[385.] Countess S. N. Tolstoi.
[386.] See [Note 384].
[387.] This thought is developed more in detail by Tolstoi in the Legend of the Stones (see The Reading Circle, Volume II).
[388.] Alfred B. Westrup. Plenty of Money. N. Y., 1899.
[389.] Countess O. C. Tolstoi, born Dieterichs, first wife of A. L. Tolstoi.
[390.] The artist, Julia Ivanovna Igumnov, who lived a long time in Yasnaya Polyana. At this time she helped Tolstoi to copy his manuscripts and his letters.
[391.] A. D. Arkhangelsky, a student in the Moscow University, who lived as a teacher in Tolstoi’s house.
[392.] These chapters on Resurrection were sent to the publishing house of Niva to be set up.
[393.] An interrogation point in the copy at the disposal of the editors.
[394.] Living at this time with the Tolstois in Moscow, Countess O. K. Tolstoi, in a letter to V. G. Chertkov on November 22nd, 1899, described Tolstoi’s illness in this way: “Yesterday we lived through a terrible evening and night. In the evening after dinner, Tolstoi went to his room to lie down, and after several minutes we were all attracted by terrible groans from him ... he was taken with severe stomach pains which were very severe from four o’clock in the morning to seven in the evening. He suffered terribly and at first nothing helped.” Tolstoi suffered especially from vomiting which lasted twenty-eight hours. His doctors were P. S. Usev and Prof. M. P. Cherinov. “Both medicine and feeding,” another person wrote to Chertkov from Moscow, December 5, 1899, “is given now by entreaty and persuasion, now by tears and now by deception, which is even more depressing than tears. To-day everything is better: pains and appetite and strength.” Tolstoi got out of bed December 6th and little by little began to walk. But the following days he had pain and felt weakness.