INDEX OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG
WORKS OF
LEON TOLSTOY
(Léof N. Tolstoï)
Compiled by David Widger
CONTENTS
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TABLES OF CONTENTS OF VOLUMES
THE FORGED COUPON, And Other Stories
By Leo Tolstoy
Contents
INTRODUCTION |
LIST OF POSTHUMOUS WORKS |
THE FORGED COUPON |
PART FIRST |
PART SECOND |
AFTER THE DANCE |
ALYOSHA THE POT |
MY DREAM |
THERE ARE NO GUILTY PEOPLE |
THE YOUNG TSAR |
THE KREUTZER SONATA, and OTHER STORIES
By Count Leo Tolstoi
CONTENTS
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE.
THE KREUTZER SONATA.
LESSON OF “THE KREUTZER SONATA.”
IVAN THE FOOL.
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A LOST OPPORTUNITY.
“POLIKUSHKA;”
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THE CANDLE.
FATHER SERGIUS
By Leo Tolstoy
CONTENTS
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MASTER AND MAN
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by Louise and Aylmer Maude
CONTENTS
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ANNA KARENINA
by Leo Tolstoy
Translated by Constance Garnett
CONTENTS
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RESURRECTION
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by Mrs. Louise Maude
CONTENTS
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE | ||
RESURRECTION | ||
BOOK I. | ||
CHAPTER I | MASLOVA IN PRISON | |
CHAPTER II | MASLOVA’S EARLY LIFE | |
CHAPTER III | NEKHLUDOFF | |
CHAPTER IV | MISSY | |
CHAPTER V | THE JURYMEN | |
CHAPTER VI | THE JUDGES | |
CHAPTER VII | THE OFFICIALS OF THE COURT | |
CHAPTER VIII | SWEARING IN THE JURY | |
CHAPTER IX | THE TRIAL—THE PRISONERS QUESTIONED | |
CHAPTER X | THE TRIAL—THE INDICTMENT | |
CHAPTER XI | THE TRIAL—MASLOVA CROSS-EXAMINED | |
CHAPTER XII | TWELVE YEARS BEFORE | |
CHAPTER XIII | LIFE IN THE ARMY | |
CHAPTER XIV | THE SECOND MEETING WITH MASLOVA. | |
CHAPTER XV | THE EARLY MASS | |
CHAPTER XVI | THE FIRST STEP | |
CHAPTER XVII | NEKHLUDOFF AND KATUSHA | |
CHAPTER XVIII | AFTERWARDS | |
CHAPTER XIX | THE TRIAL—RESUMPTION | |
CHAPTER XX | THE TRIAL—THE MEDICAL REPORT. | |
CHAPTER XXI | THE TRIAL—THE PROSECUTOR AND THE ADVOCATES | |
CHAPTER XXII | THE TRIAL—THE SUMMING UP. | |
CHAPTER XXIII | THE TRIAL—THE VERDICT | |
CHAPTER XXIV | THE TRIAL—THE SENTENCE | |
CHAPTER XXV | NEKHLUDOFF CONSULTS AN ADVOCATE. | |
CHAPTER XXVI | THE HOUSE OF KORCHAGIN | |
CHAPTER XXVII | MISSY’S MOTHER | |
CHAPTER XXVIII | THE AWAKENING | |
CHAPTER XXIX | MASLOVA IN PRISON | |
CHAPTER XXX | THE CELL | |
CHAPTER XXXI | THE PRISONERS | |
CHAPTER XXXII | A PRISON QUARREL | |
CHAPTER XXXIII | THE LEAVEN AT WORK—NEKHLUDOFF’S DOMESTIC CHANGES | |
CHAPTER XXXIV | THE ABSURDITY OF LAW—REFLECTIONS OF A JURYMAN | |
CHAPTER XXXV | THE PROCUREUR—NEKHLUDOFF REFUSES TO SERVE | |
CHAPTER XXXVI | NEKHLUDOFF ENDEAVOURS TO VISIT MASLOVA | |
