Turgenev's revolutionary views were not born in the heart of mother Russia. In his travels through Europe he had a chance to study the most prominent philosophers of that time, absorb their ideas, and later implement them in his literary works. "The streets of revolutionary Paris taught him the unpleasant rudiments of crowd psychology, and the logic of the class struggle. The reaction which followed the upheaval of 1848 intensified his disgust with the governments, the philosophy, the art of his time" (Yarmolinsky, 99). In his novel Father's and Sons, Turgenev clearly shows his love for the character of Bazarov, whom Turgenev makes the tragic hero of that novel. Turgenev clearly sympathized with Bazarov, he treats this character with respect and dignity, and never letting this character to be embarrassed by others, and only in one occasion lets him lose his dignity, when dealing with a woman.…