Turgenev in English: A Checklist of Works by and about Him
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 1950. 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.
_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.—Pyotr 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.
—— 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. 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
—— 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. _Slavonic 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 Press 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 1943. 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.