CHAPTER XXXVII | MASLOVA RECALLS THE PAST | |
CHAPTER XXXVIII | SUNDAY IN PRISON—PREPARING FOR MASS | |
CHAPTER XXXIX | THE PRISON CHURCH—BLIND LEADERS OF THE BLIND | |
CHAPTER XL | THE HUSKS OF RELIGION | |
CHAPTER XLI | VISITING DAY—THE MEN’S WARD. | |
CHAPTER XLII | VISITING DAY—THE WOMEN’S WARD | |
CHAPTER XLIII | NEKHLUDOFF VISITS MASLOVA | |
CHAPTER XLIV | MASLOVA’S VIEW OF LIFE | |
CHAPTER XLV | FANARIN, THE ADVOCATE—THE PETITION | |
CHAPTER XLVI | A PRISON FLOGGING | |
CHAPTER XLVII | NEKHLUDOFF AGAIN VISITS MASLOVA. | |
CHAPTER XLVIII | MASLOVA REFUSES TO MARRY | |
CHAPTER XLIX | VERA DOUKHOVA | |
CHAPTER L | THE VICE-GOVERNOR OF THE PRISON | |
CHAPTER LI | THE CELLS | |
CHAPTER LII | NO | 21 |
CHAPTER LIII | VICTIMS OF GOVERNMENT | |
CHAPTER LIV | PRISONERS AND FRIENDS | |
CHAPTER LV | VERA DOUKHOVA EXPLAINS | |
CHAPTER LVI | NEKHLUDOFF AND THE PRISONERS | |
CHAPTER LVII | THE VICE-GOVERNOR’S “AT-HOME” | |
CHAPTER LVIII | THE VICE-GOVERNOR SUSPICIOUS | |
CHAPTER LIX |
NEKHLUDOFF’S THIRD INTERVIEW WITH MASLOVA IN PRISON |
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BOOK II. | ||
CHAPTER I | PROPERTY IN LAND | |
CHAPTER II | EFFORTS AT LAND RESTORATION | |
CHAPTER III | OLD ASSOCIATIONS | |
CHAPTER IV | THE PEASANTS’ LOT | |
CHAPTER V | MASLOVA’S AUNT | |
CHAPTER VI | REFLECTIONS OF A LANDLORD | |
CHAPTER VII | THE DISINHERITED | |
CHAPTER VIII | GOD’S PEACE IN THE HEART | |
CHAPTER IX | THE LAND SETTLEMENT | |
CHAPTER X | NEKHLUDOFF RETURNS TO TOWN | |
CHAPTER XI | AN ADVOCATE’S VIEWS ON JUDGES AND PROSECUTORS | |
CHAPTER XII | WHY THE PEASANTS FLOCK TO TOWN | |
CHAPTER XIII | NURSE MASLOVA | |
CHAPTER XIV | AN ARISTOCRATIC CIRCLE | |
CHAPTER XV | AN AVERAGE STATESMAN | |
CHAPTER XVI | AN UP-TO-DATE SENATOR | |
CHAPTER XVII | COUNTESS KATERINA IVANOVNA’S DINNER PARTY | |
CHAPTER XVIII | OFFICIALDOM | |
CHAPTER XIX | AN OLD GENERAL OF REPUTE | |
CHAPTER XX | MASLOVA’S APPEAL | |
CHAPTER XXI | THE APPEAL DISMISSED | |
CHAPTER XXII | AN OLD FRIEND | |
CHAPTER XXIII | THE PUBLIC PROSECUTOR | |
CHAPTER XXIV | MARIETTE TEMPTS NEKHLUDOFF | |
CHAPTER XXV | LYDIA SHOUSTOVA’S HOME | |
CHAPTER XXVI | LYDIA’S AUNT | |
CHAPTER XXVII | THE STATE CHURCH AND THE PEOPLE. | |
CHAPTER XXVIII | THE MEANING OF MARIETTE’S ATTRACTION | |
CHAPTER XXIX | FOR HER SAKE AND FOR GOD’S | |
CHAPTER XXX | THE ASTONISHING INSTITUTION CALLED CRIMINAL LAW | |
CHAPTER XXXI | NEKHLUDOFF’S SISTER AND HER HUSBAND | |
CHAPTER XXXII | NEKHLUDOFF’S ANARCHISM | |
CHAPTER XXXIII | THE AIM OF THE LAW | |
CHAPTER XXXIV | THE PRISONERS START FOR SIBERIA. | |
CHAPTER XXXV | NOT MEN BUT STRANGE AND TERRIBLE CREATURES? | |
CHAPTER XXXVI | THE TENDER MERCIES OF THE LORD. | |
CHAPTER XXXVII | SPILLED LIKE WATER ON THE GROUND. | |
CHAPTER XXXVIII | THE CONVICT TRAIN | |
CHAPTER XXXIX | BROTHER AND SISTER | |
CHAPTER XL | THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF HUMAN LIFE. | |
