Ivan Turgenev
November 9th, 2012
On this date in 1818, Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev
was born in Oryol, in the Ukraine, Russia, to a noble family. His
mother never spared the whip with Ivan or their 5,000 serfs. Ivan was
educated at the universities of Moscow, St. Petersburg and Berlin. He
published poetry and short stories, then Papers of a Sportsman
(1852), whose empathetic rendering of the plight of serfs reportedly
influenced the czar to liberate them. Turgenev spent a month in
detention for writing Letter on Gogol, then was exiled to his estates for 18 months. He and Tolstoy
had a tense but longterm acquaintanceship, with rationalist Turgenev
spurning Tolstoy's "charlatanism," convinced that Russia's salvation lay
in its industry, not its mysticism. Turgenev's stories and novellas
increasingly employed realism. The hostile reaction to his novel Fathers and Sons
sent Turgenev into exile. After living in Germany and London, he spent
the rest of his life in Paris. Turgenev coined the word nihilist: "A
nihilist is a man who does not bow to any authorities, does not take any
principles on trust, no matter with what respect that principle is
surrounded." Rationalism pervaded his works. "[Turgenev] was a
Freethinker, and detested the apparatus of religion very heartily,"
according to Pavlovsky's Souvenirs sur Tourgenief, (1887, p. 242, cited by Joseph McCabe, Encyclopedia of Modern Rationalists.) D. 1883.
“Whatever a man prays for, he prays for a miracle. Every prayer reduces itself to this: Great God, grant that twice two be not four.”
— Ivan Turgenev, Fathers and Sons, 1861
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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