Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a count and envoy in the [[Russian Army]] during the [[Crimean War]] ([[1853]]-[[1856]]). He later became a famous author. | '''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a count and envoy in the [[Russian Army]] during the [[Crimean War]] ([[1853]]-[[1856]]). He later became a famous author. | ||
In [[November]] [[1854]], he was put in charge of [[Ace]], whom he believed to be a [[British]] spy. He fell in love with her and was annoyed when she was transferred to another prison. Before she left, she kissed him. She then took him hostage and travelled to [[St Petersburg]]. When she left him, she called him 'writer man' because she knew that he would write ''[[War and Peace]]'' in the near future. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Angel of Scutari (audio story)|The Angel of Scutari]]'') | In [[November]] [[1854]], he was put in charge of [[Ace]], whom he believed to be a [[British]] spy. He fell in love with her and was annoyed when she was transferred to another prison. Before she left, she kissed him. She then took him hostage and travelled to [[St Petersburg]]. When she left him, she called him 'writer man' because she knew that he would write ''[[War and Peace]]'' in the near future. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Angel of Scutari (audio story)|The Angel of Scutari]]'') | ||
In the centuries that followed [[Gavin Oliver Scott|some]] would differentiate him from [[Dostoyevski]] by saying "that Russian who wasn't Tolstoy". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Least Important Man]]'') | In the centuries that followed [[Gavin Oliver Scott|some]] would differentiate him from [[Dostoyevski]] by saying "that Russian who wasn't Tolstoy". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Least Important Man]]'') | ||
{{NameSort}} | {{NameSort}} |
Revision as of 14:17, 26 February 2019
Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy was a count and envoy in the Russian Army during the Crimean War (1853-1856). He later became a famous author.
In November 1854, he was put in charge of Ace, whom he believed to be a British spy. He fell in love with her and was annoyed when she was transferred to another prison. Before she left, she kissed him. She then took him hostage and travelled to St Petersburg. When she left him, she called him 'writer man' because she knew that he would write War and Peace in the near future. (AUDIO: The Angel of Scutari)
In the centuries that followed some would differentiate him from Dostoyevski by saying "that Russian who wasn't Tolstoy". (PROSE: The Least Important Man)