The House of the Dead; or, Prison Life in Siberia / with an introduction by Julius Bramont
EVERYMAN’S LIBRARY EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
FICTION
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JULIUS BRAMONT
First Issue of this Edition 1911 Reprinted 1914
“The Russian nation is a new and wonderful phenomenon in the history of mankind. The character of the people differs to such a degree from that of the other Europeans that their neighbours find it impossible to diagnose them.” This affirmation by Dostoïeffsky, the prophetic journalist, offers a key to the treatment in his novels of the troubles and aspirations of his race. He wrote with a sacramental fervour whether he was writing as a personal agent or an impersonal, novelist or journalist. Hence his rage with the calmer men, more gracious interpreters of the modern Sclav, who like Ivan Tourguenieff were able to see Russia on a line with the western nations, or to consider her maternal throes from the disengaged, safe retreat of an arm-chair exile in Paris. Not so was l’âme Russe to be given her new literature in the eyes of M. Dostoïeffsky, strained with watching, often red with tears and anger.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
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THE HOUSE OF THE DEAD BY FEDOR DOSTOÏEFFSKY
INTRODUCTION
CONTENTS
PRISON LIFE IN SIBERIA.
PART I.
CHAPTER I. TEN YEARS A CONVICT
CHAPTER II. THE DEAD-HOUSE
CHAPTER III. FIRST IMPRESSIONS
CHAPTER VI. THE FIRST MONTH
CHAPTER VIII. NEW ACQUAINTANCES—PETROFF
CHAPTER IX. MEN OF DETERMINATION—LUKA
CHAPTER X. ISAIAH FOMITCH—THE BATH—BAKLOUCHIN.
CHAPTER XI. THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS
CHAPTER XII. THE PERFORMANCE.
Part II.
CHAPTER I. THE HOSPITAL
CHAPTER IV. THE HUSBAND OF AKOULKA
CHAPTER V. THE SUMMER SEASON
CHAPTER VI. THE ANIMALS AT THE CONVICT ESTABLISHMENT
CHAPTER VII. GRIEVANCES
CHAPTER VIII. MY COMPANIONS
CHAPTER IX. THE ESCAPE
CHAPTER X. FREEDOM!