CHAPTER XLI | TARAS’S STORY | |
CHAPTER XLII |
LE VRAI GRAND MONDE |
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BOOK III. | ||
CHAPTER I | MASLOVA MAKES NEW FRIENDS | |
CHAPTER II | AN INCIDENT OF THE MARCH | |
CHAPTER III | MARY PAVLOVNA | |
CHAPTER IV | SIMONSON | |
CHAPTER V | THE POLITICAL PRISONERS | |
CHAPTER VI | KRYLTZOFF’S STORY | |
CHAPTER VII | NEKHLUDOFF SEEKS AN INTERVIEW WITH MASLOVA | |
CHAPTER VIII | NEKHLUDOFF AND THE OFFICER | |
CHAPTER IX | THE POLITICAL PRISONERS | |
CHAPTER X | MAKAR DEVKIN | |
CHAPTER XI | MASLOVA AND HER COMPANIONS | |
CHAPTER XII | NABATOFF AND MARKEL | |
CHAPTER XIII | LOVE AFFAIRS OF THE EXILES | |
CHAPTER XIV | CONVERSATIONS IN PRISON | |
CHAPTER XV | NOVODVOROFF | |
CHAPTER XVI | SIMONSON SPEAKS TO NEKHLUDOFF | |
CHAPTER XVII | “I HAVE NOTHING MORE TO SAY.” | |
CHAPTER XVIII | NEVEROFF’S FATE | |
CHAPTER XIX | WHY IS IT DONE? | |
CHAPTER XX | THE JOURNEY RESUMED | |
CHAPTER XXI | “JUST A WORTHLESS TRAMP.” | |
CHAPTER XXII | NEKHLUDOFF SEES THE GENERAL | |
CHAPTER XXIII | THE SENTENCE COMMUTED | |
CHAPTER XXIV | THE GENERAL’S HOUSEHOLD | |
CHAPTER XXV | MASLOVA’S DECISION | |
CHAPTER XXVI | THE ENGLISH VISITOR | |
CHAPTER XXVII | KRYLTZOFF AT REST | |
CHAPTER XXVIII | A NEW LIFE DAWNS FOR NEKHLUDOFF. |
CHILDHOOD
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by C.J. Hogarth
CONTENTS
I | THE TUTOR, KARL IVANITCH |
II | MAMMA |
III | PAPA |
IV | LESSONS |
V | THE IDIOT |
VI | PREPARATIONS FOR THE CHASE |
VII | THE HUNT |
VIII | WE PLAY GAMES |
IX | A FIRST ESSAY IN LOVE |
X | THE SORT OF MAN MY FATHER WAS |
XI | IN THE DRAWING-ROOM AND THE STUDY |
XII | GRISHA |
XIII | NATALIA SAVISHNA |
XIV | THE PARTING |
XV | CHILDHOOD |
XVI | VERSE-MAKING |
XVII | THE PRINCESS KORNAKOFF |
XVIII | PRINCE IVAN IVANOVITCH |
XIX | THE IWINS |
XX | PREPARATIONS FOR THE PARTY |
XXI | BEFORE THE MAZURKA |
XXII | THE MAZURKA |
XXIII | AFTER THE MAZURKA |
XXIV | IN BED |
XXV | THE LETTER |
XXVI | WHAT AWAITED US AT THE COUNTRY-HOUSE |
XXVII | GRIEF |
XXVIII | SAD RECOLLECTIONS |
BOYHOOD
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by C.J. HOGARTH
CONTENTS
I. | A SLOW JOURNEY |
II. | THE THUNDERSTORM |
III. | A NEW POINT OF VIEW |
IV. | IN MOSCOW |
V. | MY ELDER BROTHER |
VI. | MASHA |
VII. | SMALL SHOT |
VIII. | KARL IVANITCH’S HISTORY |
IX. | CONTINUATION OF KARL’S NARRATIVE |
X. | CONCLUSION OF KARL’S NARRATIVE |
XI. | ONE MARK ONLY |
XII. | THE KEY |
XIII. | THE TRAITRESS |
XIV. | THE RETRIBUTION |
XV. | DREAMS |
XVI. | "KEEP ON GRINDING, AND YOU’LL HAVE FLOUR” |
XVII. | HATRED |
XVIII. | THE MAIDSERVANTS’ ROOM |
XIX. | BOYHOOD |
XX. | WOLODA |
XXI. | KATENKA AND LUBOTSHKA |
XXII. | PAPA |
XXIII. | GRANDMAMMA |
XXIV. | MYSELF |
XXV. | WOLODA’S FRIENDS |
XXVI. | DISCUSSIONS |
XXVII. | THE BEGINNING OF OUR FRIENDSHIP |
YOUTH
By Leo Tolstoy (Tolstoi)
