Word: russianness
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Professor Eugen Kuhnemann will deliver what promises to be a highly interesting lecture in German on Tolstoi, the eminent Russian writer and reformer, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, in Huntinngton Hall of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston. The lecture will be under the auspices of the Deutsche Sprachverein of Boston. Professor Kuhnemann will deliver another lecture in the Fogg Lecture Room Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock on "Gerhart Hamptmann und das Deutsche Drama der Gegenwart...
...MacMillan Co. BEETHOVEN AND HIS FORERUNNERS. By Daniel Gregory Mason '95. The MacMillan Co. A GUIDE TO PARSIFAL. By Richard Aldrich '85. Oliver Ditson Co. THE GREEK POETS; AN ANTHOLOGY. By Nathan Haskell Dole '74. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co. LYMAN BEECHER. By Edward Farwell Hayward '74. The Pilgrim Press. RUSSIAN LIFE AND SOCIETY. By Nathan Appleton '63. Murray & Emery Co. SWORD AND PLOUGHSHARE. By Willis Boyd Allen '78. The Pilgrim Press. THE LIFE WITHIN THE LIFE. By Charles Hamilton Mann '69. New Church Educational Association. INTERLUDES. By Philip Becker Goetz '93. Richard G. Badger. PERSONAL AND IDEAL ELEMENTS IN EDUCATION...
Under the auspices of the History Club, Professor Paul Milyoukov, the Russian historian, yesterday afternoon delivered and interesting address in Sanders Theatre, on "The Origins of Russian Socialism." President Eliot, in introducing the speaker, made brief mention of Professor Milyoukov's personal experiences, and spoke of the fortunate opportunity given to hearing this subject directly from a man who had suffered so much for his convictions...
...dealing with the first and least violent stage of the Russian socialistic movement, which, of all political events of the nineteenth century is most closely connected with the French Revolution of 1848, Professor Milyoukov explained the theories and influence of three great leaders of that period--Herzen, the powerful writer and deep thinker, his impulsive friend Bakoonin, and the novelist Tourguenev. Herzen, an aristocrat by birth, but later a "repentant nobleman," ashamed of his own high position, maintained the attitude of the early nihilists. He sympathized with those independents who could not take for their own the worn out moralities...
...forth by Herzen, was the ground from which Bakoonin's theories started. Bakoonin formed a most important link between the merely intellectual movement of the '40's and the revolutionary period of the '60's; he transmitted the legacy of Herzen's comparatively anarchistic socialism to the first Russian outbreaks in later years. There now arose a most important question--was the mere emancipation of the poorer classes to act as a stepping-stone to the realization of the most radical socialistic aspirations of these people? The discussion of this question brings us to an era in which the struggle...