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Title: Turgenev in English:
       A Checklist of Works by and about Him

Author: Rissa Yachnin
        David H. Stam

Release Date: March 4, 2018 [EBook #56678]

Language: English

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Cover

TURGENEV IN ENGLISH


Frontispiece
Ivan Turgenev

TURGENEV IN ENGLISH
A Checklist of Works by and about Him

Compiled by
RISSA YACHNIN and DAVID H. STAM

With an Introductory Essay by
MARC SLONIM


New York
The New York Public Library
1962


THIS VOLUME HAS BEEN PUBLISHED WITH HELP
FROM THE EMILY ELLSWORTH FORD SKEEL FUND
*  *  *
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 61-11067

Printed at The New York Public Library
form p692 [ii-2-62 1m]

5


Preface

This checklist was originally intended as a tribute to the memory of Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev (1818–1883) on the seventy-fifth anniversary of his death. The first section takes account of all works by Turgenev published in English translation, including collected editions, selections, and individually published works. The collected editions are arranged chronologically while the selections and individually published works are arranged alphabetically by English title. A second section lists stories, prose poems, and other works of Turgenev which were published in anthologies and periodicals. These are arranged alphabetically by the titles under which they were published, with individual stories and prose poems from A Sportsman’s Notebook and Poems in Prose being brought together under those titles. The checklist concludes with a large section dealing with Turgenev criticism in English, arranged chronologically.

Encyclopedia entries, brief notes, theatrical notices, adaptations from Turgenev, and other trivia have as a rule not been included. No special effort has been made to locate book reviews published after 1904, when publication of the Hapgood translation of the collected works was completed. Book reviews published before that time have been included as separate entries in the chronological listing of Turgenev criticism, thus giving an approximate idea of the progress of Turgenev studies in the nineteenth-century Anglo-Saxon world.

Most entries have been personally examined. In addition to checking entries for Turgenev in the National Union Catalog and in the printed catalogs of the Library of Congress, the Slavonic Division of The New York Public Library, and the British Museum, the compilers have also searched through the collections of Princeton, Harvard, and Columbia universities.

Much difficulty was encountered in arriving at a satisfactory listing of the collected editions of Turgenev’s works, especially of the Garnett and Hapgood translations. These were published piecemeal as well as complete and the more popular volumes were frequently reissued, printed from the same plates. We have had to be content with listing the first publication of each volume in the collected editions, the dates in which complete sets were reprinted, and then listing whatever separate reprints we have found to exist. Presumably there are several more.

Stories published in periodicals often appeared under very non-Turgenevian titles; as much as possible these have been traced to the more standard English titles and so noted.

6

The index includes an alphabetical list of authors and translators, and an index of titles containing the transliterated Russian titles and the translated titles of all works listed in this checklist. All title variations of a translated work are listed in this index under the Russian title (e. g. for Liza etc see Dvoryanskoye gnezdo). For variant titles of a work for which only one English title is known, bracketed reference is made after each English title to the transliterated Russian title.

The compilers are grateful to Marc Slonim for contributing the introductory essay and to Richard C. Lewanski for his friendly encouragement. The compilers are also indebted to the work of Royal A. Gettmann, whose Turgenev in England and America (Univ of Illinois 1941; item 416) critically charted much of the material published before 1936.

R. Y.

D. S.


7–8

Table of Contents

PREFACE 5
TURGENEV REVISITED 9
WORKS BY TURGENEV:
  Collected Works:
    Collected editions
    Selected Stories and Plays
  Separately Published Works
  Articles, Stories, and Poems Published in Anthologies and Periodicals


17
20
21
25
WORKS ABOUT TURGENEV 33
TITLE INDEX 43
AUTHOR AND TRANSLATOR INDEX 53

9

Turgenev Revisited

A hundred years ago, in 1855, the first translations from Turgenev’s Sportsman’s Sketches appeared in French and British periodicals, and since that time his works have continued to gain an ever increasing acclaim in the Western world. Henry James, one of his fervent admirers, was not exaggerating when he wrote in 1874 that the Russian was “the first novelist of the day,” and Howells confessed a few years later that he had formed for Turgenev “one of the profoundest literary passions” of his life. At the beginning of the present century Arnold Bennett, asked to name the twelve best novels of world literature, included six of Turgenev’s in his honor list. Flaubert and Galsworthy, Conrad and Maupassant paid high tribute to Turgenev and ranked him with Fielding, Thackeray, and Balzac.

Turgenev was the first Russian writer to conquer large audiences outside his native land. He actually introduced Russian literature to Europe and America which, through him, discovered and admired the originality of Russian genius. The impact of his own work, moreover, was enhanced by his personal influence. For almost three decades Turgenev, who spent more time abroad than at home, was recognized as the ambassador of Russian letters in Europe. Friend of most outstanding representatives of European art and thought, he was a familiar figure in Western capitals, and the honorary degree awarded to him by the University of Oxford was but a small part of the homage paid to him by his devotees.

Yet despite his unique position and his wide following in almost every land, Turgenev’s fortunes declined sharply in the twentieth century, when many reservations were formulated about his work and person. Some of these qualifications revived old discussions and repeated arguments known already in Turgenev’s lifetime; some of them, however, were of more recent origin and expressed doubts peculiar to our century.

It is well known that most of Turgenev’s illustrious French colleagues as well as Henry James and the Scandinavian-American Boyesen, who met the Russian personally, always spoke of him as being “completely Russian.” The brothers Goncourt describe him in their Journal of 1863 as a “white haired giant who looked like the spirit of a mountain or a forest,” an embodiment of Russian soil; Henry James stressed his eminently Russian characteristics and his preoccupation with Russian affairs; and after his death Renan said that “he was the incarnation of the whole race ... his conscience was in some sort the conscience of a people.” It is curious that the main reservation of later times dealt precisely with the problem of Turgenev’s national authenticity.10 There is still a widespread opinion that the author of Fathers and Sons became dear to readers outside Russia because of his European formation and his Western leanings. Alfred Kazin stated not long ago that Turgenev “seemed of all the great Russians the least characteristic”; the American critic understands perfectly why Henry James “found it so easy in 1878 to include an appreciation of Turgenev in French Poets and Novelists.” The familiar thesis is that Europeans and Americans of the last century loved Turgenev for his moderation, his conformity to the rules of Victorian art, and his lack of irritating and disturbing Russian national traits. The supporters of this opinion point out that Turgenev’s novels and tales are as tame and respectable as their British counterparts of the same period; his heroines are not very different from the misses in the English family novels, and his nests of gentlefolk could be easily located in the countryside on the other side of the channel or even in Massachusetts or Rhode Island. Turgenev’s urbane and restrained manners and his polished style, his gloss and grace, are considered as having been more suitable to and therefore more naturally appreciated in London and Boston than in Moscow and St Petersburg (not to speak of Leningrad).

When Tolstoy and Dostoevsky became known and widely read at the end of the nineteenth century and in the first decades of the twentieth century, they not only overshadowed Turgenev but were opposed to him as genuine interpreters of the Russian national scene. Compared to those two giants who shattered the world by the depth and frenzy of their moral and religious search, Turgenev lost in stature. Some critics advanced the theory that he was but an isolated phenomenon in Russian letters; that in any case he did not represent its main stream. His art, they argued, was strangely devoid of any serious moral intent, he never affirmed anything in any area of human endeavour, he never defended any doctrine and never fought on the side of any group. In this he differed fundamentally from other Russians. They were believers or searchers for truth and seekers after God, and he was an agnostic and a skeptic. He belonged much more to the old world of Western decadent culture than to the rising lands of the revolutionary East. And this is why, to quote Mr Kazin again, Turgenev’s “civilized and European art seems no longer in the foreground of Russian literature but behind it.” His unhappy noblemen and his delicately portrayed girls appeared elusive, sentimental, and pallid next to Dostoevsky’s holy sinners and Tolstoy’s robust, full blooded men and women. While the rest of Russian literature conveyed the feeling of exuberant vitality and deep passions, Turgenev’s watercolors exuded melancholy and passivity, and his protagonists (except11 for Bazarov) talked and acted like second rate Werthers or poor versions of Hamlet. Was he not, in fact, the author of a story entitled Hamlet of the Shchigrov District?

One of the few Russians who did not try to preach and to win over the reader to some credo or idea, Turgenev became suspect even as a chronicler of his society. Russian critics had always interpreted Turgenev’s novels as illustrations of the evolutionary process within the native educated classes between 1850 and 1880. Rudin (1855) represented the idealist of the forties, Lavretzky (1858) was typical of the fifties, On the Eve (1860) conveyed the atmosphere of expectation before the era of great reforms, and Bazarov in Fathers and Sons (1861) personified the new generation of nihilists. Later Smoke (1867) and Virgin Soil (1877) reflected the political debate and the beginnings of the populist movement. Already during Turgenev’s lifetime his pictures of Russia started numerous discussions, and, as Edward Garnett said in his essay in 1917, provoked much angry heat and raised great clouds of acrimonious smoke because the defenders and the detractors of the writer disagreed about the historical accuracy of his representation. And fifty years after his death his importance as a social realist was questioned again. His portrayals of superfluous men afflicted by idleness or paralysis of the will seemed particularly inappropriate at a time when the Revolution had unleashed such an astounding amount of energy in Russia and transformed the whole country into an immense workshop. Not only was Turgenev lacking in “publicity value” but when things Russian were popular or when everybody was trying to solve the riddles of Russia’s present regime, Turgenev could hardly help. Charles Morgan said in this connection that Turgenev was too unspectacular, too moderate and patient in spirit. Besides, his protagonists did not look like ancestors of twentieth-century Russians (again excepting Bazarov). And this led to an obvious conclusion: his novels and tales belonged to another age, they were visions of the past, and theirs was the quaint charm of early daguerreotypes in period frames. Turgenev was old fashioned, dated, and offered only an historical interest. Of course, it would be erroneous to identify any work of fiction with a straight representation of reality, but in Turgenev’s case it was assumed that, while not making an exception to the rule, he was especially insensitive to Russia’s historical development. He could not foresee its future and never went beyond the limitations of the small social group to which he belonged and which he depicted with an almost annoying monotony.

Doubts were also cast on Turgenev’s art. In the nineteenth century even those who wondered about Turgenev’s national authenticity or his social12 philosophy and historical accuracy recognized his craft and mastery. Yet the same George Moore who spoke of Turgenev’s “unfailing artistry” in the eighties, later reproached him as having “a thinness, an irritating reserve,” and repeated the quip of a British journalist who remarked that the Russian was “a very big man playing a very small instrument.” The same George Moore echoed the discontent of the younger generation with Turgenev’s lack of psychological depth: “he has often seemed to us to have left much unsaid, to have, as it were, only drawn the skin from his subject. Magnificently well is the task performed; but we should like to have seen the carcass disembowelled and hung up.” Maurice Baring wrote in the twenties that Turgenev’s works were dated, that he was inaccurate as a social historian and did not reflect the true Russia, and that his subject matter was too narrow. Others added in the thirties that Turgenev, this minor Hamlet who depicted unhappy love affairs of aristocratic ladies, covered only a small area of Russian reality. He was not sufficiently dynamic or varied, there was something effeminate about his manner, and his lyrical qualities were superficial. In general his art was too contrived and self conscious, its gentility simply expressing an organic lack of directness and vitality. A German critic of the thirties found “sweet and pleasant this art for convalescents which makes one agreeably drowsy.”

While Marxist critics were inclined to see in Turgenev a “literary ghost from a sunken world of landed gentry” whose pessimism expressed the doom of his own class, others attacked the very smoothness of Turgenev’s style. Alexis Remizov, an outstanding emigré novelist who appreciated Turgenev and refused to “simplify” problems deriving from his work, identified him nevertheless with the “Karamzine line of Russian letters”: in the opinion of Remizov and many of his followers, Karamzine initiated in the eighteenth century that artificial literary idiom of the upper classes which abandoned the racy genuine language of the people and imitated the literary models of the West. The Karamzine-Turgenev-Chekhov trend of elegance, restraint, and linguistic refinement was opposed by the truly national tradition of pre-Petrine Russia with its down-to-earth realism, Greek-Orthodox and pagan roots, and popular vernacular. From that point of view Turgenev again was declared “unfit for our times, not representative as a Russian writer,” edulcorated and conventional as an artist.

While all these criticisms were widespread in literary circles of the thirties, World War II and its aftermath brought about a change of heart and a revision of current judgments of Turgenev. Apparently readers both in Russia and the Western countries as well as throughout Asia (particularly13 in China and Japan) showed more stability than the critics: they did not seem to find Turgenev so dated as to drop him. Turgenev emerged as one of the most popular authors in the Soviet Union, particularly in the decade following the war with Hitler. Between 1948 and 1958 the USSR press turned out an average of three to four million copies of his works yearly, and in America and Europe there was a definite revival of interest. His novels and short stories were issued in new translations and found a large following among young and old.

It is evident that only few went to Turgenev for wisdom on the fate of communism or to gain some “first hand knowledge of Russia,” a fashionable slogan of the time. But historians of literature and students of Turgenev suddenly discovered more profound reasons for his hundred-year hold over the general public. Charles Morgan, in an essay in his Reflections in a Mirror (1944), observed that Turgenev was criticised for his calm and his outward lack of dynamism, but then appropriately quoted Tolstoy’s letter to Strakhov (Dostoevsky’s biographer and disciple) after Turgenev’s death: “The longer I live,” wrote Tolstoy, “the more I like horses that are not restive. You say that you are reconciled to Turgenev. And I have come to love him very much, and curiously enough, just because he is not restive but gets to his destination. Turgenev will outlive Dostoevsky and not for his artistic qualities but because he is not restive.”

Tolstoy pointed out that Turgenev’s quiet tone was the result of control and not indifference. The strength of his understatement, enhanced by the neatness of his composition, was based on his essential humanity. Therefore it is erroneous to rank Turgenev with the representatives of the “well-made novel.” Of course, he used the “dramatic technique,” followed strictly the rule of the withdrawal of the author from his narrative, and built the latter on the revelation of characters through their actions and words. But he never tried to conceal his aversions and sympathies. The spontaneity of his emotional response and the freedom of his treatment of topics and characters made his works totally different from conventional Anglo-Saxon standards and from the French logical formality in constructing the “well-made novel.”

What led to errors of evaluation were his serene diction and his belief that a good work of art must never lose its equilibrium or poise, even when dealing with anxiety and madness. He praised highly the “tranquillity in passion” of the French tragedian Rachel and spoke of her acting as a model of high esthetic fulfillment. Actually, the subject matter of Turgenev’s novels and tales is far from idyllic: his love stories inevitably terminate in doom and14 frustration, and none of his novels has a happy ending, death striking most of his heroes. Throughout his works Turgenev displays an acute sense of the tragic in life and a constant preoccupation with man’s condition on earth. Yet this pessimism is far from strident, and the writer’s most poignant emotions and reflections are always expressed in an even voice, without outbursts of despair. Turgenev loves order, symmetry, balance, and radiance, and he presents a harmonized picture of life which makes his work appear self-contained. There is a world which can rightly be called “Turgenevian,” and it stands in its own right as a complete and rounded achievement.

