[1] Letter to the Chinese, October, 1906. (Further Letters).
[2] Tolstoy expressed a fear that this might happen in the above letter.
[3] "It was hardly worth while to refuse military and police service only to revert to property, which is maintained only by those two services. Those who enter the service and profit by property act better than those who refuse all service and enjoy property." (Letter to the Doukhobors of Canada, 1899. Further Letters).
[4] In the Conversations with Teneromo there is a fine page dealing with "the wise Jew, who, immersed in this Book, has not seen the centuries crumble above his head, nor the peoples that appear and disappear from the face of the earth."
[5] "To see the progress of Europe in the horrors of the modern State, the bloodstained State, and to wish to create a new Judenstaat is an abominable sin." (Ibid.)
[6] Appeal to Political Men, 1905.
[7] In the appendix to The Great Crime and in the French translation of Advice to the Ruled is the appeal of a Japanese society for the Re-establishment of the Liberty of the Earth.
[8] Letter to Paul Sabatier, November 7, 1906. (Further Letters.)
[9] Letters to Teneromo, June, 1882, and to a friend, November, 1901. (Further Letters.)