Russian
poet and author, who founded the literature of his language with epic
and lyric poems, plays, novels, and short stories.
Pushkin was born June 6, 1799, in Moscow, into a noble family. He 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 Pushkin 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 his "Ode to Liberty" came to the attention of
the authorities, and the young poet was exiled to the Caucasus; nonetheless,
Pushkin continued to hold official posts.
That same year Pushkin published his Ruslan and Ludmila, a long romantic
poem based on folklore, which earned him a reputation as one of Russia's
most promising poetic talents. The influence of Lord Byron shows itself,
along with Pushkin's own love of liberty, in his next major poems, The
Prisoner of the Caucasus (1822), The Fountain of Bakhchisarai (1822),
and The Gypsies (1823-24). He began his most famous work, Eugene Onegin,
in 1823; a Byronic love story with a realistic contemporary setting that
has been described as the first of the great Russian novels (although
in verse), it was not completed until 1831. Transferred to Odesa in 1823,
he incurred the stern disapproval of a superior. He was dismissed from
government service in 1824 and banished to his mother's estate near Pskov.
There he wrote (1824-25) Boris Godunov, a Russian historical tragedy in
the Shakespearean tradition, published six years later. In 1826 Czar Nicholas
I, recognizing his enormous popularity, pardoned him. Pushkin continued
to draw upon Russian history in two long poems, Poltava (1828) and The
Bronze Horseman (1833), and in his novel of the Pugachev rebellion, The
Captain's Daughter (1836). He also wrote short stories, the best known
of which is "The Queen of Spades." 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 poetry-said to be delightful to the Russian
ear but untranslatable-and his simple, vivid prose were invaluable models
for the writers who followed him.
|
|