INDEX
Abdul Hamid, [48], [157], [158], [161]
Afghanistan, [81]
Aksakoff, Ivan, [37]
Alcohol in Russia, [168], [169]
Alexandra, Empress, [23]
Alexandrovna, Empress Marie, [73]
Anglo-Russian agreement, [18], [25]
Anglo-Russian Alliance, [94], [286], [293], [294]
Anglo-Turkish Convention, [151]
Armenia, [147], [148], [152], [161]
Armenians, [148], [149], [150], [151], [152]
Asquith, Mr. H. H., [79]
Athens, [49]
Balkans, the, [31], [39], [41], [46], [85], [264]
Baltic, the, [25]
Baring, Walter, [26]
Bartlett, Sir Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, [99]
Belgrade, [31]
Berlin, [87]
Béust, Count, [82]
Bismarck, Prince, [50], [51], [60], [98], [277]
Bludoff, Countess, [73]
Bosnia, [31]
Bulgaria, [19], [23], [40], [113], [265], [267], [270]
Bulgarians, [19], [267], [269]
Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, The, by Mr. Gladstone, [26]
Campbell-Bannerman, Lady, [78]
Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry, [76], [78], [79]
Carlyle, Thomas, [80], [81], [163]
Cettingje, [31]
Christ or Moses? Which? by Madame Novikoff, [58]
Clarendon, Lord, [292]
Cologne, [69]
Constantine, Grand Duke, [247], [253]
Constantinople, [47], [49], [72], [163], [266]
Constantinople Conference, [46], [48]
Cossacks, [37]
Crete, [49]
Crimean War, [203]
Cyprus Convention, [151], [161]
Daily News, The, [26], [39], [120]
Disraeli, Mr. (Lord Beaconsfield), first meeting with Madame Novikoff, [24]; his policy resented by Russia, [29]; against the freeing of Bulgaria from Turkish oppression, [113]; his high opinion of Abdul Hamid, [157-158]; on the Treaty of Berlin, [159]; on England's policy with regard to Asia Minor, [160]; opposes Russia's entry into Constantinople, [266]
Dmitrieff, General Radko, [267]
Dogger Bank incident, [197]
Dolgorouki, Prince Vladimir, [74]
Döllinger, Dr., [57], [58], [68]
Dostoyevsky, Fiodor, [236], [237]
Douma, the, [49]
Egypt, [94]
Elizabeth, Grand Duchess, [137], [296]
Emperor, Russian, [21]
England, [20], [29], [30], [38], [39], [40], [41], [42], [43], [44], [49], [50], [52], [89], [93], [96], [97], [99], [100], [113], [118], [149], [151], [155], [158], [160], [164], [185], [186], [193], [194], [197], [201], [216], [217], [238], [242], [269], [292], [293], [294], [296]
France, [79], [89], [203], [237]
Franco-German War, [288]
Freeman, E. A., [39]
Free Russia, [199]
Fock, General, [192]
Fortnightly Review, [61], [163]
Froude, Henry, [39], [66], [80], [82], [194]
Germany, [22], [33], [50], [51], [95], [109], [203], [271], [277], [287], [291], [293], [297]
Ghiray, Hadji, [31]
Gibraltar, [49]
Girardin, Emile de, [70]
Gladstone, Mr. W. E., makes acquaintance of Madame Novikoff, [23]; what he called her, [24]; solitary championship of Russia, [25]; publishes his pamphlet, The Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, [26]; his anxiety about the future of England and Russia, [27]; speaks at St. James's Hall, [43]; a misunderstood incident, [44]; his fearless denunciation of Turkey, [45]; his friendship with Madame Novikoff criticised, [48]; his dying utterance, [53]; his character, [54]; he reviews Madame Novikoff's Russia and England, [55]; Cardinal Manning's opinion of him, [56]; his interest in the Old Catholics, [57]; a letter to Madame Novikoff, [58]; another letter, [62-64]; his interest in Shakespeare, [65]; a talk with Hayward, [67]; his love of books, [68]; an incident at Munich, [69]; at a dinner in Paris, [70]; his knowledge of French, [71]; a comment by the Pall Mall Gazette, [102]; on the Berlin Treaty, [147]; urges the coercion of the Sultan, [152]; a letter on Lord Salisbury's position, [153]; on the Sultan of Turkey, [154]; condemns the policy of Prince Lobanoff, [156]; on the Cyprus Treaty, [161]; on the history of nations, [219]