It could be argued that such an esthetic phenomenon is of sufficient importance to justify Turgenev’s appeal in 1961. But other factors should be noted to understand the recent revival of interest in his work. Today we find Turgenev much more “authentically Russian” than did readers of half a century ago. Fathers and Sons should be required reading for anyone who wishes to understand the psychology of the Russian post-revolutionary generation. Bazarov is the forerunner of all the men of action in Soviet literature, in much the same way that Elena, Marianna, and Natalia are typical representatives of Russia’s modern women. It is not difficult to discover that Turgenev’s characters, despite their old fashioned garb, are more fundamentally national than many exotic figures of post-Turgenev fiction who were branded by sensation-craving readers as “true Russians.”

For another thing, Turgenev, with his method of understatement (which Chekhov followed), is closer to modern literary trends than other realists of his own age. One can easily foresee that his tales—and they are probably the best and most enduring part of his work—will attract the attention and admiration of readers and writers for a long time, because they form a counterpart to the era of exaggerated psychologism which is rapidly approaching its decline. Nobody today will accuse Turgenev of “lack of psychological depth” or of over-simplicity. In his own unobtrusive manner, Turgenev hinted at all the complexities of the human soul and alluded to the hidden roots of human actions. In the dreams in Turgenev’s works is an unsuspected wealth of psychological insight.

Virginia Woolf, in her last essays, wrote that “his books were curiously of our own time, undecayed, and complete in themselves.... His novels are so short and yet they hold so much. The emotion is so intense and yet so calm. The form is in one sense so perfect, in another so broken. They are about Russia in the fifties and sixties of the last century, and yet they are about ourselves at the present moment.” What struck her as his greatest accomplishment was the union of fact and vision that he aimed at in all his15–16 writings. Turgenev himself formulated his ideal in a letter in which he said that the artist should not be simply satisfied to catch life in all its manifestations; he ought to understand them, to comprehend the laws according to which they evolve—even though those laws are not always visible.

While Turgenev’s national authenticity has been fully reestablished in the last decade and his universality and perfection often stressed by Western and Russian writers, a revision has also taken place with regard to his “objectivity.” The legend of his “impersonality” has been easily denounced by the psychological brand of criticism which found that Turgenev, as an individual, was prey to morbid complexes and obsessions, and suffered from many inner contradictions and fears. Already at the end of the nineteenth century George Moore assumed that “what influenced Turgenev’s life is put forward in his books,” and went on to argue that Turgenev exposed his own weaknesses and failures through the medium of his heroes and their unlucky experiences with life and women. Extremely representative of this trend in contemporary interpretation is the brilliant essay (1958) by Edmund Wilson which examines Turgenev’s art in the light of his biography.

Of course the flow of literary fortune is in constant ebb, and the rejection of yesterday’s formulae by critics and readers of our time is not final. Yet one has the feeling that we have overcome the biased and inimical judgments of the beginning of the century and particularly those of the twenties and thirties. Turgenev is returning to the Pantheon of world literature, not by sufferance but by merit. His lasting qualities as a story teller, as a painter of Russian life and character, and as an incomparable analyst of love seem more evident to us today than they did to the pre-war generation. He will remain a beloved writer for years to come—as long as elegiac grief combined with his exaltation of love and beauty and his vision of art as an orderly arrangement of emotional values can still quicken the feelings and the esthetic sense of men and women throughout the world.

M. S.

Sarah Lawrence College


17

Works by Turgenev


COLLECTED WORKS


COLLECTED EDITIONS

[Turgenieff’s Works] New York, Holt etc 1867–85.     1

This series, although published not as a collected edition but as part of Holt’s Leisure Hour series, often has binder’s title, “Turgenieff’s Works.”

[1] Fathers and sons. Tr E. Schuyler. New York, Leypoldt & Holt 1867. 248 p

Reprinted 1872 by Holt. Also published with Lovell imprint [c1867]

[2] Liza, or, A nest of nobles. Tr W. R. S. Ralston. New York, Holt 1872. 318 p

Reprinted 1873.

[3] Smoke. Tr from the author’s French version by William F. West. New York, Holt & Williams 1872. 291 p

Also published 1872 with Lovell imprint. Reprinted 1873.

[4] Dimitri Roudine. Tr from the French and German versions. New York, Holt & Williams 1873. 271 p

Reprinted from Every Saturday (see item 133).

[5] On the eve. Tr C. E. Turner. New York, Holt-Williams 1873. 272 p

Reprinted 1875.

[6] Spring floods. Tr Mrs Sophie Michell Butts. A Lear of the steppe. Tr from the French by William Hand Browne. New York, Holt 1874. 219 p

Also published 1874 with Lovell imprint.

[7] Virgin soil. Tr with the author’s sanction by T. S. Perry. New York, Holt 1877. 315 p

This edition and the French version both appeared before the Russian edition which was published in 1878.

[8] Annals of a sportsman. Tr F. Abbott. New York, Holt 1885. 311 p

Turgenev protested against this translation which he felt to be inadequate.

[The works of Ivan Turgénieff] London, New York, Ward, Lock 1889. New ed. 5 v.     2

Contents:

Dimitri Roudine

Fathers and sons

Liza, or A noble nest. 318 p

Smoke

Virgin soil

This collection is cited in The American Catalogue 1884–1890, but the compilers have been unable to locate the set. The scant publishing evidence available leads us to deduce that Ward, Lock obtained the rights for these volumes from Holt and issued them both separately and in this collection, printing from the same plates.

Separate publication was as follows. Dimitri Roudine (1883); Fathers and sons (1883); Smoke (1883); Virgin soil (1883); and Liza (1884). (See The English Catalogue of Books iv 1881–1889.) These were presumably London imprints.

The novels of Ivan Turgenev. Tr Constance Garnett. Intro to vol 1–2 by S. Stepniak [pseud]; to vols 3–7, 12, 14–15 by Edward Garnett. London, Heinemann; New York, Macmillan 1894–99. 15 v. illus     3

v. 1. Rudín. 1894. 260 p

v. 2. A house of gentlefolk. 1894. 311 p

v. 3. On the eve. 1895. 290 p

v. 4. Fathers and sons. 1895. 359 p

v. 5. Smoke. 1896. 315 p

v. 6–7. Virgin soil. 1896. 244, 262 p

v. 8–9. A sportsman’s sketches. 1895. 292, 284 p

Contents: Vol 8: Hor and Kalinitch.—Yermolai and the miller’s wife.—Raspberry spring.—The district doctor.—My neighbour Radilov.—The peasant proprietor Ovsyanikov.—Lgov.—Byezhin prairie.—Kassyan of Fair Springs.—The agent.—The counting-house.—Biryuk.—Two country gentlemen.—Lebedyan.

Vol 9: Tatyana Borissovna and her nephew.—Death.—The singers.—Piotr Petrovitch Karataev.—The tryst.—The Hamlet of the Shtchigri district.—Tchertop-Hanov and Nedopyuskin.—The end of Tchertop-Hanov.—A living relic.—The rattling of wheels.—Epilogue: The forest and the steppe.

v. 10. Dream tales and prose poems. 1897. 324 p

Includes Clara Militch, Phantoms, The song of triumphant love, The dream. Poems in prose: The country, A conversation, The old woman, The dog, My adversary, The beggar, “Thou shalt hear the fool’s judgment ...,” A contented man, A rule of life, The end of the world, Masha, The fool, An eastern legend, Two stanzas, The sparrow, The skulls, The workman and the man with white18 hands, The rose, To the memory of U. P. Vrevsky, The last meeting, A visit, Necessitas-vis-libertas! Alms, The insect, Cabbage-soul, The realm of azure, Two rich men, The old man, The reporter, The two brothers, The egoist, The banquet of the supreme being, The sphinx, The nymphs, Friend and enemy, Christ, The stone, The doves, To-morrow! To-morrow! Nature, Hang him! What shall I think? “How fair, how fresh were the roses...,” On the sea, N. N., Stay! Prayer, The Russian tongue.

v. 11. The torrents of spring, and other stories. 1897. 406 p

Includes First love, and Mumu.

v. 12. A Lear of the Steppes, and other stories. 1898. 318 p

Includes Faust, and Acia.

v. 13. The diary of a superfluous man, and other stories. 1899. 326 p

Includes A tour in the forest, Yakov Pasinkov, Andrei Kolosov, A correspondence.

v. 14. A desperate character, and other stories. 1899. 318 p

Includes A strange story, Punin and Baburin, Old portraits, The brigadier, Pyetushkov.

v. 15. The Jew, and other stories. 1899. 322 p

Includes An unhappy girl, The duellist, Three portraits, Enough.

Reprints:

—— London, Heinemann; New York, Macmillan 1906. 15 v.

—— London, Heinemann; New York, Macmillan 1916. 15 v.

Separate reprintings:

v. 1. Rudín. Reprinted 1912, 1917, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1930.

v. 2. A house of gentlefolk. Reprinted 1900, 1911, 1913, 1914, 1915, 1917, 1920. Another edition published 1921, 330 p; reprinted 1922, 1930.

v. 3. On the eve. Reprinted 1920, 1921, 1928.

v. 4. Fathers and children. Reprinted 1899, 1901, 1905, 1912, 1915, 1917, 1920, 1924, 1926 (1928 and 1932 in the series, The travellers library).

American edition published as Fathers and sons.

v. 5. Smoke. Reprinted 1901, 1904, 1912, 1915, 1917. New edition 1920, 330 p; reprinted 1921, 1928.

v. 6–7. Virgin soil. Reprinted 1901, 1913, 1915, 1917, 1920, 1921.

v. 8–9. A sportsman’s notebook. Reprinted 1902, 1913, 1920, 1924.

v. 10. Dream tales and prose poems. Reprinted 1904, 1913, 1917, 1920, 1921.

v. 11. The torrents of spring, and other stories. Reprinted 1905, 1914, 1917, 1920, 1921.

v. 12. A Lear of the steppes, and other stories. Reprinted 1912, 1914, 1917, 1920.

v. 13. The diary of a superfluous man, and other stories. Reprinted 1920, 1921.

v. 14. A desperate character, and other stories. Reprinted 1911, 1917, 1920. New edition published 1921, 333 p.

v. 15. The Jew, and other stories. Reprinted 1913, 1919, 1920. Another edition published 1921, 337 p.

To this collection Heinemann added volumes 16 and 17 in 1921:

v. 16. The two friends, and other stories. 1921. 369 p

Includes Father Alexey’s story, Three meetings, A quiet backwater.

Reprinted 1922.

v. 17. Knock, knock, knock, and other stories. 1921. 345 p

Includes The inn, Lieutenant Yergunov’s story, The dog, The watch.

Reprinted 1922.

The complete set of 17 volumes was published by Heinemann and Macmillan in 1920–21.

The novels and stories of Iván Turgénieff. Tr Isabel Hapgood, with intro by Henry James. New York, Scribner 1903–04. 16 v. illus     4

v. 1–2. Memoirs of a sportsman. 1903. 308, 347 p

Contents: Vol 1: Khor and Kalinitch.—Ermolai and the miller’s wife.—The raspberry water.—The district doctor.—My neighbour Radiloff.—Freeholder Ovsyanikoff.—Lgoff.—Byezhin meadow.—Kasyan from the Fair-Metcha.—The agent.—The counting-house.—The wolf.—Two landed proprietors.

Vol 2: Lebedyan.—Tatyana Borisovna and her nephew.—Death.—The singers.—Piotr Petrovitch Karataeff.—The tryst.—Hamlet of Shshtchigry county.—Tchertopkhanoff and Nedopiuskin.—The end of Tchertopkhanoff.—Living holy relics.—The rattling.—Epilogue: Forest and steppe.

v. 3. Rudín: a romance. A King Lear of the steppes, and other stories. 1903. 377 p

19

v. 4. A nobleman’s nest. 1903. 307 p

v. 5. On the eve. 1903. 277 p

v. 6. Fathers and children. 1903. 352 p

v. 7. Smoke. 1904. 310 p

v. 8–9. Virgin soil. 1904. 273, 228 p

v. 10. The Jew, and other stories. 1904. 357 p

Includes Andréi Kólosoff, The bully, Pyetushkóff, The two friends.

v. 11. The diary of a superfluous man, and other stories. 1904. 344 p

Includes Three portraits, Three meetings, Mumu, The inn.

v. 12. First love, and other stories. 1904. 344 p.

Includes A correspondence, The region of dead calm, It is enough, The dog.

v. 13. Phantoms, and other stories. 1904. 321 p

Includes Yakoff Pasynkoff, Faust, An excursion to the forest belt, Asya.

v. 14. The brigadier, and other stories. 1904. 381 p

Includes The story of Lieutenant Ergunoff, A hapless girl, A strange story, Punin and Baburin.

v. 15. Spring freshets, and other stories. 1904. 372 p

Includes Knock, knock, knock; The watch.

v. 16. A reckless character, and other stories. 1904. 385 p

Includes The dream, Father Alexyei’s story, Old portraits, The song of love triumphant, Clara Militch. Poems in prose: The village, A conversation, The old woman, The dog, The rival, The beggar man, “Thou shalt hear the judgment of the dullard...,” The contented man, The rule of life, The end of the world, Masha, The fool, An oriental legend, Two four-line stanzas, The sparrow, The skulls, The toiler and the lazy man, The rose, In memory of J. P. Vrévsky, The last meeting. The visit, Necessitas-vis-libertas, Alms, The insect, Cabbage-soup, The azure realm, Two rich men, The old man, The correspondent, Two brothers, The egoist, The supreme being’s feast, The sphinx, Nymphs, Enemy and friend, Christ, The stone, Doves, To-morrow! To-morrow! Nature, “Hang him!” What shall I think? “How fair, how fresh were the roses,” A sea voyage, N. N. Stay! The monk, We shall still fight on! Prayer, The Russian language.

 Reprints:

—— London, Dent 1905. 16 v.

—— New York, Scribner 1906. 16 v.

—— New York, Scribner 1907. 16 v.

—— New York, Scribner 1922. 16 v.

Separate reprintings:

v. 1–2. Memoirs of a sportsman. Reprinted 1913, 1915, 1920, 1927.

v. 3. Rudín ..., and other stories. Reprinted 1911, 1923.

v. 4. A nobleman’s nest. Reprinted 1918, 1923, 1924.

v. 5. On the eve. Reprinted 1918, 1923.

v. 6. Fathers and children. Reprinted 1911, 1913, 1915, 1921, 1923, 1927, 1932.

v. 7. Smoke. Reprinted 1912, 1914, 1919, 1925.

v. 8–9. Virgin soil. Reprinted 1912, 1917, 1923, 1930.

v. 10. The Jew, and other stories. No reprints located.

v. 11. The diary of a superfluous man, and other stories. Reprinted 1915, 1923.

v. 12. First love, and other stories. Reprinted 1915, 1916, 1945.

v. 13. Phantoms, and other stories. Reprinted 1916, 1926.

v. 14. The brigadier and other stories. Reprinted 1916, 1923.

v. 15. Spring freshets, and other stories. Reprinted 1916, 1920, 1923, 1926.

v. 16. A reckless character, and other stories. Reprinted 1916, 1923.

