Nikolai: Wow, the stars sure are beautiful tonight.
Sonya: They are.
Nikolai: You know who else is beautiful?
Sonya: *blushes* Who?
Nikolai: Tsar Alexander.

Andulka

PR's Tumblrdome
ojovivo
dirt enthusiast

titsay
Today's Document
No title available
i don't do bad sauce passes
YOU ARE THE REASON

if i look back, i am lost
RMH
KIROKAZE
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
cherry valley forever

JBB: An Artblog!

JVL
Cosmic Funnies
art blog(derogatory)
No title available

blake kathryn
seen from Singapore

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from Singapore

seen from Spain

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from Czechia
seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from Denmark
@incorrectrussianlitquotes
Nikolai: Wow, the stars sure are beautiful tonight.
Sonya: They are.
Nikolai: You know who else is beautiful?
Sonya: *blushes* Who?
Nikolai: Tsar Alexander.
I know this is a blog for incorrect Russian lit quotes and not headcanons but I really want to know if you have any headcanons for the war and peace characters
I am so here for this, you have no idea. I spend way too much time thinking about this book and all 2,377 of its characters, I honestly sometimes don’t know how I have any room left in my brain. OKAY HERE GOES:
-Lise Meinen comes from a noble but impoverished family in Livonia (modern Latvia/Estonia, part of the Russian Empire but with its own German Lutheran aristocracy). She was sent to live with relatives in St. Petersburg for the express purpose of making a good marriage. The marriage to Andrei was mostly arranged by their relatives, and they didn’t know each other very well beforehand.
This blog has become my new favourite thing on tumblr; thank you for existing ,you amazing human being! By the way, what's your favourite Russian novel?
Also, War and Peace, probably. Although Crime and Punishment also has a lock on my heart.
That was ninety percent gravity.
Luzhin’s wife, The Defense
*high fives fellow War and Peace lover*
*high-fives you back* wooooooooo
I always like to bring a little irony to a fire fight.
Hermann Karlovich, Despair
Nobody knows where my Genny has gone but Olga left the same time.Why is he holding her handwhen he’s supposed to be mine?
Tatiana Larina, Eugene Onegin
I’m a hunter, and it’s you season.
Parfyon Rogozhin (to Nastasya Filippovna), The Idiot
It’s a terrific year for the trans-seasonal trouser.
Karl Dreyer, King, Queen, Knave
Count Rostov: i love my children! nikolai, natasha, petya, and *squints at smudged writing on hand* varric
Should I read The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, or Crime and Punishment first?
That is tough. Personally I did Bros K, then Crime and Punishment, then the Idiot, which I think worked out well? I would recommend not doing C&P first because it's the most intense/depressing. That is some hardcore Dostoevsky shit right there. Not that Bros K is necessarily *accessible* but somehow I found it easier to handle. The Idiot is maybe the best but probably also the weirdest, so you may want to ease into that as well. So: Bros K first, then the Idiot and Crime and Punishment in whatever order. Just my opinion, though, live your life, bro.
Otradnoe is home. And home is where you find your family. And you try not to make out with your family.
Countess Rostova (to Sonya), War and Peace
See, this is why I don't leave St. Petersburg, all right? You leave St. Petersburg and bad shit happens. I mean, trees? Everywhere trees? What the hell is this place?
Nastasya Filippovna (on Pavlovsk), The Idiot
I can't believe I died for this war.
Andrei Bolkonsky, War and Peace
Maslova: You abandoned me. You left me to die.
Nekhlyudov: I wouldn't have done it if I'd known you were gonna hassle me about it.
What are you staring at? Haven't you ever seen a great man before?
Rodion Raskolnikov, Crime and Punishment
The first rule of the Pavlograd hussars is you do not talk about the Pavlograd hussars. The second rule of the Pavlograd hussars is YOU DO NOT TALK ABOUT THE PAVLOGRAD HUSSARS.
Denisov (to Nikolai Rostov), War and Peace