Gladstone, Mrs., [40], [55], [67]
Gladstone, Miss Helen, [69], [70], [71]
Gortschakoff, Prince, [37], [51], [95], [105]
Goya, Francisco, [84]
Great Britain, [23], [34], [40], [48], [162]
Greece, [49]
Grey, Lady Sybil, [137]
Grey, Earl, [137]
Hague Conference, The, [30], [186]
Hamilton, Bishop, [56]
Harcourt, Sir William, [39]
Hayward, [65], [67], [193], [194]
Helen, Grand Duchess, [73], [74-77], [141], [142]
Herzegovina, [31]
Ignatieff, General, [46], [47]
Is Russia Wrong? by Madame Novikoff, [162]
Jews, [112], [113], [114], [115], [116], [117], [119], [120], [121]
"Karaims," ancestors of, [122]
Kinglake, A. W., [34], [39], [66], [82], [93], [97], [186], [187], [188], [192], [193], [194]
Karaite Jews, the, [119]
Keyserling, Count, [60], [77], [89]
Khalil Pasha, [72]
Khanoff, General Ali, [21]
Khvostoff, Mons., [23]
Kiréeff, Alexander, [31], [32], [50], [125], [248]
Kiréeff, Nicholas, [31], [32], [33], [35], [39], [41], [51]
Kireevo, [41]
Kovalsky, Bishop, [179]
La Revue Internationale dc Théologie, [61]
Lobanoff-Rostovsky, Prince, [103], [160]
Loftus, Lord Augustus, [36], [37]
London, [23], [77], [87], [100], [102], [104], [114], [115]
Lucca, [32]
Mariavites, the, [179]
Mikoulin, General, [189]
Milan, Prince, [32]
Mohammedans in Russia, [21]
Montefiore, Mr. George, [121]
Moscow, [17], [18], [19], [36], [37], [49], [51], [68], [85], [141], [142], [298]
Munich, [69]
Murchison, Sir Roderick, [89]
My Secret Service, [271]
Naoumovitch, Father, [96]
Napier, Lord, [39], [72], [73]
Nesselrode, Count, [95]
Newmarch, Mrs., [145]
Nicholas, Count, [47]
Nicolaevitch, Grand Duke Constantine, [76], [141]
Nicholas I, Emperor, [90-95], [97-98]
Nicolas, Grand Duke, [74]
Nihilism, [199], [201], [202], [204], [276]
Nineteenth Century, The, [55], [163]
Nordau, Dr. Max, [121]
Novikoff, Alexander, [125], [127], [128], [170], [174]
Novikoff, E., [104]
Novikoff, M., [129], [134], [135]
Novikoff, Madame Olga, in Moscow, [17]; her ambition being realised, [18]; memories of 1876, [19]; introduction to Mr. Gladstone, [23]; and to Mr. Disraeli, [24]; what Mr. Gladstone called her, [24]; her fight against prejudice, [26]; Mr. Gladstone's visits, [27]; her brother, Nicholas, goes to help the Slavs, [31]; his death, [32]; effect on Russia, [34]; she assists the ambulance work, [38]; in despair she blames England, [39]; her English correspondents, [39]; letter from Mrs. Gladstone, [40]; at the St. James's Hall meeting, [43]; Mr. Gladstone sees her home, [44]; she writes to him, [45]; back in Russia, [48]; Russia declares war against Turkey, [49]; she publishes her book, Russia and England, [54]; which Mr. Gladstone reviews, [55]; a letter from Mr. Gladstone, [58]; she publishes a German pamphlet, [60]; a letter from Prof. E. Michaud, [61]; Mr. Gladstone writes to her, [62]; Hayward, the critic, [65]; her memory of Tyndall, [68]; a visit to Miss Helen Gladstone, [69]; her Thursday receptions in Russia, [72]; her mother-in-law, [74]; at the Grand Duchess Helen's ball, [75]; she meets the Campbell-Bannermans, [77]; her last talk with Sir Henry, [79]; visits from Carlyle and Froude, [80]; she visits Carlyle on his death-bed, [81-82]; a memory of Mark Twain, [82]; her friendship with Verestchagin, [84]; her