The works of Iván Turgénieff. Tr Isabel Hapgood. Boston, Lauriat 1903–04. 14 v. in 7     5

v. 1. Memoirs of a sportsman. 308, 347 p; A nobleman’s nest. 307 p (Memoirs of a sportsman has same contents as item 4, vols 1 and 2.)

v. 2. Virgin soil. 273, 228 p; [A reckless character, and other stories, including The dream, Father Alexyei’s story, Old portraits, The song of triumphant love, Clara Militch, and Poems in prose] 385 p (Poems in prose has same contents as item 4, vol 16.)

v. 3. Spring freshets, and other stories. 372 p; Smoke. 310 p

Part 1 includes Knock, knock, knock; and The watch.

v. 4. Rudin. A King Lear of the steppes. 377 p; Phantoms, Yakoff Pasynkoff, Faust, An excursion to the forest belt, Asya. 321 p

v. 5. The brigadier and other stories. 381 p; On the eve. 277 p

Part 1 includes The story of Lieutenant Ergunoff, A hapless girl, A strange story, Punin and Baburin.

20

v. 6. The diary of a superfluous man, and other stories. 344 p; Fathers and children. 352 p

Part 1 includes Three portraits, Three meetings, Mumu, The inn.

v. 7. First love and other stories. 355 p; The Jew and other stories. 357 p

Part 1 includes A correspondence, The region of dead calm, It is enough, The dog. Part 2 includes Andrei Kolosoff, The bully, Pyetushkoff, The two friends.

This is substantially the Scribner edition, with only title-pages, and the order of volumes changed. The same plates were used. Another edition of 14 volumes in 7, also using the Scribner plates, was issued at the same time by the Jefferson Press, Boston, as a deluxe edition.

Other publishers of this same Lauriat set were Brentano, New York, who also reprinted the 14 v. in 7 in 1915 and 1916; and Himebaugh-Browne, New York, who apparently issued only a few of the 7 volumes. Scribner’s again issued the 7 volumes in 1915, with the volume numbers altered. Lauriat reprinted the 7 volumes in 1914.

[Works] Tr I. [i. e. Rachelle S.] Townsend.     6

Cited in Hershkowitz bibliography (see item 502) but unlocated. Miss Townsend translated several Russian novels for the Everyman series, including Virgin soil (see item 113).

The best known works of Ivan Turgenev, including Fathers and sons, Smoke, and five short stories. New York, Literary classics 193-? 375 p     7

Includes A desperate character, A strange story, Punin and Baburin, Old portraits, The brigadier.

The best known works of Ivan Turgenev; including Fathers and sons; Smoke; and nine short stories. New York, Book League of America 1941. 502 p (Blue Ribbon books)     8

This collection adds four stories to those published in item 7. The four stories are Pyetushkov, The Jew, An unhappy girl, and Three portraits.

The same collection was also published by Halcyon House (New York 1942) and by Doubleday (Garden City 1950).

Collected works of Ivan Turgenev, including Fathers and sons; Smoke; and nine short stories. New York, Greystone Press 195-? 502 p (Masterworks library)     9

Includes A desperate character, A strange story, Punin and Baburin, Old portraits, The brigadier, Pyetushkov, The Jew, An unhappy girl, and Three portraits. This is same collection as item 8 with altered title.

Novels [Tr from the Russian by C. Garnett] London, Heinemann; New York, Macmillan 1951. 7 vols?     10

Contents:

v. 1. Not published.

v. 2. House of gentlefolk. 181 p

v. 3. On the eve. 168 p

v. 4. Fathers and children. 214 p

v. 5. Smoke. 186 p

v. 6–7. Virgin soil. 2 v. 146, 159

Both MH and NNC have cataloged volumes from this set as parts of a collected edition. However, they were issued separately and in some cases without indication of their place in the series.


SELECTED STORIES AND PLAYS

The Borzoi Turgenev. Tr H. Stevens. Foreword by Serge Koussevitzky, intro by Avrahm Yarmolinsky. New York, Knopf 1950. 801 p     11

Includes Smoke, Fathers and sons, First love, On the eve, Rudin, A quiet spot, and The diary of a superfluous man.

Reprinted 1955. Published in 1960 as paperback under title The Vintage Turgenev. New York, Vintage Books 1960. 2 v. 412, 391 p

Review. Helen Muchnic, Russian review ix No 4 (Oct 1950) 338–339

The district doctor, and other stones. Illus by Marvin Bileck. Emmaus, Pa, Story Classics 1951. 206 p illus     12

Contents: The district doctor.—Yermolai and the miller’s wife.—A strange story.—Foma, the wolf.—The counting-house.—A living relic.—A desperate character.—Pyetushkov.—[About the book, by E. J. Fluck.]

Fathers and children, and Rudin. Tr Richard Hare. London, Hutchinson International Authors 1947. 287 p     13

Reprinted 1949.

First love; and, Púnin Babúrin. Tr by permission of the author, with biographical intro by Sidney Jerrold. London, Allen 1884. 237 p front     14

First love. Tr I. Berlin. Rudin, a romance. Tr A. Brown, with intro by Lord David Cecil. New York, Pantheon Books; London, Hamilton 211950. 249 p     15

A house of gentlefolk; and Fathers and children. Tr Constance Garnett. Ed William Allan Neilson, New York, Collier 1917. 406 p (Harvard classics)     16

The Jew, and Mumu. New York, Little Leather Library 1918? 90 p     17

Literary reminiscences and autobiographical fragments. Tr with intro by David Magarshack, and an essay on Turgenev by Edmund Wilson. New York, Farrar-Straus-Cudahy 1958. 309 p     18

Contents: Instead of an introduction.—A literary party at P. A. Pletnyov’s.—Reminiscences of Belinsky.—Gogol, Zhukovsky, Krylov, Lermontov, Zagoskin.—A trip to Albano and Frascati.—Apropos of Fathers and sons.—The man in the grey spectacles.—My mates sent me!—The execution of Tropmann.—About nightingales.—Pégas.—Pergamos excavations.—The quail.—A fire at sea.

—— New York, Grove 1959. 309 p

—— London, Faber 1959. 272 p

Reviews: Morris Philipson, Commonweal lxviii (July 25, 1958) 428–430; Ernest J. Simmons, Saturday Review xli (June 14, 1958) 22–23; Ewart Milne, New Statesman lvii No 1453 (Jan 17, 1959) 74–75

Moo-Moo; and The district doctor. Ed A. Raffi. London, Paul-Trench-Trubner 1917. 104 p     19

—— New York, Dutton 1918.

Mumu, and The diary of a superfluous man. Tr Henry Gersoni. New York, Funk-Wagnalls 1884. 131 p (Standard library)     20

Mumu; and Kassyan of Fair Springs. New York, Little Leather Library 191-? 94 p     21

A nest of gentlefolk, and other stories. Tr with intro by Jessie Coulson. London, Oxford Univ Press 1959. 461 p (World’s classics)     22

Includes A quiet backwater, First love, and A Lear of the steppes.

The plays of Ivan S. Turgenev. Tr M. S. Mandell. Intro by William Lyon Phelps. New York, Macmillan; London, Heinemann 1924. 583 p     23

Contents: Carelessness. Broke. Where it is thin, there it breaks. The family charge. The bachelor. An amicable settlement. A month in the country. The country woman. A conversation on the highway. An evening in Sorrento.

Also published in two volumes, continuously paginated.

Selected tales. Tr with intro by David Magarshack. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday 1960. xvii, 355 p (Anchor)     24

Includes The singers, Bezhin meadow, Mumu, Assya, First Love, Knock ... knock ... knock, Living relics, Clara Milich.

Three famous plays: A month in the country; A provincial lady; A poor gentleman. Tr Constance Garnett with intro by David Garnett. London, Duckworth; New York, Scribner 1951. 235 p illus     25

—— New York, Hill Wang 1959. 235 p (Mermaid dramabook)

Three plays. Tr Constance Garnett. London, Cassell 1934. 323 p     26

Contents: A month in the country. A provincial lady. A poor gentleman.

Three short novels. Tr Constance Garnett. With appreciation of Turgenev by Henry James, Joseph Conrad, and Prosper Merimee. New York, Lear 1948. 352 p     27

Contents: First love. The diary of a superfluous man. Acia.

Three short novels: Asya, First love, Spring torrents. Tr I. and T. Litvinov. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1955? 303 p     28

An unfortunate woman, and Ass´ya. Tr Henry Gersoni. New York, Funk-Wagnalls 1886. 190 p (Standard library)     29


SEPARATELY PUBLISHED WORKS

Annouchka; a tale. Tr from the French of the author’s own translation, by Franklin Abbott. Boston, Cupples-Upham 1884. 111 p     30

Although Turgenev did oversee some translations of his work, he never himself translated any, as the above title-page seems to indicate.

The bachelor. A play in three acts, adapted by Miles Malleson. London, French 1953. 60 p illus     31

“Bezhin meadows.” From A sportsman’s sketches. Tr C. Garnett. London, Heinemann; New York, Macmillan, n. d.     32

“A daughter of Russia,” Tr George W. Scott. New York, George Munro 1882. 17 p     33

The Seaside Library lx No 1216. “The Seaside Library was issued daily, and A Daughter of Russia appeared on March 7th. This series was published in the form of newsheets at 15 cents for an ordinary and 25 cents for a double number.” Bookman lxxxiii (Dec 1932) p 201.

22

Don Quixote and Hamlet; a critical essay. Tr T. Rolleston. Dublin, Sealy-Bryers-Walker 190-? 30 p     34

Fathers and children. Tr Richard Hare. Intro by Ernest J. Simmons. New York, Rinehart 1948. 233 p     35

Fathers and sons. New York, Collier 1900? 348 p (The foreign classical romances)     36

—— Tr Constance Garnett. Intro by Thomas Seltzer. New York, Boni-Liveright 1917. 243 p     37

—— Intro by Carl Van Doren. New York, Literary Guild of America 192-? 242 p     38

—— Tr C. Hogarth. London, Dent 1921. 276 p (Everyman)     39

Reprinted 1929, 1934, 1938, 1941, 1954. New edition 1955 (item 52).

—— New York, Book League of America 1930. 243 p     40

—— Tr Constance Garnett. New York, Grosset 1931. 242 p     41

—— Intro by Carl Van Doren. New York, Literary Guild of America 1932. 242 p     42

—— Tr Constance Garnett. Intro by Thomas Seltzer. New York, Modern Library 194-? 243 p     43

—— Tr Constance Garnett, rev and ed by Lucy M. Cores. New York, Black 1942. 345 p (Classics club ed)     44

—— Tr Constance Garnett, with foreword by Sinclair Lewis, illus with wood engravings by Fritz Eichenberg. New York, The Press of the Readers Club 1943. 234 p front, plates     45

—— Tr B. Isaacs. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1947. 206 p     46

—— Tr Constance Garnett. Intro by Herbert J. Muller. New York, Modern Library 1950. 243 p     47

—— Tr George Reavey. London, Hamilton; New York, Pantheon 1950. 247 p     48

—— Illus by Konstantin Rudakov. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1951. 213 p illus     49

—— Tr Constance Garnett, with intro by Delmore Schwartz. New York, Harper 1951. 242 p     50

—— Tr Constance Garnett, with preface by John T. Winterich and illus with wood engravings by Fritz Eichenberg. New York, Limited Editions Club 1951. 215 p illus     51

—— Tr C. Hogarth. Intro by V. S. Pritchett. New York, Dutton 1955. 288 p     52

—— A stressed text with intro and notes by E. R. Sands. London, Cambridge Univ Press 1955. 208 p     53

—— Tr George Reavey. New York, Noonday Press 1958. 247 p (Noonday paperbacks)     54

Reprint of 1950 edition.

—— New York, Collier 1958. 348 p     55

—— Tr B. Makanowitzky. With intro by Alexandra Tolstoy. New York, Bantam Books 1959. 208 p     56

—— Tr Constance Garnett. Illus by Fritz Eichenberg. New York, Heritage Press 1961. 234 p     57

—— Tr Bernard Guilbert Guerney. With the author’s comments on his book. New York, Modern Library 1961. 281 p     58

Also published in college edition and in paperback.

First love. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1953. 130 p     59

—— Tr O. Gorchakov and illus by V. Sveshnikov. Moscow, Foreign Language Publishing House 1954. 137 p     60

—— Tr Isaiah Berlin, with intro by Lord David Cecil. Illus by Fritz Wegner. London, Hamilton; Toronto, Collins 1956. 123 p     61

Hamlet und Don Quixote, a critical essay. Tr with intro by M. Katz. n. p., Maisel & co 1910. 60 [4] p     62

Cited in National Union Catalog (OC1), but not examined.

Hamlet and Don Quixote; an essay. Tr Robert Nichols. London, Hendersons 1930. 31 p     63

Note on verso of title-page reads: “Of this edition 1000 copies have been printed, of which 105 copies are signed by the author.” NjP has copy signed on title-page!

A house of gentlefolk. Tr F. M. Davis. London, Stodder & Houghton 1914? 1916?     64

Not located. See A nest of hereditary legislators (item 77).

A hunter’s sketches. Ed O. Gorchakov. Moscow, Foreign Language Publishing House 1955. 454 p     65

Contents: Khor and Kalinich.—Yermolai and the miller’s wife.—Raspberry spring.—The district doctor.—My neighbor Radilov.—The freeholder Ovsyanikov.—Lgov.—Bezhin mead.—Kasyan of fair springs.—The steward.—The counting-house.—Biryuk.—Two country gentlemen.—Lebedyan.—Tatyana Borisovna and her nephew.—Death.—The singers.—Pyotr23 Petrovich Karataev.—The tryst.—The Hamlet of the Shchigri district.—Chertopkhanov and Nedopyushkin.—The end of Chertopkhanov.—A living relic. The rattling of wheels.—The forest and the steppe.

[Letters] Tourguéneff and his French circle. Ed by E. Halperine-Kaminsky, tr from the French by E. Arnold. London, Unwin 1898. 302 p     66

Letters from Turgenev to Flaubert, Zola, and other friends in France.

Letters, a selection. Ed and tr by Edgar H. Lehrman. New York, Knopf 1961. 401 p illus, biblio     67

Reviews: David Magarshack, New York Times Book Review (Jan 22, 1961) p 6; Peter Melik, National Review x No 7 (Feb 25, 1961) 119–120.

Liza. Tr W. R. S. Ralston. London, Chapman-Hall 1869. 2 v.     68

Tr by Garnett as A house of gentlefolk, and by F. M. Davis as A nest of hereditary legislators (item 77).

—— Tr W. R. S. Ralston. London, Dent; New York, Dutton 1914. 231 p (Everyman)     69

Reprinted 1923, 1938, 1945.

A month in the country; a comedy in four acts. Tr M. Mandell, acting version by Rouben Mamoulian. New York, Rialto Service Bureau 1930. various paginations     70

Produced by the Theatre Guild at the Guild Theatre, New York, March 17, 1930.

—— Adapted into English by Emlyn Williams. London, Heinemann 1943. 93 p     71

Text based on literal trans by E. Fenn.

