Ilyás (short story) explained

Ilyás
Author:Leo Tolstoy
Title Orig:Ильяс
Country:Russia
Pub Date:1885

"Ilyás" ("Ильяс", 1885, sometimes translated as "Elias") is a short story by Leo Tolstoy written in 1885. It is the story of the farmer, Ilyas, who grew up successful but loses his fortune through mistake, in the end only finding peace without having property.

Plot

According to the literary critic Ernest Joseph Simmons, "Elias" is a story that combines feelings universal to all men with plots and trappings of a supernatural or otherworldly character.[1] Elsewhere, Simmons said that this was one of the wrote as an illustrative text alongside pictures.[2] According to lyricist Robert Hunter, the moral of this story is that one should serve one's master with honesty and humility, no matter how oppressive one's master is.[3]

History

It was translated to English in 1899 by Nathan Haskell Dole[4] and in 1904 by Leo Wiener.[5]

The story is regularly included in academic, literary material for university-level students.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tolstoy . Ernest Joseph Simmons . 2004 . Taylor & Francis. 9781317668886 .
  2. Book: Introduction To Tolstoy's Writings . 8. Later Short Stories . Ernest Joseph Simmons . 1968.
  3. Book: Why We Fail as Christians . 70 . 1914 . Robert Hunter . Macmillan Publishers.
  4. Book: The Complete Works of Lyof N. Tolstoï . 13-14 . Nathan Haskell Dole . 1899. Tolstoy . Graf Leo .
  5. Book: Fables for Children, Stories for Children, Natural Science Stories, Popular Education, Decembrists, Moral Tales . 473 . Leo Tolstoy . 1904 . 9781465511003 . Leo Wiener . Dana Estes & Company.
  6. Book: How to Teach World Literature: Student Review Questions and Tests . 2018 . Elizabeth McCallum Marlow . WestBow Press. 9781973631521 .