Tolstoy never reached his destination. On 31 October he boarded a train heading south to Rostov-on-don with dr Makovický and Sasha (who had joined them by this time), but had to get off at Astapovo when he fell ill. Tolstoy was put to bed in the station master’s house. Sasha summoned Chertkov, who arrived with his secretary on 2 November, followed by Sergey, and then Sonya who had chartered a train with Tanya, Andrey and Misha. The next day Ilya arrived, as well as Gorbunov-Posadov and Goldenweiser, and on 5 November sixty army officers swelled the ranks of the secret police officers already stationed there. Once the news reached the press, the story made front page headlines. Soon the whole world knew what was happening at the remote railway station in Ryazan province. On 7 November 1910, amidst of a frenzy of international publicity, which included regular headlines in
There was only one place Tolstoy could be buried, and that was in the grounds of his ancestral home Yasnaya Polyana, where he had spent some seventy of his eighty years. He was interred where exactly as he had wished, at the spot in the woods a short walk from his house where the little green stick was buried – the little green stick on which his brother Nikolay had told him the secret to human happiness was written. Aware that mourners from all over Russia would want to attend the funeral, and that the quicker the burial, the fewer would have time to make the journey, the Russian government hastened with the arrangements. There were so many students attending the meetings organised at Moscow University the day following Tolstoy’s death that even the corridors were full, and the 800 reserved seats on the train that their representatives managed to negotiate with the management of the Kursk station could have been filled many times over. Thousands besieged the station, but the government forbade the running of any extra trains. Nevertheless, thousands did manage to pay their last respects, having sat all night on a freezing train which brought them to Zaseka station (as Yasenki had been renamed) in the early hours of the morning. It was a clear November night, bonfires were burning, and students had to struggle to restrain the enormous crowd awaiting the arrival of the special train bearing Tolstoy’s coffin. But as soon as the train’s yellow lights emerged out of the fog on that cold morning, the crowd fell completely silent.
When it was removed from the carriage, which prompted the immediate removal of hats, the wooden coffin containing Tolstoy’s body seemed somehow small and too short. The writer’s sons passed the coffin over to peasants from Yasnaya Polyana, who would carry it on its final journey. With the exception of the police in attendance, the entire crowd started softly singing ‘Eternal Memory’, the sombre song which concludes every Orthodox funeral. Still singing, the crowd set off behind Sofya Andreyevna and her sons, to walk for three hours to reach Tolstoy’s ancestral home – first down the slope and across the little wooden bridge over the stream, then through the birch and alder forest underneath frosted branches, and then along bare, frozen fields, lightly covered in snow, which were the same pale-white colour as the sky.
Ahead of the coffin village carts carried wreaths and fir-twigs, which were strewn along the path by students and old women. As many noted with amazement, the whole of Russian society had come together on that day to pay their last respects – peasants, aristocrats, intellectuals and factory workers, old and young, male and female – and this was something quite unprecedented. Two local peasants carried a banner as they walked on which they had painted ‘Lev Nikolayevich! The Memory of Your Goodness Will not die Amongst the Orphaned Peasants of Yasnaya Polyana’. No one in the village surrounding Tolstoy’s estate had been to bed, and their houses remained lit throughout the night. One local peasant was heard to remark that it was just like at Easter, when everyone stayed up for the midnight service, before going home to break the long fast in the early hours and start celebrating.