—— Adapted into English by Emlyn Williams with intro by Michael Belgrave. London, Heinemann 1953. 93 p     72

—— Adapted into English by Emlyn Williams. New York, French 1957. 110 p     73

Mumu. Tr Jessie Domb and Zlata Shoenberg. London, Harrap; New York, Transatlantic Arts 1945. 47, 47 p     74

Russian and English on opposite pages, numbered in duplicate.

—— Tr I. Litvinov. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 195-? 77 p illus     75

A nest of the gentry. Tr Bernard Isaacs. Illus by Konstantin Rudakov. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1947. 178 p illus     76

Reprinted 1951.

A nest of hereditary legislators. Tr F. M. Davis. London, Simkin & Marshall 1914. 396 p     77

A nobleman’s nest. Tr Richard Hare. London, Hutchinson International Authors 1949. 287 p     78

On the eve. Tr C. E. Turner. London, Stodder & Houghton 1871. 248 p     79

Reprinted 1915, 1916.

—— Tr Richard Hare. London, Hutchinson International Authors 1947. 174 p     80

—— Tr M. Budberg. New York, Chanticleer Press 1950. 225 p     81

—— Tr M. Budberg. London, Cresset Press 1950. 217 p     82

—— Tr G. Gardiner. Baltimore, Allen Lane 1950. 234 p (Penguin)     83

—— Tr G. Gardiner. Harmondsworth, Middlesex, Penguin Books 1951. 233 p     84

—— Tr S. Apresyan. Ed George H. Hanna. Moscow, Foreign Languages Publishing House 1959. 179 p     85

Pegasus, Biryuk, Forest and steppe. Ed Nevill Forbes and E. G. Underwood. London, Oxford Univ Press 1917. 56 p     86

From A sportsman’s sketches.

Poems in prose. Boston, Cupples-Upham 1883. 120 p port     87

Contents: The village.—The old woman.—A dialogue.—The dog.—My opponent.—An axiom.—Dost thou hearken to the words of the fool.—The beggar.—A contented man.—The destruction of the world.—Mascha.—The blockhead.—An oriental legend.—Two quatrains.—The sparrow.—The laborer and the man with the white hand.—The skull.—The last meeting.—The rose.—The visit.—Necessitas-vis-libertas.—The alms.—The insect.—The cabbage-soup.—The happy land.—Who is the richer?—The old man.—The newspaper correspondent.—Two brothers.—In memory of I. P. W.—The egotist.—The supreme being’s banquet.—The nymphs.—The sphinx.—The friend and the enemy.—Christ.—The stone.—The doves.—To-morrow, to-morrow!—Nature.—Hang him!—What shall I think about?—How lovely and fresh those roses were!—A trip by sea.—N. N.—Stop!—The monk.—Let’s keep a good heart.—Prayer.—The Russian language.

Also appeared with New York, Putnam’s c1883 imprint.

—— 2d ed. Boston, DeWolfe, Fiske 1883. 120 p     88

Reprinted 1887.

24

—— A metrical version by J. B. Mather. Adelaide, Advertiser Newspapers 1934. 98 p     89

Contents: In the village.—A dialogue.—The old woman.—The dog.—My adversary.—The beggar.—The fool’s judgment thou wilt hear.—A contented man.—A rule of life.—The end of the world.—Masha.—A blockhead.—An eastern tale.—The two poets.—The sparrow.—The skulls.—The working man and the man with the white hands.—The rose.—In memoriam.—The last good-bye.—A visit.—Necessitas-vis-libertas.—The alms.—The insect.—Cabbage soup.—The fields of the blest.—Which is the richer?—The old man.—The reporter.—The two brothers.—The egoist.—Jupiter’s feast.—The sphinx.—The nymphs.—Friend and foe.—Christ.—The stone.—The doves.—To-morrow! to-morrow!—Nature.—Hang him.—What shall I think?—How were the roses so fresh and so fair?—On the sea.—N. N.—Abide.—The monk.—We are still at war.—Prayer.—The Russian language.

—— Tr Eugenia Schimanskaya. Drawings by Donia Nachshen. London, Drummond 1945. 66 p illus     90

Contents: The village.—The conversation.—The old woman.—The dog.—The rival.—The beggar.—“You shall hear the judgment of the fool.”—The contented man.—Worldly wisdom.—The end of the world.—Masha.—An eastern tale.—Two quatrains.—The sparrow.—The skulls.—The worker and the man with white hands.—The rose.—The memory of U. P. Vrevskaya.—The last meeting.—The visit.—Necessitas-vis-libertas.—Charity.—The insect.—Cabbage soup.—The realm of azure.—Two rich men.—The old man.—The journalist.—Two brothers.—The egotist.—The feast of the supreme being.—The sphinx.—The nymphs.—Enemy and friend.—Christ.—The stone.—Two doves.—To-morrow! To-morrow!—Nature.—Hang him.—What shall I be thinking?—“How lovely, how fresh were the roses ...”—A sea voyage.—N. N.—Stay!—The monk.—We’ll still go on fighting!—Prayer.—The threshold.—The Russian language.

—— In Russian and English, ed André Mazon. Tr C. Garnett and R. Rees. Oxford, Blackwell 1951. 219 p (Blackwell’s Russian texts)     91

Contents: The country.—The old woman.—A meeting.—The beggar.—My adversary.—I feel pity.—A conversation.—The dog.—Friend and enemy.—Thou shalt hear the fool’s judgment.—A contented man.—A curse.—The twins.—The blackbird (I, II).—A bird without a nest.—The cup.—Whose fault?—The fool.—The workman and the man with white hands.—The banquet of the supreme being.—The skulls.—An eastern legend.—The end of the world.—Two stanzas.—The rose.—Masha.—Necessitas, vis, libertas.—The sparrow.—The last meeting.—A rule of life.—A visit.—The threshold.—The insect.—A snake.—Cabbage soup.—Author and critic.—On arguing.—The reporter.—The old man.—Oh, my youth.—To * * *.—Two rich men.—Two brothers.—To the memory of Yu. P. Vrevskaya.—I walked amid high mountains.—When I am no more.—Christ.—The hour glass.—The nymphs.—The egoist.—The sphinx.—Alms.—The stone.—The doves.—To-morrow! To-morrow!—I rose from my bed at night.—The realm of azure.—Nature.—Hang him!—How fair, how fresh were the roses.—What shall I think?—When I am alone.—To N. N.—On the sea.—The monk.—Stay!—We will still fight on.—The path to love.—Phrases.—Simplicity.—The Brahmin.—You wept.—Love.—Prayer.—Truth and justice.—The partridges.—Nessun maggior dolore.—The Russian tongue.—On the rack.—A rule of life.—A baby’s cry.—My trees.

“Notes” by Charles Salomon.

A provincial lady. A comedy in one act. A new version by Miles Malleson. London, French 1950. 44 p illus     92

Punin and Babwin. Tr George Scott. New York, Munro 1882. 18 p (Seaside Library)     93

The ruffian. Tr from the German. Chicago, Overland Library 1887. (Collection Schick, no 13)     94

Russian life in the interior; or The experiences of a sportsman. Ed James D. Meiklejohn. Edinburgh, Black 1855. 428 p     95

Translated from M. Charriere’s French version of A sportsman’s notebook, a version against which Turgenev strongly protested.

Contents: Khor and Kalinytch.—Ermolai and the miller’s wife.—Raspberry water.—The country doctor.—My neighbour Radiloff.—The Odnovoretz.—Lgoff.—Beejina Lough.—The funeral.—The bourmister.—The counting house.—Foma the bireouk.—The two village lords.—Lebediana.—The provincial woman, and her nephew the artist.25 artist.—How a Russian dies.—The tavern.—Karataeff.—The assignation.—The higher provincial society.—Native oddities.—The forest and the steppe.—Epilogue.

Senilia. Poems in prose, being meditations, sketches.... English version with intro and biographical sketch by S. Macmullan. Bristol, Arrowsmith 1890. 153 p     96

Smoke, or Life at Baden, a novel. Tr from the French version. London, R. Bentley 1868. 2 v.     97

Another bad translation (anonymous) against which Turgenev protested.

—— Intro by John Reed. New York, Modern Library 1919. 234 p     98

—— London, Heinemann 1930. 315 p (The traveller’s library)     99

—— Tr Natalie Duddington. London, Dent 1949. 242 p; New York, Dutton 1950. 256 p (Everyman)     100

Song of triumphant love. Adapted by Marian Ford. New York, Munro 1882. 17 p (Seaside library 72)     101

A sportsman’s notebook. Tr Charles and Natasha Hepburn. London, Cresset Press; New York, Chanticleer Press 1950. 397 p     102

Contents: Khor and Kalinich.—Ermolai and the miller’s wife.—Raspberry water.—The country doctor.—My neighbour Radilov.—Ovsyanikov the freeholder.—Lgov.—Bezhin meadow.—Kasyan from Fair Springs.—The bailiff.—The estate office.—The bear.—Two landowners.—Lebedyan.—Tatyana Borisovna and her nephew.—Death.—The singers.—Pyotr Petrovich Karataev.—The rendezvous.—Prince Hamlet of Shchigrovo.—Chertopkhanov and Nedopyuskin.—The end of Chertopkhanov.—The live relic.—The knocking.—Forest and steppe.

—— Tr Charles and Natasha Hepburn. New York, Viking Press 1956. 403 p     103

—— Tr Charles and Natasha Hepburn. New York, Viking Press; Toronto, Macmillan 1957. 397 p (Compass books)     104

Items 103–104 have same contents as 102.

A sportsman’s sketches. Tr Constance Garnett. New York, Dutton 1932. 253 p illus.     105

This edition contains fourteen of the twenty-five sketches which appeared in the two volumes of the collected edition. Not located.

Spring floods. Tr E. Richter. London, Lamley 1895. 252 p     106

Tales from the notebook of a sportsman. Tr E. Richter. Series 1. London, Lamley 1895. 247 p     107

The torrents of spring. Tr David Magarshack. New York, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy; London, Hamilton 1959. 188 p     108

—— Tr David Magarshack. Toronto, Collins 1960. 188 p (Deluxe edition)     109

The two friends. Tr Noel Evans. London, Paul-Trench-Trubner 1936. 115 p     110

The unfortunate one; a novel. Tr A. R. Thompson. London, Trubner 1888. 134 p     111

Virgin soil. Tr A. Dilke. London, Macmillan 1878. 346 p     112

—— Tr Rachelle Townsend. Intro by Ernest Rhys. London, Dent 1911. 317 p (Everyman)     113

Reprinted 1915, 1916, 1920, 1929, 1942, 1948, 1954. New edition published 1955, 336 p.

—— Tr Constance Garnett. New York, Grove Press 1956. 305 p (Evergreen)     114


ARTICLES, STORIES, AND POEMS PUBLISHED
IN ANTHOLOGIES AND PERIODICALS

“The adventure of Second Lieutenant Bubnov,” In And the darkness falls ed by Boris Karloff. Cleveland, World 1946. 58–65     115

“After death,” Modern age ? (New York 1883)     116

“Klara Milich.”

“The antchar,” Galaxy xv Nos 3, 4 (Mar-Apr 1873) 330–350, 461–480     117

“A quiet backwater.”

“Apropos of ‘Fathers and Sons,’” Partisan review xxv No 2 (Spring 1958) 265–273     118

See also item 18.

“Assja,” Galaxy xxiii No 3 (Mar 1877) 368–394     119

“Asya,” In Selected Russian short stories comp and tr Alfred E. Chamot. New York, Oxford Univ Press 1925. 107–160     120

“Autumn,” Arena ii No 12 (Nov 1890) p 705     121

26

—— Tr by Maud Jerrold. Slavonic review x No 28 (Jul 1931) p 24     122

“Ballad,” In The wagon of life tr Cecil Kisch. New York, Oxford Univ Press 1947. p 42     123

“Beneficence and gratitude,” In The world’s best humor ed C. Wells. New York 1933. p 638     124

“The brigadier,” Tr by Constance Garnett. Outlook lxxxviii No 4 (Jan 25, 1908) 223–238 port     125

Intro by Hamilton W. Mabie, 223–226.

“The bully,” Tr by Mary J. Safford. Living Age ccxi Nos 2732–36 (Nov 14, 21, 28; Dec 5, 12, 1896) 387–393, 483–490, 547–549, 636–642, 700–704     126

“Clara Militch; a tale,” Tr by Augustus Anthony and Walter W. Spooner. The independent xxxvi Nos 1871–1873 (Oct 9, 16, 23, 1884) 1306–08, 1338–40, 1370–72     127

“A conversation,” Current literature xlii No 4 (Apr 1907) p 465     128

“A correspondence,” Galaxy xii No 4 (Oct 1871) 451–469     129

“The country,” In The world’s best essays, from Confucius to Mencken ed F. H. Pritchard. New York, Halcyon House 1939. 730–731     130

Item not used     131

“Desperate,” Cosmopolitan v No 4 (Aug 1888) 335–344     132

Dimitri Roudine. In Every Saturday iii Nos 4–17 (Jan 25-Apr 26, 1873) 85, 113, 141, 169, 197, 225, 253, 281, 309, 337, 365, 393, 421, 449     133

See also item 1 [vol 4].

“The dream,” Tr Isabel Hapgood. In Great Russian short stories ed Stephen Graham. New York, Liveright 1929. 169–192     134

Reprinted London, Benn 1959.

“Dying plea to Tolstoy,” In A treasury of Russian life and humor ed John Cournos. New York, Coward-McCann 1943. p 79     135

“Evening in the country,” In The Slav anthology tr Edna Underwood. Portland, Me., Mosher Press 1931. 210–211     136

Fathers and sons. In A treasury of Russian literature ed Bernard Guilbert Guerney. New York, Vanguard Press 1943. 255–436     137

—— [excerpt] In Anthology of Russian literature ed Leo Wiener. New York, Putnam’s 1903. 282–295     138

—— [excerpt] In The world’s greatest books ed Alfred Harmsworth and S. S. McClure. [n. p.] McKinley, Stone & Mackenzie 1910. 245–259     139

“Faust,” Galaxy xiii Nos 5, 6 (May-Jun 1872) 621–634, 734–746     140

—— Fortnightly review lxii Ns lvi No 3311 (Jul 1, 1894) 132–160     141

“A fire at sea,” Macmillan’s magazine liv No 319 (May 1886) 39–44     142

—— Eclectic magazine Ns xliii No 6 (Jun 1886) 835–839     143

—— London magazine iv no 7 (1957) 18–24     144

—— Reporter xviii No 4 (Feb 20, 1958) 31–34     145

First love. Tr C. Garnett. In Love throughout the ages ed Robert Lynd. New York, Coward-McCann 1932. 685–734     146

—— Golden book magazine xvi Nos 94–96 (Oct-Dec 1932) 339–352, 420–433, 562–575     147

—— In World’s great love novels ed Edwin Seaver. Cleveland, World 1944.     148

—— In Great Russian short novels ed Philip Rahv. New York, Dial Press 1951. 39–109     149

—— Tr Constance Garnett and N. H. Dole. In Four great Russian short novels. New York, Dell 1959. 9–73     150

“Freddy,” In Russian songs and lyrics ... ed John Pollen. London, East and West 1917. 159–160     151

“Ghosts,” In Tales for a stormy night. Tr from the French. Cincinnati, Clarke 1891. 3–67     152

“Hamlet and Don Quixote,” Tr J. Kral and P. Durdik. Poet lore iv (1892) 169–183     153

—— Fortnightly review lxii Ns lvi No 332 (Aug 1, 1894) 191–205     154

—— [excerpt] In A treasury of Russian life and humor ed John Cournos. New York, Coward-McCann 1943. 26–30     155

“Hamlet and Don Quixote, the Two Eternal Human Types,” Current literature xlii No 3 (Mar 1907) 290–293     156

“I wander round the lake,” Tr by M. Jerrold. 27Slavonic review x No 29 (Dec 1931) p 272     157

“The idiot,” Tr by W. R. S. Ralston. Temple Bar xxix (May 1870) 249–266     158

“In front of the guillotine,” In Bachelor’s quarters; stories from two worlds ed Norman Lockridge. New York, Biltmore 1944. 689–709     159

“King Lear of the Russian steppes,” Tr Bury Palliser. London society xxii No 131 (Nov 1872) 437–449     160

—— [excerpt] Every Saturday ii No 22 (Nov 30, 1872) 608–613     161

Reprinted from London society, item 160.

