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Page:Iván Ilyitch and Other Stories (1887).djvu/11

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PREFACE.


The short stories here presented form about one-half of the twelfth volume of Count Tolstoi’s collected writings.[1] None of them dates back more than three years. They represent the latest phase in the evolution of the author’s peculiar views,—an evolution which may be traced from Olénen in “The Cossacks,” through Pierre Bezúkhof in ‘‘War and Peace,’’ and Levin in “Anna Karénina,’’ down or up to the idealized muzhík who lives by the sweat of his brow, does good for evil, makes no resistance to violence, and comes out victorious over every temptation of the grotesque and naïve Devil and his imps. With the exception of “The Death of Iván Ilyitch,’’ which is a sombre and powerful study of the insidious progress of fatal disease, as well as a study in religious philoso-

  1. Sochin’yéniya Gráfa L. N. Tolstávo: Proïzvedéniya Posl’yédnikh gódof. Moskva: Tipografiya M. G. Volchaninova, 1886.

    The remainder of the volume consists of ‘‘What Men Live By” (Ch’yém Liudi Zhivui); two papers on the Revision, or Census, in Moscow, the second, “Thoughts suggested by the Revision,” now translated into English under the title “What to do?” certain selections from “My Religion” passed by the censor, and here entitled ‘‘Wherein Happiness [consists] ” (V ch’yém Stchast’yé); and finally a paper written in 1875 on Popular Education (O Narédnom Obrazovanii).