Liza; Or, "A Nest of Nobles". Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev

Liza; Or,


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       Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev

      Liza; Or, "A Nest of Nobles"

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066180744

       PREFACE.

       LIZA.

       I.

       II.

       III.

       IV.

       V.

       IV.

       VII.

       VIII.

       IX.

       X.

       XI.

       XII.

       XIII

       XIV.

       XV.

       XVI.

       XVII.

       XVIII.

       XIX.

       XX.

       XXI.

       XXII.

       XXIV.

       XXIV.[A]

       XXV.

       XXVI.

       XXVII.

       XXVIII.

       XXIX.

       XXX.

       XXXI.

       XXXII.

       XXXIII.

       XXXIV.

       XXXV.

       XXXVI.

       XXXVII.

       XXXVIII.

       XXXIX.

       XL.

       XLI.

       XLII.

       XLIII.

       EPILOGUE.

       Table of Contents

      The author of the Dvoryanskoe Gnyezdo, or "Nest of Nobles," of which a translation is now offered to the English reader under the title of "Liza," is a writer of whom Russia may well be proud.[A] And that, not only because he is a consummate artist—entitled as he is to take high rank among those of European fame, so accurate is he in his portrayal of character, and so quick to seize and to fix even its most fleeting expression; so vividly does he depict by a few rapid touches the appearance of the figures whom he introduces upon his canvas, the nature of the scenes among which they move—he has other and even higher claims than these to the respect and admiration of Russian readers. For he is a thoroughly conscientious worker; one who, amid all his dealings with fiction, has never swerved from his regard for what is real and true; one to whom his own country and his own people are very dear, but who has neither timidly bowed to the prejudices of his countrymen, nor obstinately shut his eyes to their faults.

      [Footnote A: Notwithstanding the unencouraging opinion expressed by Mr. Ralston in this preface, of the probable fate of "Fathers and Children," and "Smoke," with the English public, both have been translated in America and have met with very fair success. Of course, even more may be hoped for the author's other works.]

      His first prose work, the "Notes of a Sportsman" (Zapiski Okhotnika), a collection of sketches of country life, made a deep and lasting impression upon the minds of the educated classes in Russia, so vigorous were its attacks upon the vices of that system of slavery which was


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