—— Living age cxvi No 1491 (Jan 4, 1873) 48–57     162

“The kiss,” Tr by Bernard Guerney. Golden book magazine xii No 69 (Sep 1930) p 79     163

“Krilof and his fables,” [review of Ralston translation] Academy ii (Jul 15, 1871) p 345     164

Written in English.

The lady from the provinces; a comedy in one act. Tr Jenny Covan. In The Moscow art theatre series of Russian plays ed O. M. Sayler. New York, Brentano 1923. vol 5, 45–90     165

“A Lear of the steppe,” Southern magazine xi (Nov-Dec 1872) 513, 641     166

“A Lear of the steppes,” Tr C. Garnett. In The book of the short story ed Alexander Jessup and H. S. Canby. New York, Appleton 1912. 359–438     167

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In Russian short stories ed Harry C. Schweikert. Chicago, Scott-Foresman 1919. 113–206     168

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In Great short novels of the world ed B. H. Clark. New York, McBride; London, Heinemann 1927.     169

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In Representative modern short stories ed Alexander Jessup. New York, Macmillan 1929. 226–303     170

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of great Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky ed Avrahm Yarmolinsky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 143–214     171


LETTERS

“Tourguenieff’s letters,” Tr Florence K. Wischnewetsky. Overland monthly 2nd ser viii No 46 (Oct 1886) 385–389     172

“Some new letters of Tourgeniev,” Tr and ed Rosa Newmarch. Atlantic monthly lxxxiv No 505 (Nov 1899) 691–705     173

“Turgeneff’s German letters,” intro by E. Halperine-Kaminsky. Saturday review cvii-cviii Supplements for Feb 6, 13, 20, 27, Mar 6; Aug 7, 14, 21, 28, Sep 4, 1909     174

“Tolstoi and Turgenev: extracts from correspondence,” Living age cccxxix No 4265 (Apr 4, 1926) 197–200     175

“Turgenev’s last letter,” [letter to Tolstoy unsigned, July 3, 1883] in The Portable Russian reader ed Bernard Guilbert Guerney. New York, Viking Press 1947. 627–628     176

Reprinted 1959.

“Lettres de Tourguéneff à Henry James,” ed Jean Seznec. Comparative literature i No 3 (Summer 1949) 193–209     177

Some of the letters are in English.

* * * * *

“Makel-Adel,” In Mainly horses ed Ernest Rhys and C. A. Dawson-Scott. New York, Appleton 1929. 265–280     178

—— In A treasury of animal stories ed Emma Louise Mally. New York, Citadel Press 1946. 202–214     179

“Monsieur François; a souvenir of 1848,” Fortnightly review xcvi Ns xc No 539 (Nov 1, 1911) 946–961     180

A month in the country. Tr G. Noyes. In Masterpieces of the Russian drama ed G. Noyes. New York 1933. 233–327     181

A month in the country; a comedy in five acts. Tr M. Mandell. In Famous plays of 1937. London 1937. 9–159     182

A month in the country. Adapted into English by Emlyn Williams. In Great Russian plays ed Norris Houghton. New York, Dell 1960. 123–218 (Laurel drama series)     183

“Moomoo,” Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of great Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 116–142     184

“Mou-Mou,” Lippincott’s monthly magazine vii (Apr 1871) 372–387     185

“Mumu,” Tr C. Garnett. In Stories by foreign authors; Russian. New York 1898. 11–61     186

—— In Writers of the Western world ed Clarence A. Hibbard. Boston, Houghton-Mifflin 1942. 959–972     187

—— Tr C. Garnett. In Representative short stories ed Amanda M. Ellis. New York, Ronald 28Press 1946. 469–506     188

—— In Famous dog stories ed Page Cooper. New York, Doubleday 1948. 1–19     189

A nest of nobles [excerpt] In The world’s greatest books ed Alfred Harmsworth and S. S. McClure. [n. p.] McKinley, Stone & Mackenzie 1910. 259–272     190

“New poems in prose,” Tr by George Z. Patrick and George R. Noyes. Slavonic review xii No 35 (Jan 1934) 241–257     191

“The nihilist” [excerpt from Fathers and sons] In Half-hours with foreign novelists (See item 348.)

“The nobleman of the steppe,” Tr H. H. Boyesen. Scribner’s monthly xiv No 3 (Jul 1877) 313–338     192

“Old portraits,” Tr C. Garnett. In A treasury of great Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky ed Avrahm Yarmolinsky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 228–249     193

—— In The heritage of European literature ed Edward Howell Weatherly. Boston, Ginn 1948–49. vol 2, 506–517     194

“On the road,” Tr by M. Jerrold. Slavonic review ix No 25 (Jun 1930) p 207     195

—— In The wagon of life tr C. Kisch. New York, Oxford Univ Press 1947. p 41     196

—— Tr by W. Matthews. Slavonic review xxviii No 70 (Nov 1949) p 4     197

“One may spin a thread too finely; a comedy in one act,” Tr Margaret Gough. Fortnightly review lxxxv Ns xci No 508 (Apr 1, 1909) 786–804     198

“Pegasus,” Tr by F. H. Snow and A. M. Nikolaieff. Golden book magazine viii No 44 (Aug 1928) 243–246     199


POEMS IN PROSE

“The Blockhead,” Romance xv No 1 (Jul 1894) 44–45     200

“Cabbage-soup,” Golden book magazine iv No 19 (Jul 1926) p 2     201

—— In The mother’s anthology ed William Lyon Phelps. New York, Doubleday 1940. p 352     202

“Dear Mary,” In Russian songs and lyrics tr John Pollen. London, East and West 1917. 182–186     202A

“Masha.”

“The dog,” Living age ccxxi No 2866 (Jun 10, 1899) 776–785     203

—— In Short stories. New York 1900. vol 37, 220–234     204

—— Fortnightly review xc Ns lxxxiv (Aug 1, 1908) 341–352     205

—— In Golden book of dog stories ed Era Zistel. Chicago, Ziff-Davis 1947. 241–253     206

“The egotist,” Dublin review xcv Ns xliii (Jul 1884) 64     207

“The fool,” Century magazine xxvii No 2 (Dec 1883) 319–320     208

“How beautiful were once the roses,” In The silver treasury ed Jane Manner. New York, French 1934. 148–149     209

“Nature,” In Anthology of Russian literature ed Leo Wiener. New York, Putnam 1902–03. vol 2, 295–296     210

“Nymphs,” Tr by Isabel Hapgood. Golden book magazine iii No 17 (May 1926) p 688     211

“Prayer,” In The world’s best humor ed C. Wells. New York 1933. p 638     212

“A rule of life,” Golden book magazine xi No 61 (Jan 1930) p 92     213

“The Russian language,” In Russian songs and lyrics tr John Pollen. London, East and West 1917. p 186     214

“The Russian tongue,” In A treasury of Russian life and humor ed John Cournos. New York, Coward-McCann 1943. p 2     215

—— In A treasury of Russian literature ed Bernard Guilbert Guerney. New York, Vanguard Press 1943. p vii     216

“The sparrow,” In Short stories. New York 1895. vol 20, p 230     217

—— In The world’s best essays, from Confucius to Mencken ed F. H. Pritchard. New York, Halcyon House 1939. 731–732     218

“The threshold,” Tr Herman Bernstein. Independent lx No 2985 (Feb 15, 1906) p 386     219

—— New republic xxix No 375 (Feb 28, 1922) p 309     220

—— In The Russian horizon; an anthology comp Nagendranath Gangulee. London, Allen-Unwin 1943. p 42     221

—— In A treasury of Russian life and humor ed John Cournos. New York, Coward-McCann 291943. 30–31     222

“To-morrow! to-morrow!” Dublin review xcv Ns xliii (Jul 1884) 64–65     223

“Treasure,” All the year round Ns x No 253 (Oct 4, 1873) 543–547     224

An abridged version of “The dog.”

“Two stanzas: A barbed satire on literary success,” Golden book magazine xix No 114 (Jun 1934) 703–704     225

“A visit,” Tr J. H. Wisby. In Short stories. New York 1893. vol 12, p 445     226

* * * * *

“The priest’s son,” Lippincott’s magazine xix (Jun 1877) 744–750     227

“A quiet backwater,” In Russian short stories. London, Faber; Toronto, Ryerson 1943. 78–150     228

Review of History of a Town by M. E. Saltykoff (Shchedrin), Academy ii (Mar 1, 1871) 151–152     229

Written in English.

“A Russian sorcerer,” Appleton’s journal iii No 43 (Jan 22, 1870) 94–99     230

“Senilia; prose poems,” Macmillan’s magazine xliv Nos 289–290 (Nov-Dec 1883) 9–20, 103–116     231

Contents: Part I: In the village.—A conversation.—The old woman.—My dog.—The adversary.—The beggar.—“Accept the verdict of fools....”—A self-satisfied man.—A rule of life.—The end of the world.—Mascha.—The blockhead.—An Eastern legend.—The two quatrains.—The sparrow.—The skulls.

Part II: The workman and the man with the white hands.—The rose.—Alms.—The insect.—The cabbage soup.—The happy land.—Who is the richer?—Old age.—The newspaper correspondent.—Two brothers.—To the memory of J. P. W-Skaja.—The egoist.—The banquet of the deity.—The sphinx.—The nymphs.—The enemy and the friend.—Christ.—The stone.—The doves.—Nature.—Hang him!—“The roses were lovely, the roses were fresh....”—A sea voyage.—The monk.—We will struggle.—Prayer.—The Russian language.

“Serenade,” In Russian poems ed Charles F. Coxwell. London, Daniel 1929. p 165     232

“Sketches and reminiscences,” Tr C. Turner. Macmillan’s magazine xliv No 262 (Aug 1881) 306–320     233

Reprinted in Appleton’s journal xxvi (1881) 305–315; Eclectic magazine Ns xxxiv (1881) 440–452; Living age cl (1881) 692–703.

Smoke [excerpt] In The world’s greatest books ed Alfred Harmsworth and S. S. McClure. [n. p.] McKinley, Stone & Mackenzie 1910. 272–286     234

“The song of love triumphant,” Tr I. Hapgood. In Great Russian short stories ed Stephen Graham. New York, Liveright 1929. 144–169     235

Reprinted London, Benn 1959.

—— Tr by Constance Garnett. Golden book magazine xv No 85 (Jan 1932) 69–81     236

—— Cosmopolitan ii No 1 (Sep 1886) 3–14     237

—— In Little masterpieces of fiction ed Hamilton W. Mabie and L. Strachey. New York,
Doubleday 1904. vol 1, 123–154     238

“Specters, a phantasy,” In The portable Russian reader ed Bernard Guilbert Guerney. New York, Viking Press 1947. 103–141     239

Editor’s note 100–103.


SKETCHES FROM
A SPORTSMAN’S NOTEBOOK

“Photographs from Russian life,” Fraser’s magazine l (Aug 1854) 209–222     240

Quotes long passages with some critical comment.

Four extracts published in Household words:

“The children of the czar” [The agent], Household words xi No 258 (Mar 3, 1855) 108–114     241

“More children of the czar” [Pietr Petrovich Karatoev], Household words xi No 263 (Apr 7, 1855) 227–232     242

“Nothing like Russian leather” [Lgov], Household words xi No 265 (Apr 21, 1855) 286–288     243

“A Russian singing match” [The singers], Household words xii No 296 (Nov 24, 1855) 402–405     244

“Bezhin meadow,” In Great Russian short stories ed Stephen Graham. New York, Liveright 1929, 192–218     245

Reprinted London, Benn 1959.

—— In Great Russian short stories ed Norris Houghton. New York, Dell 1958. 63–84     246

“Biryuk,” Tr Constance Garnett. In Russian short stories ed Harry C. Schweikert. Chicago, 30New York, Scott-Foresman 1919, 103–112     247

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In Our heritage of world literature ed Stith Thompson. New York, Dial Press 1938. 764–768     248

Reprinted New York, Dryden Press 1942.

—— Tr C. Garnett. In Adventures in world literature ed R. B. Inglis and W. K. Stewart. New York, Harcourt-Brace 1946. 785–793     249

“Byezhin meadow,” In The house of fiction; an anthology of the short story ed Caroline Gordon and Allen Tate. New York, Scribner 1950. 129–145     250

“Byezhin prairie,” from A sportsman’s sketches. In The Warner library. New York, Knickerbocker Press 1917. vol 25, 15091–106     251

“The counting-house,” Tr Constance Garnett. In Short story classics ed William Patten. New York, Collier 1907. vol 1, 81–106     252

—— Famous story magazine i No 3 (Dec 1925) 332–340     253

“The district doctor,” In Short story masterpieces ed Joseph B. Esenwein. Springfield, Mass., The home correspondence school 1912. vol 3, 139–156     254

—— done into English by John Cournos. Lippincott’s monthly magazine xli No 542 (1913) 233–246     255

—— In Best Russian short stories ed Thomas Seltzer. New York, Boni-Liveright 1917. 61–70     256

Reprinted 1925, 82–95.

—— from A sportsman’s sketches. In The Warner library. New York, Knickerbocker Press 1917. vol 25, 15082–090     257

—— from A sportsman’s sketches. In Great short stories of the world; an anthology selected from the literature of all periods and countries ed Barrett Harper Clark and Maxim Lieber. New York, McBride 1925. 644–651     258

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In Prose preferences ed Sidney Cox and E. Freeman. New York, Harper 1926. 273–284     259

—— In The world’s one hundred best short stories ed Grant Overton. New York, Funk-Wagnalls 1927. vol 4, 76–88     260

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In The fifteen finest short stories ed John Cournos. New York, Dodd-Mead 1928. 250–263     261

—— Golden book magazine xxii No 129 (Sep 1935) 301–30     262

—— In The story survey ed Harold Blodgett. Philadelphia, Lippincott 1939.     263

—— Encore [Hoboken, N. J.] ii No 8 (Sep 1942) 260–267     264

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of Russian life and humor ed John Cournos. New York, Coward-McCann 1943. 219–226     265

—— In A treasury of doctor stories by the world’s great authors ed Noah D. Fabricant and H. Werner. New York, Fell 1946. 201–210     266

—— In Great short stories from the world’s literature ed Charles Neider. New York, Rinehart 1950. 468–477     267

“Foma, the wolf,” In World’s great adventure stories. New York, Black 1929. 203–209     268

“The bear.”

