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]