ROSA NEWMARCH
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||||
| PART | [I.] | CHAPTERS I.-V. | 1840-1861 | [1] |
| PART | [II.] | CHAPTERS I.-VII. | 1861-1866 | [30] |
| PART | [III.] | CHAPTERS I.-XIII. | 1866-1877 | [64] |
| PART | [IV.] | CHAPTERS I.-VIII. | 1877-1878 | [204] |
| PART | [V.] | CHAPTERS I.-XX. | 1878-1885 | [318] |
| PART | [VI.] | CHAPTERS I.-XIII. | 1885-1888 | [468] |
| PART | [VII.] | CHAPTERS I.-XIX. | 1888-1893 | [539] |
| [Appendices]—[A], [B], [C] | [726] | |||
| [Alphabetical Index of Names:][A],[B],[C],[D],[E],[F],[G],[H],[I],[J],[K],[L],[M],[N],[O],[P],[R],[S],[T],[V],[W],[Z] | [773] | |||
| [Alphabetical Index of Musical Works:][A],[B],[C],[D],[E],[F],[G],[H],[I],[L],[M],[N],[O],[P],[Q],[R],[S],[T],[U],[V],[W],[Y] | [779] | |||
ILLUSTRATIONS
| [1.] | Tchaikovsky in 1893, from a Portrait By Kouznietsov | [Frontispiece] |
| TO FACE PAGE | ||
| [2.] | Ilia Petrovich Tchaikovsky, the Composer’s Father, in 1860 | [4] |
| [3.] | The House in which Tchaikovsky was born, at Votinsk | [8] |
| [4.] | The Tchaikovsky Family in 1848, from a Daguerrotype | [14] |
| [5.] | Alexandra Andreievna Tchaikovsky, the Composer’s Mother, in 1848 | [20] |
| [6.] | Tchaikovsky in 1859 (vignette) | [26] |
| [7.] | The Composer’s Father, with his Twin Sons Modeste and Anatol | [34] |
| [8.] | Tchaikovsky in 1859 (carte de visite) | [42] |
| [9.] | Tchaikovsky in 1863 | [56] |
| [10.] | Tchaikovsky in 1867, in Winter Dress | [78] |
| [11.] | Tchaikovsky in 1868 | [102] |
| [12.] | Tchaikovsky in 1873 | [132] |
| [13.] | Tchaikovsky in 1874 | [150] |
| [14.] | Tchaikovsky in 1877 | [214] |
| [15.] | Fragment from a Letter, with Sketch for a Theme for “The Enchantress” | [482] |
| [16.] | Tchaikovsky in 1888 | [540] |
| [17.] | Tchaikovsky and Siloti | [550] |
| [18.] | Tchaikovsky’s House at Frolovskoe | [560] |
| [19.] | The House in which Tchaikovsky lived at Klin | [680] |
| [20.] | Tchaikovsky’s Bedroom at Klin | [694] |
| [21.] | Sitting-room at Klin | [700] |
| [22.] | Tchaikovsky in 1893 (taken in London) | [708] |
“To regret the past, to hope in the future, and never to be satisfied with the present—this is my life.”—P. Tchaikovsky (Extract from a letter)