单选题
Leo Tolstoy was a Russian writer and moral philosopher, and one of the world"s greatest novelists. He was born on April 30,1828 and died on Feb. 14, 1910. His writings
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influenced much of 20th-century literature, and his moral
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helped shape the thinking of several important
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and political leaders.
Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy was born
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a family of noble landowners at his family
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south of Moscow. His early education came from tutors at home, but after the deaths of his parents in the 1830s, he was
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by relatives. He entered Kazan" University when he was 16 but preferred to educate himself independently, and in 1847 he
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his studies without finishing his degree. His next 15 years were very
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. Tolstoy returned to manage the family estate, with the determination to improve himself
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and physically. Alter less than two years, however, he abandoned rural life
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the pleasures of Moscow. In 1851 Tolstoy traveled to the Caucasus, a region then part of southern Russia,
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his brother was serving in the army. He was
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as a volunteer, serving with distinction in the Crimean War from 1853 to 1856.
Tolstoy began his literary career during his army service, and his first work, the semiautobiographical short novel Childhood
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was published in 1852, brought him fame. A series of other stories
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, and when he left the army in 1856 he was acknowledged as a rising new talent in literature.
Tolstoy achieved great literary fame during his lifetime, both in Russia and abroad. Thirty-one translations of his works
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in the year 1887 alone.
The most significant part of Tolstoy"s legacy may be his defense of the individual personality.