The Way of a Pilgrim
1884 Russian literary work / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Way of a Pilgrim, or The Pilgrim's Tale, is the English title of a 19th-century Russian work, recounting the narrator's journey as a mendicant pilgrim while practicing the Jesus Prayer. The pilgrim's travels take him through southern and central Ukraine, Russia, and Siberia. It is unknown if the book is literally an account of a single pilgrim, or if it uses a fictional pilgrim's journey as a vehicle to teach the practice of ceaseless inner prayer and communion with God.[1] The Russian original, or a copy of it, was present at a Mount Athos monastery in Greece in the 19th century, and was first published in Kazan in 1884, under the Russian title that translates as Candid Narratives of a Pilgrim to His Spiritual Father. (Russian: Откровенные рассказы странника духовному своему отцу, romanized: Otkrovenniye rasskazy strannika dukhovnomu svoyemu ottsu)[2]
Author | Michael Kozlov Arsenius Troyepolsky |
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Original title | Откровенные рассказы странника духовному своему отцу |
Translator | R. M. French |
Country | Russian Empire |
Language | Russian |
Genre | Christian devotional |
Publication date | 1884 |
Published in English | 1930 |
248.4 | |
LC Class | BX382 .O8513 |