Fate and Migration; A Migrant, Returning to His Homeland, Bids Farewell to the Graves of those Dear to Him Who He Had Lost in the Adopted Land.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
In a Solitary Cell in the Irkutsk Prison. A Free Bird Landed by the Window.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Gold-Mining Worker. A Spirtonos, or Alcohol Smuggler, Imprisioned for Selling Alcohol at the Mines.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Christmas Tree at a Field Hospital near Irkutsk during the Russo-Japanese War.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Inhabitant of Krasnoyarsk, Serving at the Forest Pier on the Yenisei River.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Prisoner in Prison for Exiles. Adherent of the Dukhobor Religious Sect. Irkutsk.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
An Old Coachman from a Horse Train on the Great Siberian Road near Irkutsk.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Congratulatory Visit on a Name-Day (Feast Day of a Saint Who Shares a Name).Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Deportation of Political Exiles to Siberia in a Prison Wagon. Composed from Memory.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904
Fresh-Baked Shaneshki (Siberian Buns) and Grandmother Arina, from Whom I Rented a Bed. Irkutsk.Борис Васильевич Смирнов1904