Family
Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy was born September 9, 1828 (new style) at his family’s estate, Yasnaya Polyana, in Russia. His childhood was somewhat normal, for someone of the upper class, except for the constant repetition of death in his life. The first came at age two with the death of his mother.
Leo Tolstoy got along with his three older brothers, Nikolai, Sergei, and Dmitiri, and younger sister, Marya. Dmitri, being the closest in age, was Tolstoy’s playmate most of his childhood but their relationship never progressed beyond boyhood games. Sergei, for Tolstoy, most closely represented his mother and his sister, Marya, later became a nun for the church. Yet it was his oldest brother Nikolai, that, Tolstoy admired.
The Green Stick
The following account is taken from Ernest J. Simmons’ biography Leo Tolstoy
Nikolai solemnly announced to his siblings one day that he possessed a wonderful secret that could make all men happy. If it became generally known, a kind of golden age would exist on earth: there would be no more disease, no human misery, and no anger. All would love one another and become “Ant Brothers.” (Moravskiye bratya – “Moravian Brothers” – of whom young Nikolai had no doubt read, was probably mistakenly transformed by the boys into Muraveinye bratya – “Ant Brothers.”)
The children adopted the idea with enthusiasm and even organized a game of Ant Brothers. Boxes and chairs were converted with shawls, and they all cuddled together in the dark within the shelter.
Nikolai had disclosed the Ant Brotherhood to them but not the chief secret – the means by which all men would become everlastingly happy. He had written this secret, he said, on a green stick buried by the road at the edge of a ravine in the Zakaz forest.
The other children soon forgot about the green stick. Tolstoy, however, traced to the Ant Brotherhood under the shawl-covered chairs his first childhood experience of love, not love of some one person, but love of love. Huddled together under the chairs, the Ant Brothers felt a particular tenderness for each other, and they talked of what was necessary for happiness and how they would love everybody. When he was over seventy, he recalled the incident in his Recollections:
The ideal of Ant Brothers clinging lovingly to one another, only not under two armchairs curtained by shawls, but of all the people of the world under the wide dome of heaven, has remained unaltered for me. As I then believed that there was a little green stick whereon was written something which would destroy all evil in men and give them great blessings, so I now believe that such truth exists among people and will be revealed to them and will give them what it promises.
Two years before his death, Tolstoy dictated to his secretary, N.N. Gusev, the following: “Although it is a trifling matter, yet I wish to say something that I should like done after my death. Even though it is a trifle of trifles: let no ceremonies be performed in putting my body into the earth. A wooden coffin, and whoever wishes, carry it or cart it to Zakaz, opposite the ravine at the place of the ‘green stick.’ At least, there’s a reason for selecting that and no other place.” When he mentioned the green stick, Gusev observed, tears filled his eyes.
Moscow
At age nine his family moved to Moscow but returned each summer to Yasnaya Polyana. It was a new world for Tolstoy. Beggars on the street that no one paid attention to and serfs who didn’t acknowledge, let alone bow to his father, all helped Tolstoy realize that Yasnaya Polyana was no longer the center of the world.
After the family had rented a home Tolstoy’s father left for Tula on business. While en route to a friends house he mysteriously “turned up dead” on the road. Because his papers and money were missing it’s widely believed he was murdered by those servants that accompanied him, not unheard of at the time. Shortly afterwards Tolstoy’s grandmother also passed away.
Losing two family members in the same year pushed Tolstoy to ask tough questions and formulate serious ideas about death and happiness. He concluded that death could come at any time and that happiness can be obtained simply by enjoying the present. So for three days he set aside his homework and read a novel and ate ginger bread which he bought with his last kopek.
He also believed that if one could learn to endure suffering they would never be unhappy. To increase his stamina for suffering he would hold a dictionary straight out in front of himself for five minutes. Another time he whipped himself until he started to cry. Needless to say both these activities were short lived.
While these perceptive thoughts may seem unusual for a nine year old boy Leo Tolstoy had his share of boyish concerns. Not the least were his looks. His cauliflower nose, bushy eyebrows, and big lips convinced him he was ugly. Daily he prayed and asked God to make him as good looking as his older brother Nikolai. When that didn’t work he took a pair of scissors and cut off his eyebrows only to have them grow back thicker than before. These worries only made a naturally shy Tolstoy even more self conscience.