No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
At Easter, 1900, Solovyev published a revised version of his Three Discussions and prefaced it with these words:: “Even in this amended form, I still feel numerous defects in the work. But not less felt is the distant image of pale death which quietly advises me not to put off the publication of this book to an indefinite and unsure date.” He thus proved to be a good prophet even in regard to his own life. A few months later, on the 31st of July, 1900, he died.
* This article is the final chapter of a manuscript “Vladimir Solovyev—The Prophet of Russian-Western Unity” which was among unpublished papers left by die late Egbert Munzer. Mr. Munzer was Professor of Sociology and Statistics at Laval University, Quebec, and died July 31, 1948. The manuscript has been edited by Mrs. Margot Munzer and Mrs. Genevieve Holden.—THE EDITORS