meeting with Skobeleff, [85]; his last visit to her, [86]; a talk with Prince Gortschakoff, [95]; a reminiscence of childhood, [96]; a tribute from Sir Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett, [99]; her detestation of the word "mission," [101]; a remark of the Pall Mall Gazette, [102]; a letter from Prince Lobanoff-Rostovsky, [103]; her brother, E. Novikoff, [104]; a Press comment on her friendship with Count Shouvaloff, [105]; her last interview with Prince Gortschakoff, [105]; why she used the initials "O.K.," [106]; in London, [108]; a speech on Shakespeare, [110-111]; her first public expression of views on the Jewish question, [112]; letters to The Times, [114--116]; her comment on the Sydney Street affair, [118]; her attitude towards Jews, [121]; in Russia, the famine, [125]; her son, Alexander Novikoff, [127]; interviewed by The Week's News, [128-136]; a visit to Paris, [139]; about Nicolas Rubinstein, [140-142]; a talk with the Grand Duchess Helen, [142]; memories of well-known musicians, [143-146]; she hears of the Armenian massacres, [152]; letters from Mr. Gladstone, [153-154]; she tries to persuade her country that Disraeli does not represent England, [156]; what she was told about the Cyprus Treaty, [161]; she publishes Is Russia Wrong? [162]; her dream of an Anglo-Russian understanding, [165]; a conversation on the drink question in Russia, [166-170]; in Petrograd, [175]; in the village of Novo Alexandrovka, [177]; about the "Mariavites," [179]; memories of Scotland, [184]; her first meeting with John Bright, [186]; a talk with Kinglake, [187]; his weekly letters, [193]; about the Dogger Bank affair, [197]; in London, [200]; on the English idea of Siberia, [216]; why prisoners are sent to Siberia, [217]; her introduction to Siberia as it is, [220]; her friend, Helen Voronoff, [226]; on Russian prisons, [227]; a visit from Dostoyevsky, [236]; about Russia in 1905; on the Grand Duke Constantine, [247]; a letter from him, [251]; on Prince Oleg Constantinovitch, [252]; a visit from ex-President Grant, [266]; on prisoners of war, [272]; on the Russian Slavophils, [282]; her ideal in life, [286]; on Prussianism, [289]; on England, [295]
Pall Mall Gazette, The, [102]
Parliamentary system in Russia, [214]
Pasha, Madame Nubar, [100]
Pears, Sir Edwin, Forty Years in Constantinople, [47]
Petrograd, [18], [19], [36], [49], [68], [72], [97], [100], [111], [115], [118], [139], [141], [144], [166], [170], [175], [242], [243], [269], [299]
Pobyedonostzeff, C. P., [68]
Rakovitz, [32]
Ratchinsky, Mr. Serge, [176], [177]
Revue des Deux Mondes, [70]
Roumiantzoff Museum, Moscow, [41], [86]
Rubinstein, Nicolas, [138], [140], [141], [142], [143]
Russia and England, by Madame Novikoff, [54], [107], [163]
Russia, Tsar's reception in Petrograd and Moscow, [18]; sympathy for oppressed Slavs, "Red Cross" collections, [19]; pledge to save Serbia, [20]; Mohammedans, [21]; Emperor's New Year address, [21]; political unity, [22]; attitude towards Great Britain in 1876 and in 1914, [23]; crisis between Great Britain and Russia, [25]; inclination for war with Turkey, [26]; bitterness against Disraeli's policy, [29]; England blamed for Slav oppression, [30]; Russian volunteers to help Slavs, [31]; army eager to assist, [34]; effect of Nicholas Kiréeff's death, [35], [38], [39]; Cossacks in disguise sent to Balkans, [36]; chivalry of Russian nature, [37]; Great Britain and Russia's distrust of each other, [40]; England's