Vronsky’s horse Frou-Frou 37–8
the ‘woman question’ 186
‘Appeal to the Russian People’ 401
‘Bethink Yourselves!’ (article) 399
‘Captive of the Caucasus’ 197, 316
‘Church and State’ 382
Academy of Sciences edition 452–3
‘Jubilee’ edition 198, 437–43, 452
‘The Devil’ 96, 138, 264–5, 410
‘The Essence of Christian Teaching’ 346
‘Father Iliodor’ 34
‘Father Sergius’ 192–3, 332, 333
‘A Few Words About the Novel
‘The First Step 334–5
‘The Girl and the Mushrooms’ 196
‘God Sees the Truth But Waits’ 197
‘How Wolves Teach Their Cubs’ 196 ‘I Cannot Be Silent’ 346, 407
advocacy of chastity 329, 377
afterword 330, 333
and Alice Stockham’s
association of carnal love with extreme violence 324
banned 330
chekhov on 329–30
female sensuality censured 370
inspiration for 324–5
publication 330–31
‘The Law of Violence and the Law of Love’ 346
‘Lucerne’ 135, 137, 139
‘Master and Man’ 357
‘The Meaning of the Russian Revolution’ 401–2
‘The Muzhik and the Cucumbers’ 196
‘My Life’ [unfinished memoirs] 35
‘The New Laws and Their Application’ [unfinished article] 227
‘Notes of a Billiard Marker’ 107, 111
‘Notes of a Madman’ 185
‘On Popular Education’ 200, 233
‘On Reason in Religion’ 361
‘Polikushka’ 158–9
‘The Raid – A Volunteer’s Story’ 106, 130
‘Religion and Morality’ 346
attack on the Orthodox Church 381
infamous description of the Holy Eucharist 382
number twenty-eight in 34
plot of 376–7
publication of 377, 378
seduction scene 73, 377
Sonya’s disgust at T’s confession 96
success of 377, 378
translation 378
and T’s excommunication 6, 388
‘Sebastopol in August’ 125
‘Sebastopol in December’ 111, 114–16
‘Sebastopol in May’ (censored version published anonymously as ‘A Night in the Spring of 1855 in Sebastopol’) 115–16, 122
‘Sebastopol in September’ 116–17
‘Shameful’ 64
‘The Snowstorm’ 125
‘Sparrows’ 196
‘Strider’ (‘Kholstomer’) 38, 160–61, 316, 333
‘The Tale of Ivan the Fool’ 316, 333
‘A Terrible Question’ 337, 338
‘Thou Shalt Not Kill’ 346
‘Three Deaths’ 139
‘Tikhon and Malanya’ 159
‘The Two Hussars’ 125
ancestors as prototypes for central characters 13, 19, 21, 29
battle scenes 99, 172
changes in its eventual form 169–70, 177, 201
christmas 46
the holy fool 332
hunting scenes 37
moral duties of Russian aristocracy 81
Moscow as a queenless hive 162
Natasha’s night at the opera 372
Natasha’s seduction by Kuragin 172–3
not regarded as a novel by T 66, 86, 173
popularity 177–8, 180
publication of 2, 169, 170, 173, 177
religiosity of Princess Maria 41–2
research for 166–7, 171, 306
royalties 168–9
sales 173, 209
shooting parties 176
sin and redemption 373
T begins writing 66, 152, 160
T manipulates events and people to suit his view of history 287
‘Three Ages’ plan 165
title 170
translations 281, 317, 347
T’s family members inspire memorable characters 166
T’s skewed presentation of history in 172
Turgenev on 178–9
and World War II 444
written at the happiest time in T’s life 3, 164
written with Sonya’s support 10, 166
and Yasnaya Polyana 25, 26
‘What Men Live By’ 292–3, 299