“Hor and Kalinitch,” In The world’s progress vol IX. Chicago, The Delphian Society 1913. 488–501     269

Binder’s title: The Delphian course.

“How Russians meet death,” Tr Lady George Hamilton. Temple bar xlviii (Dec 1876) 496–505     270

“Death.”

“The living mummy,” Scribner’s monthly xii No 4 (Aug 1876) 563–569     271

“A living relic,” Tr of “Zhivyye moshchi.” Scottish review iii (Dec 1884) 75–91     272

Reprinted in Living Age clx No 2069 (Feb 16, 1884) 416–423.

—— from A sportsman’s sketches. In The Warner library. New York, Knickerbocker Press 1917. vol 25, 15119–130     273

—— In The Copeland translations ed Charles T. Copeland. New York, Scribner 1934. 823–834     274

—— In Modern short stories ed Margaret E. Ashmun. New York, Macmillan 1941. 354–375     275

“Living relics,” Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of great Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 215–227     276

“The raspberry water,” In Great stories of all nations ed Maxim Lieber. New York, Brentano 1927. 751–759     277

The rendezvous,” Tr Herman Bernstein. In Short story classics ed William Patten. New 31–32York, Collier 1907. vol 1, 65–80     278

—— In The masterpiece library of short stories ed J. A. Hammerton. London, Educational Book Company 1920. vol 12, 117–124     279

—— Golden book magazine ii No 11 (Nov 1925) 622–626     280

—— In World’s great romances. New York, Black 1929. 337–343     281

See also “The tryst” (items 289–291).

“The singers,” from A sportsman’s sketches. In The Warner library. New York, Knickerbocker Press 1917. vol 25, 15107–118     282

—— In The masterpiece library of short stories ed J. A. Hammerton. London, Educational Book Company 1920. vol 12, 88–104     283

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky ed Avrahm Yarmolinsky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 90–106     284

—— Tr W. Morison. In A first series of representative Russian stories, Pushkin to Gorky ed Janko Lavrin. London, Westhouse 1946. 62–79     285

—— In The heritage of European literature ed Edward Howell Weatherly. Boston, Ginn 1948–49. vol 2, 492–501     286

—— In Great Russian stories comp Isai Kamen. New York, Random House 1959. 77–92.     287

“Tatyana Borissovna and her Nephew,” Chautauquan liii No 3 (Feb 1909) 395–407     288

“The tryst,” Tr Constance Garnett. In An anthology of world prose ed Carl van Doren. New York, Reynal Hitchcock 1935. 978–983     289

—— Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of great Russian short stories; Pushkin to Gorky ed Avrahm Yarmolinsky. New York, Macmillan 1944. 107–115     290

—— In The heritage of European literature ed Edward Howell Weatherly. Boston, Ginn 1948–49. vol 2, 501–506     291

“Yermolai and the miller’s wife,” Tr Constance Garnett. In A treasury of short stories ed Bernardine Kielty. New York, Simon Schuster 1947. 3–10     292

* * * * *

Spring floods. Tr Sophie Michell. Eclectic magazine Ns xviii No 4 xix No 3 (Oct 1873 to Mar 1874) 436–449, 552–565, 686–699; 45–55, 177–187, 339–346     293

“The storm has passed,” Arena ii No 12 (Nov 1890) 705–706     294

“Strange adventure of Lieutenant Yergunof,” Galaxy xxix (1877) 459–475     295

Tr from the French.

“A strange story,” Tr Edward Foord. Eclectic magazine Ns xl No 1 (July 1884) 98–108     296

Reprinted from Merry England ii (1884).

—— Tr W. Morison. In A first series of representative Russian stories, Pushkin to Gorky ed Janko Lavrin. London, Westhouse 1946. 80–101     297

“Three meetings,” Tr Agnes Lazarus. Lippincott’s magazine xvi No 1 (Jul 1875) 21–35     298

“Three sketches: The museum. The kiss. A parting,” Tr by H. Stewart. Saturday review cviii No 2821 (Nov 20, 1909) 629–630     299

Reprinted in Living age cclxiii No 3416 (Dec 25, 1909) 806–808. Not included in his Collected Works (Moscow 1954–58).

“Vassilissa,” Romance iii? (New York 1893)     300

Vassilissa is the heroine of Turgenev’s story, “Petushkov.” Although the above cited publication has not been located, it is probably the same story as “Petushkov.”

“Visions: A phantasy,” Galaxy xiv No 1 (Jul 1872) 108–121     301

—— In Library of choice literature. Philadelphia, Gebbie 1888. vol 6, 42–47     302

—— In The masterpiece library of short stories ed J. A. Hammerton. London, Educational Book Company 1920. vol 12, 105–116     303

“The watch: an old man’s story,” Lippincott’s magazine xvii (May 1876) 594–616     304

“The watch,” In The bridal march, from the Norwegian of Bjornstjerne Bjornson, and The watch, from the Russian of Ivan Turgenieff. Tr J. Williams. London, Digby-Long 1893. 175 p     305

“What Pushkin merits from Russia,” Tr Elizabeth Brereton Lord. Vassar review No 38 (Feb 1937) p 14     306

“When I from thee was forced to part,” Arena ii No 12 (Nov 1890) p 706     307

“The wood lark,” Tr Edna Underwood. In The Slav anthology. Portland, Me., Mosher Press 1931. 209–210     308


33

Works about Turgenev

[Mrs E Robinson. “Slavery in Russia”] The North American review lxxxii (Apr 1856) 293–318     309

P 314–318 is a review of Aus dem Tagebuche eines Jägers, the 1850 German edition of A sportsman’s notebook.

Athenaeum xxxviii No 1781 (Dec 14, 1861) p 803     310

Review of French edition of A nest of gentlefolk.

“A Russian romance,” Saturday review xiii No 334 (Mar 22, 1862) 334–336     311

Another review of the French edition of A nest of gentlefolk.

Athenaeum xli No 1856 (May 23, 1863) 680–681     312

Review of Nouvelles Scènes de la Vie Russe; Elena; un Premier Amour.

Saturday review xv No 399 (Jun 20, 1863) 799–800     313

Review of French editions of On the eve and First love.

“A novel from Russian,” Nation iv No 102 (Jun 13, 1867) 470–472     314

Review of Fathers and sons (1867).

[C. E. Norton] North American review cv No 216 (Jul 1867) 328–329     315

Review of Schuyler translation of Fathers and sons (1867).

“A Russian novel,” Saturday review xxiv No 619 (Sep 7, 1867) 322–323     316

Review of Fathers and sons (1867).

Athenaeum li No 2119 (Jun 6, 1868) 789–790     317

Review of Smoke.

“Iwan Turgenew, the Russian novelist,” The new eclectic iii (Dec 1868) 477–480     318

Translated from the Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung.

“Turguenief’s novels,” North British review l (Mar 1869) 22–64     319

“Liza,” [review] Saturday review xxviii No 718 (Jul 31, 1869) 163–164     320

[The Works of Ivan Sérguevitch Tourgéneff, Carlsruhe, Hasper 1866 — 5 v] British quarterly review l (Oct 1, 1869) 423–447     321

Royal Gettmann attributes this unsigned article to C. E. Turner.

“M. Turguenief’s ‘Liza,’” Every Saturday viii No 203 (Nov 20, 1869) 656–57     322

Review of Ralston translation of Liza.

A. C. Dillmann. “Ivan Toorgenef, the novelist,” Lippincott’s magazine vii (May 1871) 494–502     323

[T. S. Perry] Nation xii No 307 (May 18, 1871) 340–341     324

Review of On the eve (1871).

—— Nation xiv No 365 (Jun 27, 1872) 423–424     325

Review of Smoke (1872).

[Eugene Schuyler] Athenaeum No 2331 (Jun 29, 1872) p 815     326

Brief note on Spring floods.

[W. D. Howells] Atlantic monthly xxx No 178 (Aug 1872) 243–244     327

Review of Smoke (1872).

[T. S. Perry] Atlantic monthly xxx No 181 (Nov 1872) p 630     328

Review of German edition of Spring floods.

Atlantic monthly xxxi No 183 (Jan 1873) 110–112     329

Review of Drei Novellen (Vienna 1872).

[W. D. Howells] Atlantic monthly xxxi No 184 (Feb 1873) 239–241     330

Review of Liza (1872).

Hjalmar H. Boyesen. “A visit to Tourguéneff,” Galaxy xvii (Apr 1874) 456–466     331

Henry James, Jr. [Iwan Turgéniew] North American review cxviii No 243 (Apr 1874) 326–356     332

Reprinted in French poets and novelists. London, Macmillan 1878, 1884, 1893, 1904, 1908, 1919. 211–252

Also reprinted in Partial portraits. London, Macmillan 1888, 1894, 1899. 291–323

Thomas Sergeant Perry. “Ivan Turgénieff,” Atlantic monthly xxxiii (May 1874) 565–575     333

[T. S. Perry] Atlantic monthly xxxv No 212 (Jun 1875) 748–749     334

Review of Skizzen aus dem Tagebuche eines Jägers.

Athenaeum lxix No 2573 (Feb 17, 1877) 217–218     335

Review of Russian edition of Virgin soil.

34

“Notes,” Nation xxiv No 608 (Feb 22, 1877) 117     336

Brief paragraph discussing the English spelling of Turgenev’s name, favoring Turgenef.

Henry James. “Ivan Turgenef’s new novel,” Nation xxiv No 617 (Apr 26, 1877) 252–253     337

Review of 1877 French edition of Virgin soil.

[Hjalmar H. Boyesen] “Ivan Tourguéneff,” Scribner’s monthly xiv No 2 (May 1877) 200–207, port     338

W. R. S. Ralston. “Russian revolutionary literature,” Nineteenth century i (May 1877) 397–416     339

[T. S. Perry] Atlantic monthly xl No 237 (Jul 1877) 122–124     340

Another review of the 1877 French Virgin soil.

T. E. Child. “Ivan Turgenieff,” Belgravia xxxiii (Aug 1877) 212–223     341

Clara Barnes Martin. “Turgeneff and his translators,” [Letter] Nation xxvi No 672 (May 16, 1878) 321–322     342

“Tourgénief’s Virgin Soil,” Saturday review xlv No 1183 (Jun 29, 1878) 830–831     343

Review of Dilke’s 1878 translation.

William L. Kingsley. “Nihilism in Russia as it appears in the novels of Ivan Turgenieff,” New Englander xxxvii No 145 (Jul 1878) 553–572     344

Octave Thanet. “The moral purpose of Tourguéneff,”
Journal of speculative philosophy xii No 4 (Oct 1878) 427–434     345

S. E. Shevitch. “Russian novels and novelists of the day,” North American review cxxviii No 268 (Mar 1879) 326–334     346

Review of Diary of a sportsman, Smoke, and Virgin soil.

Clara Barnes Martin. “The greatest novelist’s work for freedom,” Atlantic monthly xliv (Dec 1879) 761–770     347

Helen and Alice Zimmern. Half-hours with foreign novelists, vol II. London, Remington 1880.     348

Biographical sketch p 3–10. “The Nihilist” (p 10–34) from Fathers and Sons.

“Russia and nihilism in the novels of Tourgénieff,” Blackwood’s magazine cxxvii No 775 (May 1880) 623–647     349

Hjalmar H. Boyesen. “Tourguéneff and the nihilists,” Critic i No 6 (Mar 26, 1881) 81–82     350

“Ivan Turguenief,” Saturday review lii No 1356 (Oct 22, 1881) 509–510     351

Charles Edward Turner. “Tourgenieffs novels as interpreting the political movement in Russia,” Macmillan’s magazine xlv No 270 (Apr 1882) 471–486     352

“Ivan Surguéyevitch Tourguénief,” Athenaeum lxxxii No 2915 (Sep 8, 1883) 305–306     353

“Ivan Turgénieff,” Saturday review lvi No 1454 (Sep 8, 1883) p 306     354

[Memorial Notices] Nation xxxvii No 950 (Sep 13, 1883) p 230; No 958 (Nov 8, 1883) p 395     355

A. R. R. Barker. “Obituary. Ivan Turgenev,” Academy xxiv No 593 (Sep 15, 1883) 179–180     356

W. R. S. Ralston. “Ivan Surguéyevitch Tourguénief,” Athenaeum lxxxii No 2916 (Sep 15, 1883) 337–338     357

Hjalmar H. Boyesen. “Ivan Tourguéneff,” Critic iii No 82 (Sep 22, 1883) 365–366     358

“Turgenieff [with] A Bibliography of Turgenieff,” The Literary world xiv (Sep 22, 1883) 304–305     359

“Trollope and Turgenieff,” The Literary world xiv (Oct 6 1883) p 327     360

Reprinted from the Athenaeum.

“The funeral of Tourguenieff,” Saturday review lvi No 1460 (Oct 20, 1883) 490–491     361

Alphonse Daudet. “Tourguéneff in Paris: Reminiscences by Daudet,” Century magazine xxvii Ns v No I (Nov 1883) 48–53, port     362

Bayard Tuckerman. “Ivan Sergheïevitch Tourgeneff,” Princeton review lix Ns xii (Nov 1883) 247–260     363

“Ivan Tourgénief,” Eclectic magazine Ns xxxvii No 5 (Nov 1883) 643–649     364

Reprints obituaries and memorials from the London Spectator, the London Athenaeum, and the Saturday review.

Henry James. “Ivan Turgénieff,” Atlantic monthly liii No 315 (Jan 1884) 42–55     365

Wilbur Larremore. “Tourguéneff,” Overland 35monthly 2nd ser iii No 3 (Mar 1884) 301–307     366

“Two of Turgenieff’s tales,” Literary world xv No 6 (Mar 22, 1884) p 87     367

Review of 1884 Gersoni translation of Mumu; and The diary of a superfluous man.

Charlotte Adams. “Tourgueneff’s youth,” Critic v No 27 (Jul 5, 1884) 7–8     368

G. V. Staratsky. “Ivan Tourguénief,” Dublin review xcv 3rd ser xii (Jul 1884) 46–65     369

“Ivan Serguievitch Tourgenieff,” London quarterly review lxiii Ns iii No 11 (Oct 1884) 38–55     370

Review of Tourgenieff’s Novels, Liza, etc.

William Richard Morfill. “The early life of Tourghéniev,” Academy xxvi No 657 (Dec 6, 1884) 375–376     371

Clara Barnes Martin. “The mother of Turgeneff,” Atlantic monthly lv No 329 (Mar 1885) 361–370     372

Arthur Tilley. “Ivan Turgénieff,” National review iv No 23 (Jan 1885) 683–697; v No 30 (Aug 1885) 829–841     373

“Turgeneff in his letters,” Nation xli No 1053 (Sep 3, 1885) 190–192     374

Ernest Dupuy. The great masters of Russian literature in the nineteenth century. Tr Nathan Haskell Dole. New York, Crowell 1886. 117–213, port     375

[Isabel Florence Hapgood] “Tolstoi and Turgeneff,” Nation xlii No 1088 (May 6, 1886) 388–389     376

Review of Anna Karénina.

