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]

Paris, [70], [73], [139]

Parliamentary system in Russia, [214]

Pasha, Madame Nubar, [100]

Pears, Sir Edwin, [26], [47]

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]