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| A L E K S A N D R P U S H K I N |
1799 - 1837 |
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Greatest Russian poet, founder of classical Russian poetry. Born June 6, 1799, in Moscow, into a noble family. Took particular pride in his great-grandfather Hannibal, a black general who served Peter the Great. Educated at the Imperial Lyceum at Tsarkoye Selo, Pushkin demonstrated an early poetic gift. In 1817 was taken into the ministry of foreign affairs in Saint Petersburg; there he mingled in the social life of the capital and belonged to an underground revolutionary group. In 1820 this came to the attention of the authorities, and Pushkin was exiled to Caucasus; nonetheless, he continued to hold official posts and incurred the stern disapproval of a superior. Pushkin was dismissed from government service in 1824 and banished to his mother's estate near Pskov. In 1826 Czar Nicholas I, recognizing his enormous popularity, pardoned him. Pushkin died February 10, 1837, from wounds that he suffered in a duel which he had fought in St. Petersburg. Pushkin provided a literary heritage for Russians, whose native language had hitherto been considered unfit for literature. He was also a versatile writer of great vigor and optimism who understood the many facets of the Russian character. His lyric poetrysaid to be delightful to the Russian ear but untranslatableand his simple, vivid prose were invaluable models for the writers who followed him. The influence of Lord Byron shows itself, along with Pushkin's own love of liberty, in many of his poems. Most important works include a verse novel "Evgeny Onegin" ("Eugene Onegin"), which is considered the first of the great Russian novels (although in verse), as well as verse dramas "Boris Godunov", "Poltava", "Mednyi vsadnik" ("The Bronze Horseman"), "Mozart i Salieri" ("Mozart and Salieri"), "Kamennyi gost" ("The Stone Guest"), "Pir vo vremya chumy" ("Feast in the Time of the Plague"), poems "Ruslan and Ludmila", "Kavkazskii plennik" ("The Prisoner of the Caucasus", "Bakhchisaraiskii Fontan" ("The Fountain of Bakhchisarai"), "Tsygane" ("The Gypsies"), novel "Kapitanskaya dochka" ("The Captain's Daughter"). Lived in Moscow and St. Petersburg, for his social pursuits was in 1820 exiled to Kishinev and then to Odessa. Aleksander
Pushkin Page Selected poems in Russian
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