W. H. Allen. “A Russian fury,” Cosmopolitan ii No 2 (Oct 1886) 76–84     377

Popular article on Turgenev’s mother.

[F. Bôcher] “Russian authors for French readers,” Nation xliii No 1111 (Oct 14, 1886) 312–313     378

Eugene Melchoir Marie de Vogue. The Russian novelists. Tr Jane Loring Edmonds. Boston, Lothrop 1887. 88–140     379

Thomas Sergeant Perry. “Russian novels,” Scribner’s magazine i No 2 (Feb 1887) 252–256     380

Joel Benton. “The Russian novel,” Southern Bivouac v (Louisville, May 1887) 723–725     381

Harriet Waters Preston. “The spell of the Russian writers,” Atlantic monthly lx (Aug 1887) 199–213     382

George Moore. “Turgeneff,” Fortnightly review xlix Ns xliii (Feb 1, 1888) 237–251     383

“Two Russian realists,” [Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy] London quarterly review lxx Ns x (Apr 1888) 56–73. See p 56–57     384

Georg Brandes. Impressions of Russia. Tr from the Danish by S. C. Eastman. New York, Crowell 1889. 271–300     385

An 1888 ed is mentioned in the preface.

—— New York, Crowell 1899.     386

Ivan Panin. Lectures on Russian literature: Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenef, Tolstoy. New York, Putnam 1889. 115–153     387

Emilia Pardo-Bazán. Russia, its people and its literature. Tr from the Spanish by F. Gardiner. Chicago, McClurg 1890. 209–233     388

Roman I. Zubof. “Tourgenief and the Russian social problem,” New England magazine Ns i No 6 (Feb 1890) 702–708     389

Charles Johnston. “The quarrel between Turgeniev and Tolstoi,” Academy xxxviii No 965 (Nov 1, 1890) 392–393     390

Nathan Haskell Dole. “Turgénief as a poet,” Arena ii No 12 (Nov 1890) 688–707     391

Excerpts from “A visitation.”

Leopold Katscher. “Tourgenieff in his letters,” Universal review viii No 32 (Dec 15, 1890) 577–596     392

George Moore. “Turgeneff,” In Impressions and opinions. New York, Scribner 1891. 65–97     393

—— New York, Brentano 1913. 44–65     394

“Russia: its people and government,” Quarterly review clxxii No 343 (Jan 1891) 113–142     395

Review of French edition of Fathers and Sons.

Allan Monkhouse. “Turgenieff,” In Books and plays. London, Mathews-Lane 1894. 118–154     396

Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen. “The mother of Ivan Tourguéneff,” Century magazine xlviii No 2 (Jun 1894) 249–252     397

Nathan Haskell Dole. “An episode in Turgénief’s life,” Arena x No 57 (Aug 1894) 401–408     398

William D. Howells. My literary passions. New 36York, Harper 1895. 229–232     399

[William D. Howells] “Mr Howells on Tourgueneff,” Critic xxvi No 682 (Mar 16, 1895) 204–205     400

From The Ladies Home Journal.

Reginald George Burton. “An appreciation of Russian fictional literature,” Westminster review cxliv No 5 (Nov 1895) 539–544     401

Edward Arthur Brayley Hodgetts. “Turgueniev’s place in literature,” Anglo-Russian literary society proceedings No 13 (Jan-Mar 1896) p 13     402

Maurice Todhunter. “Ivan Turgenev,” Westminster review cxlvi No 2 (Aug 1896) 141–149     403

Gertrude Shepherd. “Observations on some of the women of Turgueniev,” Anglo-Russian literary society proceedings No 17 (1897) 68–79     404

Serge Mikhailovich Volkonski. Pictures of Russian history and Russian literature. Boston, Lamson-Wolffe 1897. 249–256     405

—— London 1897.     406

—— Boston, Lamson-Wolffe 1898. 249–256     407

William D. Howells. “My favorite novelist and his best book,” Munsey’s magazine xvii No 1 (Apr 1897) 18–25     408

F. Volkhovsky. “Ivan S. Turgenev,” Free Russia ix No 4 (1898) 26–29     409

Virginia M. Crawford. Studies in foreign literature. London, Duckworth 1899. 7–18     410

Reprinted 1908.

Eugene Melchoir de Vogue. “Russian literature; its great period and its great novelists,” In Universal anthology xvii (1899) xxxi-xlix     411

Georg Brandes. “Nihilist circles in Russia,” Tr by S. C. Eastman. In Universal anthology xxxi (1899) 340–349     412

Reprinted from his Impressions of Russia, item 385.

E. A[rnold] B[ennett] “Ivan Turgenev, an enquiry,” Academy lvii No 1435 (Nov 4, 1899) 514–517, port     413

Kazimierz Waliszewski. A history of Russian literature. London, Heinemann; New York, Appleton 1900. 278–298     414

—— New York, Appleton 1905. 278–298     415

—— New York, Appleton 1927. 278–298     416

“Ivan Turgenev,” Literature vi No 126 (Mar 17, 1900) 219–220; No 128 (Mar 31, 1900) p 256     417

I The Controversialist

II The Artist

Eugene Schuyler. Selected essays. New York Scribner 1901. 259–274, passim     418

Isabel Florence Hapgood. A survey of Russian literature, with selections. New York, Chautauqua Press 1902. 164–180     419

Charles Whibley. “Ivan Turgenev,” North American review clxxiv No 543 (Feb 1902) 212–221     420

George Moore. “Avowals, being the second of a new series of ‘Confessions of a young man,’” [Balzac and Turgenev] Lippincott’s monthly magazine lxxii No 16 (Oct 1903) 481–488     421

James Gibbons Huneker. Overtones; A book of temperaments. New York, Scribner 1904. 142–161     422

—— New York, Scribner 1912. 142–161     423

William Leonard Courtney. “Turgenieff,” In Development of Maurice Maeterlinck and other sketches of foreign writers. London, Richards 1904.     424

Chapter 5.

“Turgeneff and his translators,” Nation lxxviii No 2014 (Feb 4, 1904) 93–95     425

Review of the Garnett and Hapgood collected editions.

Piotr Alekseyevich Kropotkin. Russian literature. New York, McClure-Phillips 1905. 89–109, passim     426

Reissued as Ideals and realities in Russian literature. New York, Knopf 1909 (q. v.). This title was reprinted by Knopf in 1915. All have the same pagination.

“A glance backward at Ivan Turgenieff and his work,” Critic xlvi No 5 (May 1905) 444–447     427

“Turgenev and the golden era of Russian literature,” American monthly review of reviews xxxv No 6 (Jun 1907) 741–742     428

[Lady] Anne Thackeray Ritchie. “Concerning Tourguénieff,” New quarterly i No 2 (Mar 1908) 181–194     429

Reprinted in Living age clvii No 3329 (Apr 25, 1908) 214–220, and in Blackstick Papers, 1908.

37

“Turgénieff, ‘The greatest of all novelists,’” Current literature xliii No 2 (Aug 1907) 174–178     430

Review of the Garnett and Hapgood translations and a French biography.

Crossfield, H. “Turgueneff’s novels and the Russian revolution,” Westminster review clxviii No 5 (Nov 1907) 523–536     431

Simeon Strunsky. “Turgenieff and the moderns,” Nation lxxxv No 2213 (Nov 28, 1907) 488–490     432

A review of the Hapgood collected edition.

“Turgénieff anew,” Atlantic monthly c (Dec 1907) 862–863     433

Alexander Brückner. A literary history of Russia. Ed by E. H. Minns and trans from the German by H. Havelock. London, Unwin 1908. 338–357     434

Maurice Baring. “Tolstoy and Turgenev,” Quarterly review cxi No 420 (Jul 1909) 180–202     435

Review of Garnett’s Heinemann edition of The works of I. S. Turgenev (item 2).

Maurice Baring. Landmarks in Russian literature. New York, Macmillan 1910.     436

Ch 4: “Tolstoy and Turgenev” 77–115

Ch 5: “The Place of Turgenev” 116–124

Jacob Tonson. “Books and persons,” [Turgenev and Dostoyevsky] New Age Ns vi No 22 (Mar 31, 1910) 518–519     437

Francis Gribble. “Tourgueneff,” Fortnightly review xciii Ns lxxxvii (Jun 1910) 1071–81     438

Richard H. P. Curle. “Tourgeneff and the life-illusion,” Fortnightly review xciii Ns lxxxvii (Jun 1910) 1082–89     439

“Turgenieff and the woman he loved,” Current literature il No 2 (Aug 1910) 213–215     440

Ford Madox Ford. The critical attitude. London, Duckworth 1911. 156–160     441

In chapter on “The Woman of the Novelists.”

Reprinted 1915.

John Arthur Thomas Lloyd. Two Russian reformers: Ivan Turgenev, Leo Tolstoy. New York, London, Lane 1911. 335 p, ports     442

Review: George Sampson. “Tolstoy and another,” Bookman xxxix No 232 (Jan 1911) 189–190.

William Lyon Phelps. Essays on Russian novelists. New York, Macmillan 1911. 62–129 bibliog 285–322     443

Reprinted 1917.

Nevill Forbes. “Turgenev,” Russian review i No 3 (London 1912) 116–140     444

W[illiam] D. H[owells] and T[homas] S[ergeant] P[erry] “Recent Russian fiction; a conversation,” North American review cxcvi No 680 (Jul 1912) 85–103     445

Philip Stafford Moxom. “Turgenief: The man,” North American review cxcvi No 682 (Sep 1912) 394–405     446

Reprinted in Two Masters, Browning and Turgenev. Boston, Sherman-French 1912.

Eugène Melchoir Marie de Vogüe. The Russian novel. Tr from the 11th French ed by H. A. Sawyer. London, Chapman-Hall 1913. 155–203, ports     447

John Cournos. “Turgenev, the emancipator,” Lippincott’s monthly magazine xci No 9 (Feb 1913) 233–238     448

Reprints “The district doctor,” p 239–246.

Maurice Baring. An outline of Russian literature. London, Williams-Norgate 1914–15. 161–175     449

Count Ilya Tolstoy. “Reminiscences of Tolstoy,” Tr George Calderon. Century magazine lxxxviii No 3 (Jul 1914) 424–428     450

Leo Wiener. An interpretation of the Russian people. New York, McBride, Nast 1915. passim     451

Padraic Colum. “Maria Edgeworth and Ivan Turgenev,” British review xi No 1 (Jul 1915) p 109     452

Henry St. George Tucker. “A Russian novelist’s estimate of the Russian intellectual,” Sewanee review xxiv No 1 (Jan 1916) 61–68     453

Arnold Bennett. Books and persons. London, Chatto & Windus 1917. 208–213     454

Edward Garnett. Turgenev; a study. With foreword by Joseph Conrad. London, Collins 1917. 206 p, port (Kings’ Way classics)     455

Henry James. “Ivan Turgeneff,” The Warner library. vol 25. New York, Knickerbocker Press 1917. 15057–62     456

Radoslav Andrea Tsanoff. “The art of Ivan Turgenev,” In The problem of life in the Russian novel; five public lectures.... Houston, Rice Institute Apr 1917. 144–179 (Rice Institute pamphlets vol 4)     457

[List of references on Ivan Sergieevich Turgenev] Washington, Library of Congress 1917. ff 4.     458

Cited in Bestermann. Unlocated.

38

“Turgenef’s failure,” Literary digest lix No 6 (Nov 9, 1918) p 28     459

Humphry Sandwich. “Hamlet the lover: thoughts on Ivan Turgeniev’s essay ‘Hamlet and Don Quixote,’” Anglo-Russian Literary society proceedings No 85 (1919) 33–41     460

Discussion, 41–43.

Robert Lynd. Old and new masters. New York, Scribner 1919. 117–122     461

John Arthur Thomas Lloyd. “The charm of Turgenev,” Fortnightly review cxii Ns cvi (Aug 1, 1919) 297–307     462

A. Clutton-Brock. Essays on books. New York, Dutton; London, Methuen 1920. 157–168     463

Reprinted from Times Literary Supplement.

Moissaye J. Olgin. A guide to Russian literature, 1820–1917. New York, Harcourt-Brace-Howe 1920. 76–81     464

Joseph Conrad. Notes on life and letters. London, Dent 1921. 61–65     465

—— New York, Doubleday 1921. 45–48     466

Percy Lubbock. The craft of fiction. London, Cape 1921. 121–122     467

Reprinted in The Travellers’ library series 1926, 1928, 1929, 1932, 1935, 1939.

Shakhnovski. A short history of Russian literature. Tr Serge Tomkeyeff. London, Paul-Trench-Trubner 1921. 127–129     468

Stuart P. B. Mais. Why we should read—London, Grant Richards 1921. 263–269     469

Jacob Zeitlin. “Turgenev and his heroes,” Nation cxii No 2915 (May 18, 1921) 712–713     470

Lilian Rowland-Brown. “Turgenev and girlhood,” Nineteenth century xc No 534 (Aug 1921) 230–244     471

M. P. Willcocks. “Turgenev,” English review xxxiii No 2 (Aug 1921) 175–189     472

Reprinted in Between the old world and the new. London, Allen-Unwin 1925; New York, Stokes 1926.

Oliver M. Sayler. “Turgenieff as a playwright,” North American review ccxiv No 790 (Sep 1921) 393–400     473

Sarah F. Radoff. “The intellectualist in Strindberg and Turgeniev,” Texas review vii No 3 (1922) 215–235     474

Alexander Kaun. “Turgenev rerambled,” Bookman lv (May 1922) 308–311     475

“A fortuitous advantage,” [Gogol’s Dead souls and Turgenev’s Sportsman’s sketches] Freeman vii No 169 (Jun 6, 1923) 294–295     476

M. O. Gershenson. “A sketch of Turgenev,” Living age cccxviii No 4132 (Sep 15, 1923) 513–516     477

First English translation of article in Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Jul 31, 1923) from his Mechta i mysl´ I. S. Turgeneva [Dreams and thoughts of Turgenev] Moscow 1919.

Frank Harris. “Ivan Turgenief: A snapshot,” In Contemporary portraits. Fourth series. London, Richards 1924. 49–53     478

Konstantin Sergeyevich Stanislavski. My life in art. Tr by J. J. Robbins. Boston, Little-Brown 1924. 542–546, passim     479

Leo Wiener. The contemporary drama of Russia. Boston, Little-Brown 1924. 276 p     480

See index and bibliography.

Prince D. S. Mirsky [Dmitrii Petrovich Svyatopolk-Mirski]. Modern Russian literature. London, Oxford Univ Press 1925. 22–33, port.     481

Abraham Yarmolinsky. Turgenev, the man—his art—and his age. New York, Century 1926. 386 p, ports     482

—— London, Hodder & Stoughton 1927.     483

See also 1959 edition.