Translated by C. J. Hogarth
CONTENTS
I | WHAT I CONSIDER TO HAVE BEEN THE BEGINNING OF MY YOUTH |
II | SPRINGTIME |
III | DREAMS |
IV | OUR FAMILY CIRCLE |
V | MY RULES |
VI | CONFESSION |
VII | THE EXPEDITION TO THE MONASTERY |
VIII | THE SECOND CONFESSION |
IX | HOW I PREPARED MYSELF FOR THE EXAMINATIONS |
X | THE EXAMINATION IN HISTORY |
XI | MY EXAMINATION IN MATHEMATICS |
XII | MY EXAMINATION IN LATIN |
XIII | I BECOME GROWN-UP |
XIV | HOW WOLODA AND DUBKOFF AMUSED THEMSELVES |
XV | I AM FETED AT DINNER |
XVI | THE QUARREL |
XVII | I GET READY TO PAY SOME CALLS |
XVIII | THE VALAKHIN FAMILY |
XIX | THE KORNAKOFFS |
XX | THE IWINS |
XXI | PRINCE IVAN IVANOVITCH |
XXII | INTIMATE CONVERSATION WITH MY FRIEND |
XXIII | THE NECHLUDOFFS |
XXIV | LOVE |
XXV | I BECOME BETTER ACQUAINTED WITH THE NECHLUDOFFS |
XXVI | I SHOW OFF |
XXVII | DIMITRI |
XXVIII | IN THE COUNTRY |
XXIX | RELATIONS BETWEEN THE GIRLS AND OURSELVES |
XXX | HOW I EMPLOYED MY TIME |
XXXI | “COMME IL FAUT” |
XXXII | YOUTH |
XXXIII | OUR NEIGHBOURS |
XXXIV | MY FATHER’S SECOND MARRIAGE |
XXXV | HOW WE RECEIVED THE NEWS |
XXXVI | THE UNIVERSITY |
XXXVII | AFFAIRS OF THE HEART |
XXXVIII | THE WORLD |
XXXIX | THE STUDENTS’ FEAST |
XL | MY FRIENDSHIP WITH THE NECHLUDOFFS |
XLI | MY FRIENDSHIP WITH THE NECHLUDOFFS |
XLII | OUR STEPMOTHER |
XLIII | NEW COMRADES |
XLIV | ZUCHIN AND SEMENOFF |
XLV | I COME TO GRIEF |
WAR AND PEACE
By Leo Tolstoy (Tolstoi)
CONTENTS
BOOK ONE: 1805
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BOOK TWO: 1805
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BOOK THREE: 1805
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BOOK FOUR: 1806
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BOOK FIVE: 1806 - 07
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BOOK SIX: 1808 - 10
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BOOK SEVEN: 1810 - 11
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BOOK EIGHT: 1811 - 12
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BOOK NINE: 1812
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BOOK TEN: 1812
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BOOK ELEVEN: 1812
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BOOK TWELVE: 1812
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BOOK THIRTEEN: 1812
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BOOK FOURTEEN: 1812
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BOOK FIFTEEN: 1812 - 13
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FIRST EPILOGUE: 1813 - 20
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SECOND EPILOGUE
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THE COSSACKS
A Tale of 1852
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by Louise and Aylmer Maude
CONTENTS
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WHAT MEN LIVE BY AND OTHER TALES
By Leo Tolstoy
