21. Does your wife
22. How much did you weigh when you were ten years old?
23. Do you consume hot drinks?
It is unlikely that Tolstoy ever read
Tolstoy failed in his mission to induce Muscovites to show brotherly love to the poor, as his appeal only resulted in him receiving requests for financial help, and misunderstanding on the part of the press, but his article nevertheless won him an early follower. Indeed, the article’s impact on the painter Nikolay Ge was so tumultuous that he left his remote farmhouse in the Ukraine and got on a train to Moscow so that he could come and embrace the ‘great man’ who had written it. Like Tolstoy, Ge (a descendant of a French émigré called Gay) had become preoccupied with religious and moral questions in the 1870s and had come to the same conclusions: art should not be practised for commercial gain, while engaging in physical labour was the path to saving one’s soul. In early March 1882 Ge turned up at Tolstoy’s front door in Moscow, and the discovery of their shared beliefs led to the blossoming of a close friendship.5
Ge was lucky to find Tolstoy at home. Several times that spring Sonya was left to fend on her own while her husband retreated to Yasnaya Polyana to recuperate from the trauma of living in Moscow, which he condemned as a ‘foul sewer’.6 For the first time, however, Sonya found herself almost wishing Tolstoy would stay at Yasnaya Polyana.7 She had her hands full with the family (two of their eight children were under five in 1882), but she was also beginning to take her first steps into Moscow society. As Countess Tolstoy she had an entrée into all the best drawing rooms, and as the wife of the famous novelist she was now also a celebrity in her own right, and she found it rather intoxicating being the centre of attention for once. She had missed out on going to balls and soirées in her youth, but now she prepared to live vicariously through their daughter Tanya, who was about to turn eighteen, and as keen to dress up and go out as she was. Sonya was only thirty-eight in 1882, and still very attractive. Tolstoy, by contrast, desired only to simplify his life now, and wanted nothing to do with the conventions of polite society. Instead he gravitated towards peasant sectarians like Vasily Syutayev and ascetics like the ‘Moscow Socrates’ Nikolay Fyodorov, the eccentric philosopher-librarian of the Rumyantsev Library who deplored all material possessions (even refusing a salary), and slept on bare planks covered only by his threadbare overcoat.
Vasily Syutayev came to visit Tolstoy after the census, and his arrival caused a great stir in Moscow. The tiny sect that he had established in Tver was the subject of a recently published article in the new journal