I've just begun to read The Diary and am enjoying it a lot. But I've missed out on some of the earlier chat and hope I don't bring up now points and issues previously discussed.
Some problems arise simply from the difficulty of pinning down all of Olga's references. This is understandable and I think Helen and her collaborators have done extremely well under the circumstances.
Just jumping in here with this, for example: Page 7
"Thursday.24th July
We 2 slept with Mama, went onto Alexandria.... Returned for breakfast and left before dinner. Passed by dear Yalta , overcast and rainy..."
Dear Yalta? This is five days after the declaration of war in St. Petersburg. Since this can't be the Crimean seaport, what might this Yalta be?
And on page 13, Olga refers to a church consecration with all the relatives there.Olga mentions " Uncle Kostya with his wife Elena, Kostya , Igor and Georgiy". Uncle Kostya was Konstantine Konstantinovich , KR, whose wife was Elizaveta (also "Mavra"). Elena was his daughter-in'-law, Elena of Serbia.
I guess this could simply be an error on Olga's part although it is a bit odd, since she presumably knew these relatives well enough.
And finallly, for now, a question not so much about this book and Olga's diary, but about Olga herself. Just thirty-three days after the German declaration of war, and even a shorter time after the first Russian battles,Olga is in her hospital on Thursday, August 21 and actively dealing with wounded men. I didn't think she was thrown into nursing head first so to speak so early. I thought it was more like a few months before she was doing real nursing work. like late September or so.
Comments?
1) From Peterhof, on the Finnish Gulf, they sailed on the smaller yacht, "Alexandria", to Petersburg. Along the way they passed the "Standart", which was at anchor in the Neva river.
[Perhaps the mention of the Standart brought Yalta to mind?...]
2) In the Russian, there is a comma after "wife": Uncle Kostya and his wife, Elena, Kostya, etc....
3) Not certain about the timing of her Red Cross work.
I. N.