CONTENTS
WHAT MEN LIVE BY
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THREE QUESTIONS
THE COFFEE-HOUSE OF SURAT
HOW MUCH LAND DOES A MAN NEED?
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A LETTER TO A HINDU
The Subjection Of India—Its Cause And Cure
With an Introduction by M. K. GANDHI
Leo Tolstoy
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
A LETTER TO A HINDU
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THE AWAKENING
(THE RESURRECTION)
By Count Leo Tolstoi
CONTENTS
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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
COUNT
LEO TOLSTOI |
PRINCE
NEKHLUDOFF |
THE
PRISONERS |
EASTER
SERVICES |
WARDEN
AND MATRON |
PLAYS
Complete Edition, Including the Posthumous Plays
By Leo Tolstoy
Translator: Louise Maude and Aylmer Maude
ILLUSTRATIONS
Matryóna gives Anísya the powders | Facing page 12 |
I'm not ashamed of my parent | Facing page 51 |
Her box is full as it is | Facing page 53 |
You tell me not to fear men? | Facing page 91 |
Well, dear, and what progression is our business making? | Facing page 174 |
There, you see! You are being made a fool of | Facing page 223 |
CONTENTS
PAGE | |
Plays published during Tolstoy's life | |
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The Power of Darkness (1886) | 3 |
The First Distiller (1886) | 97 |
Fruits of Culture (1889) | 125 |
Posthumous Plays | |
The Live Corpse | 229 |
The Cause of it All | 303 |
The Light Shines in Darkness | 321 |
FABLES FOR CHILDREN ⚘ STORIES FOR CHILDREN ⚘ NATURAL SCIENCE STORIES ⚘ POPULAR EDUCATION ⚘ DECEMBRISTS ⚘ MORAL TALES ⚘ ⚘ ⚘
By Count Lev N. T́olstóy
Translated By Leo Wiener
CONTENTS
FABLES FOR CHILDREN
Æsop's Fables 3 |
Adaptations and Imitations of Hindoo Fables 19 |
STORIES FOR CHILDREN
The Foundling 39 |
The Peasant and the Cucumbers 40 |
The Fire 41 |
The Old Horse 43 |
How I Learned to Ride 46 |
The Willow 49 |
Búlka 51 |
Búlka and the Wild Boar 53 |
Pheasants 56 |
Milton and Búlka 58 |
The Turtle 60 |
Búlka and the Wolf 62 |
What Happened to Búlka in Pyatigórsk 65 |
Búlka's and Milton's End 68 |
The Gray Hare 70 |
God Sees the Truth, but Does Not Tell at Once 72 |
Hunting Worse than Slavery 82 |
A Prisoner of the Caucasus 92 |
Ermák 124 |
NATURAL SCIENCE STORIES
Stories From Physics: |
[Pg vi]The Magnet 137 |
Moisture 140 |
The Different Connection of Particles 142 |
Crystals 143 |
Injurious Air 146 |
How Balloons Are Made 150 |
Galvanism 152 |
The Sun's Heat 156 |
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Stories From Zoology: |
The Owl and the Hare 159 |
How the Wolves Teach Their Whelps 160 |
Hares and Wolves 161 |
The Scent 162 |
Touch and Sight 164 |
The Silkworm 165 |
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Stories From Botany: |
The Apple-Tree 170 |
The Old Poplar 172 |
The Bird-Cherry 174 |
How Trees Walk 176 |