Lawrence F. Abbott. “A word about Russia,” Outlook [New York] cxliii No 8 (Jun 23, 1926) 275–276     484

[Turgenev the modern] Theatre Arts monthly x No 11 (Nov 1926) 725–727     485

Janko Lavrin. Russian literature. London, Benn [1927] 38–41 biblio (Benn’s Sixpenny Library No 56)     486

John Galsworthy. “Six novelists in profile,” in Castles in Spain and other screeds. London, Heinemann 1927. p 150–153 on Turgenev.     487

Same address reprinted in Candelabra, another collection of essays and addresses. London, Heinemann 1932. 124–127.

Prince D. S. Mirsky [Dmitrii Petrovich Svyatopolk-Mirski]. A history of Russian literature, from the earliest times to the death of Dostoyevsky. London, Routledge 1927. 236–254, passim     488

Included in A history of Russian literature (1949), item 540.

Arnold Bennett. The savour of life. New York, 39Doubleday, Doran 1928. 127–135     489

Frank Swinnerton. A London bookman. London, Secker 1928. 205–208     490

Edmund Gosse. “A memory of Tourgenieff,” London mercury xvii No 100 (Feb 1928) p 403     491

Joshua Kunitz. Russian literature and the Jew. New York, Columbia Univ Press 1929. 46–51, passim     492

Columbia University PhD thesis. Short discussion of “The Jew.”

Item not used     493

Janko Lavrin. Studies in European literature. London, Constable 1929. 58–79     494

E. H. Carr. “Turgenev and Dostoyevsky,” Slavonic review viii No 22 (Jun 1929) 156–163     495

Gustave Flaubert. “Letters to Turgenev,” Living age cccxxxvii No 4349 (Nov 1, 1929) 295–299     496

E. H. Carr. “Two Russians,” Fortnightly review cxxxii (Dec 2, 1929) 823–826     497

Cornelia Pulsifer Kelley. The early development of Henry James. In Studies in language and literature xv No 1–2. Urbana, Illinois University (May-February) 1930. See index     498

William Lyon Phelps. “Turgenev, ancestor: The Russian novelist as a source of modern psychological drama,” Theatre Guild magazine vii No 8 (May 1930) 37–39, illus     499

Catherine Radziwill. “Ivan Turgenev,” Commonweal xiv No 15 (Aug 12, 1931) 361–362     500

Clarence A. Manning. “Ivan Sergyeyevich Turgenev,” South Atlantic quarterly xxx No 4 (Oct 1931) 366–381     501

Harry Hershkowitz. Democratic ideas in Turgenev’s works. New York, Columbia Univ Press 1932. 131 p, biblio     502

Columbia Univ thesis, published in the series, Columbia University Slavonic Studies.

E. A. Osborne. “Russian literature and translations: Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev, 1818–1883,” Bookman lxxxiii (Dec 1932) 198–202. port     503

Alexander Kaun. “Turgenev, the European,” Books abroad vii (Jul 1933) 274–277, port p 270     504

Edward Bernstein. “Turgenev and the Tolstoys,” New statesman and nation vii (Mar 10, 1934) 349–350     505

Sophie Andreyevna Tolstoy (Bers). “Tolstoy versus Turgeniev: The childish quarrel between two literary giants that almost ended in a duel, narrated by Tolstoy’s wife,” Golden Book magazine xx No 115 (Jul 1934) 91–92     506

Virginia Woolf. ”The novels of Turgenev,” Yale review xxiii No 2 (Winter 1934) 276–283     507

Reprinted in The Captain’s Death Bed and other essays. New York, Harcourt-Brace, 1950. 53–61.

Ford Madox Ford. “Turgenev, the beautiful genius,” American Mercury xxxix No 153 (Sep 1936) 41–50     508

—— Portraits from life. Boston, Houghton-Mifflin 1937. 143–163     509

—— London, Allen-Unwin 1938, under title Mightier than the sword. 190–214. See also p 30.     510

Reprinted from American Mercury xxxix No 153 (Sep 1936) 41–50 (item 508).

Nicolas E. Niewiadomsky. “Master of Language,” [Letter] American Mercury xl No 158 (Feb 1937) p 252     511

Rebuttal by Ford Madox Ford on same page.

V. S. Pritchett. “A hero of our time?” London Mercury xxxvi No 216 (Aug 1937) 359–364     512

Ivar Spector. The golden age of Russian literature. Seattle, University Book Store 1938. mimeo 49–71, biblio     513

—— Los Angeles, Cal., Scholastic Press 1939. 75–103     514

—— Rev ed, Caldwell, Idaho, Caxton Printers 1943. ports. 75–103     515

Royal Alfred Gettmann. Turgenev in England and America. Urbana, Univ of Illinois Press 1941. 196 p (Illinois studies in language and literature XXVII No 2) biblio 187–194     516

Daniel Lerner. “The influence of Turgenev on Henry James,” Slavonic and East European review xx No 1 (Dec 1941) 28–54     517

Janko Lavrin. An introduction to the Russian novel. London, Methuen 1942. 57–66     518

John Arthur Thomas Lloyd. Ivan Turgenev, a literary biography. London, Hale 1942. 227 p, ports     519

—— London, Hale; New York, Transatlantic 40Arts; Toronto, Ryerson Press 1943.     520

V. S. Pritchett. “Books in general,” New statesman and nation Ns xxiii No 569 (Jan 17, 1942) p 43; Ns xxxvi No 920 (Oct 23, 1948) p 351; Ns xlvii No 1203 (Mar 27, 1954) 409–410     521

Raymond Mortimer. “Books in general,” New Statesman and Nation Ns xxvi No 646 (Jul 10, 1943) p 27; Ns xxvi No 651 (Aug 14, 1943) p 107     522

Charles Morgan. Reflections in a mirror. First series. London, Macmillan 1944. 165–173     523

Noel Annan. “Novelist-philosophers III: Turgenev,” Horizon xi No 63 (Mar 1945) 152–163     524

George Halperin. Tolstoy, Dostoevski, Tourgenev; The three great men in Russia’s world of literature. Chicago, Chicago Literary Club 1946. 73 p     525

V. S. Pritchett. “The Russian day,” The living novel. London, Chatto-Windus 1946. 219–225     526

Valentine Snow. Russian writers; a bio-bibliographical dictionary. From the age of Catherine II to the October revolution of 1917. vol I. New York, International Book Service 1946. 197–202     527

William Henry Chamberlin. “Turgenev: The eternal romantic,” Russian review v No 2 (Spring 1946) 10–23     528

Nicholas N. Sergievsky. “The tragedy of a great love: Turgenev and Pauline Viardot,” American Slavic and East European review v No 14–15 (Nov 1946) 55–71     529

Amrei Ettlinger and Joan M. Gladstone. Russian literature, theatre and art; a bibliography of works in English, published 1900–1945. London, Hutchinson 1947. 86–88     530

Helen Muchnic. An introduction to Russian literature. Garden City, NY, Doubleday 1947. 125–149     531

Richard Hare. Russian literature from Pushkin to the present day. London, Methuen 1947. 63–77     532

Varvara, Nikolayevna Zhitova. The Turgenev family. Tr by A. S. Mills. London, Harvill Press 1947. 179 p     533

First published in Vestnik yevropy, Nov-Dec 1884.

—— New York, Roy Publishers 1954?     534

Henry James. The art of fiction, and other essays. Intro by Morris Roberts. New York, Oxford Univ Press 1948.     535

Includes two essays on Turgenev, one a reprint from the North American review.

Janko Lavrin. From Pushkin to Mayakovsky, a study in the evolution of a literature. London, Sylvan Press 1948. 104–122, passim     536

Lord David Cecil. “Turgenev,” Fortnightly clxiv (1948) 42–49     537

Reprinted in Virginia quarterly review xxiv (1948) 591–601.

Walter A. Strauss. “Turgenev in the role of publicity agent for Flaubert’s La Tentation de Saint Antoine,” Harvard Library Bulletin ii No 3 (Autumn 1948) 405–410     538

Lord David Cecil. Poets and story-tellers; a book of critical essays. London, Constable 1949. 123–138     539

Prince D. S. Mirsky [Dmitrii Petrovich Svyatopolk-Mirski]. A history of Russian literature. Ed and abridged by Francis J. Whitfield. New York, Knopf 1949. 139–140, 184–198, 233–234, passim     540

Henry Gifford. The hero of his time; a theme in Russian literature. London, Longmans 1950. 141–148, 158–176 et passim     541

F. W. J. Hemmings. The Russian novel in France 1884–1914. London, Oxford Univ Press 1950. 20–24, 31–38 et passim     542

Mark L´vovich Slonim. The epic of Russian literature, from its origins through Tolstoy. New York, Oxford Univ Press 1950. 250–271     543

Charles Morgan. “Turgenev’s treatment of a love-story,” Transactions of the Royal Society of literature of the United Kingdom Ns xxv (1950) 102–119     544

Zbigniew Folejewski. “Turgenev and Prus,” Slavonic and East European review xxix (Dec 1950) 132–138     545

Boris V. Varneke. History of the Russian theatre. Tr Boris Brasol. New York, Macmillan 1951. 400–406 et passim     546

David Footman. “Turgenev rediscovered,” Listener xlv (Apr 5, 1951) 546–547     547

Renato Poggioli. “Realism in Russia,” Comparative literature iii No 3 (Summer 1951) 253–267     548

David Garnett. “Turgenev, Madame Viardot, and A Month in the Country,” Adelphi xxvii 41No 4 (Third quarter 1951) 346–350     549

Nina Brodianski. “Turgenev’s short stories. A revaluation,” Slavonic and East European review xxxii No 78 (Dec 1953) 70–91     550

David Magarshack. Turgenev; a life. London, Faber 1954. ports. biblio, 314–316     551

Review: Ivar Spector, Russian review xiv No 3 (Apr 1955) 163–164.

Dorothy Brewster. East-West passage; a study in literary relationships. London, Allen-Unwin 1954. 219–226, passim     552

Review: René Wellek, Russian review xiv No 3 (Jul 1955) 267–268.

Janko Lavrin. Russian writers; their lives and literature. New York, Van Nostrand 1954. 116–131 et passim port     553

Review: Marc Slonim, Russian review xiv No 1 (Jan 1955) 75–76.

Alfred Kazin. “Turgenev and the non-Russians,” In The inmost leaf. New York, Harcourt, Brace 1955. 89–92     554

—— New York, Noonday Press 1959. 89–92 (Noonday paperbacks)

Dmytro Chyzhevs´kyi. “Manuscripts of Dostoevsky and Turgenev at Harvard,” Harvard library bulletin ix (1955) 410–415     555

Harold Orel. “English critics and the Russian novel, 1850–1917,” Slavonic and East European review xxxiii No 81 (Jun 1955) 457–469     556

Gilbert Phelps. The Russian novel in English fiction. London, Hutchinson 1956. 42–138 et passim     557

Wacław Lednicki. Bits of table talk on Pushkin, Mickiewicz, Goethe, Turgenev, and Sienkiewicz. The Hague, Nijhoff 1956. 62–86 et passim (International Scholars Forum V)     558

Oscar Cargill. “The Princess Casamassima; a critical reappraisal,” PMLA lxxi No 1 (Mar 1956) 97–117     559

Mildred A. Martin. “The last shall be first; a study of three Russian short stories ... Turgenev’s ‘Biryuk,’” Bucknell review vi No 1 (Mar 1956) 13–23     560

Irving Howe. “Turgenev, the virtues of hesitation,” Hudson review viii No 4 (Winter 1956) 533–551     561

Ralph E. Matlaw. “Turgenev’s art in Spring Torrents,” Slavonic and East European review xxxv No 84 (Dec 1956) 157–171     562

Henry James. “Ivan Turgenev’s Virgin Soil,” In Literary reviews and essays ed Albert Mordell. New York, Twayne 1957. 190–196     563

Isaiah Berlin. “An episode in the life of Ivan Turgenev,” London magazine iv No 7 (1957) 14–18     564

Following this short article Turgenev’s “A Fire at Sea” is reprinted. See item 144.

Ralph E. Matlaw. “Turgenev’s novels: civic responsibility and literary predilection,” Harvard Slavic studies iv (1957) 249–262     565

Edmund Wilson. “Turgenev and the life-giving drop,” New Yorker xxxiii (Oct 19, 1957) 163–216     566

Reprinted in Turgenev’s Literary reminiscences and autobiographical fragments tr by David Magarshak. See item 18, p 3–64.

E. D. Goy. “The attitude of the Serbs to Turgenev’s works in the 19th century,” Slavonic and East European review xxxvi No 86 (Dec 1957) 123–149     567

Cyril Bryner. “Turgenev and the English speaking world,” In Three papers in Slavonic studies (Fourth International Congress of Slavists. Moscow 1958) Vancouver, Univ of British Columbia 1958. 3–19     568

Marc Slonim. An outline of Russian literature. London, Oxford Univ Press 1958. 89–98 et passim     569

New York Public Library. Slavonic Division. “Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev, 1818–1883.”     570

Unpublished exhibition material from the 75th anniversary exhibit in 1958.

Prince D. S. Mirsky [Dmitrii Petrovich Svyatopolk-Mirski]. A history of Russian literature from the beginning to 1900. New York, Vintage Books 1958. 193–208 et passim     571

Ralph E. Matlaw. “A New Letter of Turgenev,” Harvard Library bulletin xii No 2 (Spring 1958) 268–270     572

Karol Maichel. “The collected works of Russian classical authors,” American Slavic and East European review xvii No 2 (Apr 1958) 223–225     573

Sergei Bertensson. “Turgenev and Savina,” American Slavic and East European review xvii 42(Dec 1958) 530–533     574

Abraham Yarmolinsky. Turgenev: the man, his art and his age. New York, Orion Press 1959; London, Deutsch, Toronto, Burns & MacEachern 1960. 406 p illus     575

—— New York, Colliers books 1961. 362 p     575A

Review: Richard Gilman, Commonweal lxx No 18 (Aug 28, 1959) 451–452.

Richard Hare. Portraits of Russian personalities between reform and revolution. London, Oxford Univ Press 1959. 68–103     576

V. S. Pritchett. “The marksman,” New Statesman lvii (1959) 74–75     577

Oscar Mandel. “Molière and Turgenev: the literature of no-judgment,” Comparative literature xi No 3 (Summer 1959) 233–249     578

Milton Hindus. “The duels in Mann and Turgenev,” Comparative literature xi No 4 (Fall 1959) 308–312     579

Richard Freeborn. Turgenev; the novelist’s novelist. London, Oxford Univ Press 1960. 201 p     580

Richard George Kappler.[Turgenev and the French] Diss, Columbia Univ 1960. 195 p microfilm     581

“Quixotic Hamlet,” MD, Medical newsmagazine v No 2 (Feb 1961) 180–191     582

Decor

43

Title Index

Numbers refer to items, not pages. Items with asterisks represent transliterated Russian titles of Turgenev’s works for which no translations have been found. An English title entry is followed by the equivalent Russian title [in square brackets]. A Russian title entry is followed by all English variant titles (in parentheses) and their item numbers. Item numbers in italics refer to reviews.


53

Author and Translator Index


Transcriber’s Note

The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.

Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations in hyphenation have been standardized but all other spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.






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