ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1932, the author, a Polish journalist, in this book directs his hostility against the fundamentals of Bolshevism, but nonetheless achieves impartiality. With regard to Russian culture, Soviet Russia appears to the author as the home of an almost Victorian puritanism. Daily life under the Bolsheviks is discussed, as is the meeting on a train with a man who claimed to have been present at the murder of the Imperial Family.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter I|31 pages

The Cauldron Still Boils

chapter II|26 pages

Sexual Morality and Education

chapter III|18 pages

Daily Life in Bolshevia

chapter IV|12 pages

The Outlaw

chapter V|11 pages

An Answer to the Second Question

chapter VI|10 pages

Laudetur Jezus Christus

chapter VII|11 pages

Woman, Unveil Thyself

chapter VIII|13 pages

Youth in Bolshevia

chapter IX|5 pages

Palimpsest

chapter X|5 pages

Terrorism

chapter 11|4 pages

The Future

chapter XII|11 pages

Conversation in a Train

chapter XIII|8 pages

The Three Causes of the Catastrophe

chapter XIV|5 pages

The Russian Intelligentsia

chapter XV|2 pages

“Une Stupide Aventure”