Pierre goes through Free Mason ceremony, clip 20 Prince Andre's social reforms for his peasants on his estates are thwarted by the overseers' "Potemkin Village" like chicanery. M4B Audiobook part 1 (218MB) M4B Audiobook part 2 (221MB) Dole)įor further information, including links to online text, reader information, RSS feeds, CD cover or other formats (if available), please go to the LibriVox catalog page for this recording.įor more free audio books or to become a volunteer reader, visit. ![]() Tolstoy finds endless opportunities of inculcating his favorite themes: - the mastery of circumstance over will and desire, the weakness of man in the front of things, and the necessity for resignation." (from the Preface by N.H. As we summon our recollections of the prodigal outpouring of a careless genius, a troop of characters as lifelike as any in Scott or in Shakespeare, defile before our mental eye. We pass at a leap from a soiree to a battle-field, from a mud hovel to a palace, from an idyl to a saturnalia. "The court and camp, town and country, nobles and peasants, - all are sketched in with the same broad and sure outline. What a succession - a kaleidoscopic succession of life-views, he gives in "War and Peace!" One follows the other without confusion, naturally, with entrancing interest. And yet what a picture of a battle was ever more vivid! It is like a painting where the general impression is true, but a close analysis discovers nothing but contradictory lines! I would defy an historian to reconstruct the battle of Austerlitz from Count Tolstoy's description. ![]() He is as willing to adopt an anachronism as a medieval painter. Numberless incongruities can be pointed out. I am inclined to rank Count Tolstoy not among the realists or naturalists, but rather as an impressionist.
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