
In this lyrical tribute, the author recalls the moment Tolstoy’s voice first reached France in the mid‑1880s. He paints a vivid picture of a literary fever that swept Parisian houses, bringing works such as War and Peace and The Death of Ivan Ilyich to eager readers hungry for a new vision of Russian life. The preface captures the excitement of a generation that found in Tolstoy a friend whose stories seemed to illuminate their own hopes and doubts.
The writer’s own recollections place him in a bustling college environment, surrounded by philosophers, poets, mystics and skeptics. Despite their varied outlooks, the students were drawn together by a shared reverence for Tolstoy’s honesty and moral depth. Even ordinary folk in author’s native province felt the sting of “Ivan Ilyich,” proving how the Russian master could touch any heart.
The essay reflects on why Tolstoy’s power lies not merely in ideas but in the unmistakable texture of his prose—its realism, its mysticism, its fierce compassion. It offers listeners a window into the cultural reverberations of a writer whose influence reshaped European thought.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (297K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clare Graham and Marc D'Hooghe
Release date
2015-07-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1866–1944
A Nobel Prize–winning French writer, he used fiction, biography, and essays to explore music, conscience, and the struggle to stay humane in troubled times. Best known for the vast novel cycle Jean-Christophe, he also became one of Europe’s most recognizable literary voices for peace.
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