attitude hostile, [43]; war declared against Turkey, England's neutrality, [48]; plans ascribed to England, [49]; receipt of the news of declaration of war, [49]; mission to Afghanistan, [81]; eve of Russo-Turkish War, [85]; smoking not common among women, [100]; "Russians are Slavs," [106]; Jewish question in Russia, [112]; what the Hebrews did in 1876, [113]; feeling between Slavs and Jews, [113]; Yiddish jargon not used by Russians, [117]; vigilance with regard to criminals, [117]; famine of 1892, [125]; sufferings of people, [126], [128-136]; Moscow and Petrograd Conservatoriums, [141]; people's interest in England's expressed sympathy for oppressed Armenians, [162]; temperance measures, [167]; Germans encourage sale of alcohol in Polish provinces, [178]; reforms in Russia effected rapidly, [180]; arrest of alleged Englishwoman at Warsaw, [196]; Dogger Bank incident, [197]; and a parallel, [198]; feeling towards Nihilists, [202]; war never desired, [203]; effect of political murders, [209]; people's loyalty to Emperor, [210]; unlimited faith in new theories, [211]; difference between students of 1840 and 1860, [212]; parliamentary system unsatisfactory, [214]; Russian nature, [214], [215]; meaning of Siberia to Englishmen, [216]; the convict's treatment in Siberia, [217]; proportion of prisoners, [218]; revolution of 1905, [237]; the "Court of Petitions," [241]; the Court of Appeal to Mercy, [242]; prisoners taken for active service, [244]; political prisoners' patriotism. [245]; the ancient Russian parish, [279]; proposed reforms, [281], [282]; appreciation of England's assistance in European War, [290]
Russo-Japanese War, [88]
Russo-Turkish War, [85]
Salisbury, Lord, [46], [47], [115], [152], [153], [161]
Safonoff, M., [145]
San Stéfano treaty, [149], [150], [266], [267]
Sassoun, [148], [149], [151], [152]
Serbia, [17], [20], [35], [41], [216], [217], [218], [248]
Seymour, Sir Henry, [93]
Seymour, Vice-Admiral, [198]
Shouvaloff, Count, [103], [104], [105]
Siberia as it is, by Harry de Windt, [220]
Skobeleff, General, [85], [86]
Skobeleff, Madame, [85]
Slavonic Saints, [47]
Slavs, treatment in 1875, [18]; Russian sympathy, [19]; Russia's pledge to help Serbia, [20]; England blamed for Turkey's cruelty, [30]; help from Russian volunteers, [31]; Mr. Gladstone's sympathy, [45]; Russia the only Power which cares for Slavs, [95]
Smirnoff, General, [192]
Smoking in Russia, [106]
Sofia, [31]
Staal, Baron and Baroness de, [102]
State and its Relation to the Churches, by Mr. Gladstone, [56]
Stead, W. T., [24], [103], [106], [237]
St. James's Hall Conference, [43], [45], [51], [55], [105]
Sultan, the, [30]
Sydney Street outrage, [117], [118]
Tchaikovsky, [144]
Tchernaieff, General, [32], [33]
Tikhomirov, Leon, [204-215]
Times, The, [112], [114], [115], [116], [154], [194]
Treaty of Berlin, [147], [159]
Treaty of Paris, [95], [105], [147]
Troubetskoi, Princess Lise, [100]
Tsar, the, [17], [18], [21], [51], [100], [114], [166], [177]
Turkey, [30], [39], [45], [46], [48], [49], [72], [96], [97], [150], [160], [162], [181]
Tyndall, [60]
Unsterblichkeítslehre nach der Bibel, [60]
Vatican, the, [57]
Vatican, The, by Mr. Gladstone, [57]
Verestchagin, Vassily, [84-88]
Verneuil, M. de, [89]
Victoria, Queen, [50], [54], [55], [108]
Vienna, [104]
Viennese aristocracy, the, [66]
Villiers, Charles, [39], [82], [291]
Volnys, Madame, [73]
Voronoff, Miss Helen, [226-228]
Warsaw, [196]
Watson, Mr. William, [157]
Witte, Count, [178]
Zaitschar, [37]