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The Decembrists 181 |
On Popular Education 251 |
What Men Live By 327 |
The Three Hermits 363 |
Neglect the Fire 375 |
The Candle 395 |
The Two Old Men 409 |
Where Love Is, There God Is Also 445 |
TEXTS FOR CHAPBOOK ILLUSTRATIONS
The Fiend Persists, but God Resists 463 |
Little Girls Wiser than Old People 466 |
The Two Brothers and the Gold 469 |
Ilyás 472 |
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A Fairy-Tale about Iván the Fool 481 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
"The clerk beat Sídor's face until the blood came" (The Candle, see page 397) Frontispiece |
"'Whose knife is this?'" 73 |
"'God will forgive you'" 81 |
"They rode off to the mountains" 96 |
"'Whither are you bound?'" 332 |
"But the candle was still burning" 403 |
RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR and OTHER STORIES
CONTENTS.
A Russian Proprietor | 1 | ||
Lucerne | 87 | ||
Recollections of a Scorer | 123 | ||
Albert | 148 | ||
Two Hussars | 190 | ||
Three Deaths | 286 | ||
A Prisoner in the Caucasus | 308 |
KATIA
By Count Léon Tolstoï
CONTENTS
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THE JOURNAL OF LEO TOLSTOI
(First Volume-1895-1899)
Translated From The Russian By Rose Strunsky
CONTENTS
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Explanatory Notes to Text by V. G. Chertkov, 299 |
A short Sketch of the Life of Tolstoi at the End of the Nineties, by C. Shokor-Trotsky, 387 |
Index, 409 |
SEVASTOPOL
By Count Lyof N. Tolstoï
Translated By Isabel F. Hapgood
CONTENTS
page | |
Sevastopol in December, 1854 | 5 |
Sevastopol in May, 1855 | 37 |
Sevastopol in August, 1855 | 123 |
THREE DAYS IN THE VILLAGE
And Other Sketches Written from September 1909 to July 1910
By Leo Tolstoy
Translated by L. and A. Maude
CONTENTS
THREE DAYS IN THE VILLAGE— | ||
FIRST DAY—TRAMPS | 7 | |
SECOND DAY—THE LIVING AND THE DYING | 20 | |
THIRD DAY—TAXES | 33 | |
CONCLUSION—A DREAM | 41 | |
SINGING IN THE VILLAGE | 55 | |
TRAVELLER AND PEASANT | 63 | |
A TALK WITH A WAYFARER | 75 | |
FROM THE DIARY | 79 |
TOLSTOI FOR THE YOUNG
Translated By Mrs. R. S. Townsend
With Six Coloured Plates By Michel Sevier
CONTENTS
PAGE | |
Ivan the Fool | 1 |
Where there is Love, there is God also | 57 |
A Prisoner | 82 |
Emelian and the Empty Drum | 138 |
The Great Bear | 156 |
Three Questions | 158 |
The Godson | 167 |
LIST OF COLOURED PLATES
Ivan the Fool | Frontispiece |
Where there is Love, there is God also | To face p. 57 |
A Prisoner | 82 |
Emelian and the Empty Drum | 138 |
Three Questions | 158 |
The Godson | 167 |
THE INVADERS
AND OTHER STORIES
By Count Lyof N. Tolstoi
Translated By Nathan Haskell Dole
CONTENTS.
THE INVADERS. |
THE WOOD-CUTTING EXPEDITION. |
AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE. |
LOST ON THE STEPPE; OR, THE SNOWSTORM. |
POLIKUSHKA. |
KHOLSTOMÍR. |