Audiolibro: Russia in 1919
- Download Prefatory Notes audio
- Download To Petrograd audio
- Download Smolni audio
- Download Petrograd to Moscow audio
- Download First Days in Moscow audio
- Download The Executive Committee on the Reply to the Prinkipo Proposal audio
- Download Kamenev and the Moscow Soviet audio
- Download An Ex-Capitalist audio
- Download A Theorist of Revolution audio
- Download Effects of Isolation audio
- Download An Evening At the Opera audio
- Download The Committee of State Constructions audio
- Download The Executive Committee & the Terror audio
- Download Notes of Conversations With Lenin audio
- Download The Supreme Council of Public Economy audio
- Download The Race With Ruin audio
- Download A Play of Chekhov audio
- Download The Centro-Textile audio
- Download Modification in the Agrarian Programme audio
- Download Foreign Trade & Munitions of War audio
- Download The Proposed Delegation From Berne audio
- Download The Executive Committee on the Rival Parties audio
- Download Commissariat of Labour audio
- Download Education audio
- Download A Bolshevik Fellow of the Royal Society audio
- Download Digression audio
- Download The Opposition audio
- Download The Third International audio
- Download Last Talk With Lenin audio
- Download The Journey Out audio
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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: On August 27, 1914, in London, I made this note in a memorandum book: "Met Arthur Ransome at_____'s; discussed a book on the Russian's relation to the war in the light of psychological background--folklore." The book was not written but the idea that instinctively came to him pervades his every utterance on things Russian. The versatile man who commands more than respect as the biographer of Poe and Wilde; as the (translator of and commentator on Remy de Gourmont; as a folklorist, has shown himself to be consecrated to the truth. The document that Mr. Ransome hurried out of Russia in the early days of the Soviet government (printed in the New Republic and then widely circulated as a pamphlet), was the first notable appeal from a non-Russian to the American people for fair play in a crisis understood then even less than now. The British Who's Who--that Almanach de Gotha of people who do things or choose their parents wisely--tells us that Mr. Ransome's recreations are "walking, smoking, fairy stories." It is, perhaps, his intimacy with the last named that enables him to distinguish between myth and fact and that makes his activity as an observer and recorder so valuable in a day of bewilderment and betrayal. - Summary by B. W. Huebsch
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