that she was there.

0:53:030:53:05

Her greatest fear was that he would die in her absence,

0:53:050:53:10

and that they would not be able to say farewell to each other.

0:53:100:53:15

"3rd November. Astapovo.

0:53:170:53:19

"Lev Nikolaivic has pneumonia in the left lung.

0:53:200:53:24

"They won't let me see him."

0:53:240:53:25

"4th November.

0:53:290:53:31

"Lev Nikolaivic is worse.

0:53:310:53:33

"I wait in agony outside the little house where he is lying.

0:53:330:53:37

"We are sleeping in the train."

0:53:370:53:38

"5th November.

0:53:410:53:43

"There is evidently little hope.

0:53:430:53:46

"I am tormented by remorse.

0:53:460:53:48

"The painful anticipation of his end and the impossibility of seeing my beloved husband."

0:53:480:53:54

"6th November.

0:53:560:53:57

"Dreadful atmosphere of anticipation.

0:53:570:54:00

"I can't remember anything clearly."

0:54:000:54:02

"7th November.

0:54:030:54:05

"At six o'clock in the morning, Lev Nikolaivic died.

0:54:070:54:13

"I was allowed in only as he drew his last breath.

0:54:130:54:17

"They wouldn't let me take leave of my husband.

0:54:170:54:20

"Cruel people."

0:54:200:54:21

Thousands of people went on strike the day of the funeral.

0:54:330:54:37

There were actually some mass demonstrations

0:54:370:54:39

that spilled out into the streets.

0:54:390:54:41

Real concern on the part of the government

0:54:410:54:43

that this could be an opening up of that revolutionary energy

0:54:430:54:48

that they had kind of pressed down

0:54:480:54:50

after the 1905 Revolution.

0:54:500:54:52

This is really his most famous story.

0:54:530:54:56

This is the one that everyone followed,

0:54:580:55:00

everyone literally, everyone in Russia

0:55:000:55:03

and people all over the world were talking about this.

0:55:030:55:07

It was based on this very enigmatic gesture of just trying

0:55:070:55:13

to figure out what he was doing, where he was going,

0:55:130:55:16

what he would do when he got there, why he had left?

0:55:160:55:19

All of these questions provoked people to create this story,

0:55:190:55:25

and because it's an unfinished one

0:55:250:55:27

because he died without reaching his destination,

0:55:270:55:30

it created that opening for people to imagine what it all meant.

0:55:300:55:34

It's hard to find another story like it.

0:55:340:55:38

It was a huge demonstration of public opinion.

0:55:380:55:42

Most of those crowds weren't clutching the equivalent

0:55:420:55:45

of the Times Literary Supplement.

0:55:450:55:47

They weren't literary people.

0:55:470:55:48

They weren't going there because they so admired War And Peace,

0:55:480:55:52

they were going there because they saw him as their saviour.

0:55:520:55:55

As the one man who could stand up

0:55:550:55:57

and say that the government of Russia was intolerable.

0:55:570:56:01

It's not surprising that revolution was in the air,

0:56:010:56:05

and there'd already been one minor revolution.

0:56:050:56:08

There was going to be another revolution.

0:56:080:56:11

People thought it would be a Tolstoyan revolution.

0:56:110:56:14

TRANSLATION: Tolstoy was not a comfortable figure

0:56:160:56:22

for the Tsarist authority in Russia.

0:56:220:56:26

Nor was he acceptable to the Bolshevik communist authorities,

0:56:260:56:31

and he is still an inconvenience

0:56:310:56:33

for the so-called democratic authorities today.

0:56:330:56:38

He always said exactly what he thought,

0:56:380:56:41

and this would never have been appreciated by any form of authority.

0:56:410:56:45

When the 5,000 mourners arrived at the grave

0:56:480:56:52

there was no ceremony, no priest, no cross.

0:56:520:56:56

Everyone knelt, including the armed police

0:56:560:56:59

after they were shouted at by the crowd.

0:56:590:57:02

The place Tolstoy had chosen for his burial

0:57:020:57:06

was not the churchyard where the rest of his family were buried,

0:57:060:57:11

but here just by the path at the edge of the ravine.

0:57:110:57:16

The spot where his brother had told him a little green stick was buried.

0:57:160:57:21

The stick on which was written the secret of universal happiness.

0:57:210:57:26

I wonder, did Tolstoy ever get to read

0:57:320:57:34

what was on that little green stick?

0:57:340:57:37

I suspect not. At least not for himself.

0:57:370:57:41

This great Russian writer

0:57:410:57:43

always seems to have been at odds with the world,

0:57:430:57:46

always in trouble, and always a trouble maker.

0:57:460:57:50

100 years on from those extraordinary scenes

0:57:540:57:57

and the riots and demonstrations that followed Tolstoy's death,

0:57:570:58:01

it's unsurprising that Tolstoy, the uncompromising critic of church,

0:58:010:58:06

state corruption, social inequality and militarism,

0:58:060:58:10

still seems difficult and problematic, and not just in Russia.

0:58:100:58:15

It's easier to applaud Tolstoy the greatest of novelists,

0:58:150:58:18

and dismiss Tolstoy the idealist as a crank.

0:58:180:58:22

An artist out of his depth.

0:58:220:58:24

But the real trouble with Tolstoy is that so much of what he advocated...

0:58:240:58:28

that love is all that matters, that violence begets violence,

0:58:280:58:32

that no man has the right to take control over the life of another...

0:58:320:58:36

is uncomfortably but unavoidably true.

0:58:360:58:39

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0:58:450:58:48

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0:58:480:58:51

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