Leonid Andreyev, who was born in Oryol,
in 1871, is the most popular, and next to Tolstoy,
the most gifted writer in Russia to-day. Andreyev
has written many important stories and dramas, the
best known among which are “Red Laughter,”
“Life of Man,” “To the Stars,”
“The Life of Vasily Fiveisky,” “Eliazar,”
“Black Masks,” and “The Story of
the Seven Who Were Hanged.”
In “Red Laughter” he depicted
the horrors of war as few men had ever before done
it. He dipped his pen into the blood of Russia
and wrote the tragedy of the Manchurian war.
In his “Life of Man” Andreyev
produced a great, imaginative “morality”
play which has been ranked by European critics with
some of the greatest dramatic masterpieces.
The story of “The Seven Who
Were Hanged” is thus far his most important
achievement. The keen psychological insight and
the masterly simplicity with which Andreyev has penetrated
and depicted each of the tragedies of the seven who
were hanged place him in the same class as an artist
with Russia’s greatest masters of fiction, Dostoyevsky,
Turgenev and Tolstoy.
I consider myself fortunate to be
able to present to the English-reading public this
remarkable work, which has already produced a profound
impression in Europe and which, I believe, is destined
for a long time to come to play an important part in
opening the eyes of the world to the horrors perpetrated
in Russia and to the violence and iniquity of the
destruction of human life, whatever the error or the
crime.
New York. Herman Bernstein.