Eugene Onegin Alexander Pushkin (e book reader for pc txt) đ
- Author: Alexander Pushkin
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Ovid thus enumerates the causes which brought about his banishment:
âPerdiderint quum me duo crimina, carmen et error,
Alterius facti culpa silenda mihi est.â
â©
Les Aventures du Chevalier de Faublas, a romance of a loose character by Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray, b. 1760, d. 1797, famous for his bold oration denouncing Robespierre, Marat and Danton. â©
Ă la âBolĂvar,â from the founder of Bolivian independence. â©
M. BrĂ©guet, a celebrated Parisian watchmakerâ âhence a slang term for a watch. â©
Talon, a famous St. Petersburg restaurateur. â©
Paul PetrĂČvitch KavĂšrine, a friend for whom Pushkin in his youth appears to have entertained great respect and admiration. He was an officer in the Hussars of the Guard, and a noted âdandyâ and man about town. The poet on one occasion addressed the following impromptu to his friendâs portrait:
âWithin him daily see the fires of punch and war,
Upon the fields of Mars a gallant warrior,
A faithful friend to friends, of ladies torturer,
But ever the Hussar.â
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Denis Von Wisine (1741â ââ 92), a favourite Russian dramatist. His first comedy The Brigadier, procured him the favour of the second Catherine. His best, however, is the Minor (Niedorosl). Prince Potemkin, after witnessing it, summoned the author, and greeted him with the exclamation, âDie now, Denis!â In fact, his subsequent performances were not of equal merit.
Jacob Borissovitch Kniajnine (1742â ââ 91), a clever adapter of French tragedy.
Simeonova, a celebrated tragic actress, who retired from the stage in early life and married a Prince Gagarine.
Ozeroff, one of the best-known Russian dramatists of the period; he possessed more originality than Kniajnine. Oedipus in Athens, Fingal, Demetrius Donskoi, and Polyxena, are the best known of his tragedies.
KatĂšnine translated Corneilleâs tragedies into Russian.
Didelot, sometime Director of the ballet at the Opera at St. Petersburg.
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IstĂČminaâ âA celebrated Circassian dancer of the day, with whom the poet in his extreme youth imagined himself in love. â©
In Russia large fires are lighted in winter time in front of the theatres for the benefit of the menials, who, considering the state of the thermometer, cannot be said to have a jovial time of it. But in this, as in other cases, âhabitâ alleviates their lot, and they bear the cold with a wonderful equanimity. â©
âTout le monde sut quâil (Grimm) mettait du blanc; et moi, qui nâen croyait rien, je commençai de le croire, non seulement par lâembellissement de son teint, et pour avoir trouvĂ© des tasses de blanc sur la toilette, mais sur ce quâentrant un matin dans sa chambre, je le trouvais brossant ses ongles avec une petite vergette faite exprĂšs, ouvrage quâil continua fiĂšrement devant moi. Je jugeai quâun homme qui passe deux heures tous les matins Ă brosser ses ongles peut bien passer quelques instants Ă remplir de blanc les creux de sa peau.â
Confessions de J. J. Rousseauâ©
Refers to Dictionary of the Academy, compiled during the reign of Catherine II under the supervision of Lomonossoff. â©
Elvine, or Elvina, was not improbably the owner of the seductive feet apostrophized by the poet, since, in 1816, he wrote an ode, âTo Her,â which commences thus:
âElvina, my dear, come, give me thine hand,â and so forth. â©
I.e. the milkmaid from the Okhta villages, a suburb of St. Petersburg on the right bank of the Neva chiefly inhabited by the labouring classes. â©
Apropos of this somewhat ungallant sentiment, a Russian scholiast remarks:â ââThe whole of this ironical stanza is but a refined eulogy of the excellent qualities of our countrywomen. Thus Boileau, in the guise of invective, eulogizes Louis XIV. Russian ladies unite in their persons great acquirements, combined with amiability and strict morality; also a species of Oriental charm which so much captivated Madame de Stael.â It will occur to most that the apologist of the Russian fair âdoth protest too much.â The poet in all probability wrote the offending stanza in a fit of Byronic âspleen,â as he would most likely himself have called it. Indeed, since Byron, poets of his school seem to assume this virtue if they have it not, and we take their utterances under its influence for what they are worth. â©
The midsummer nights in the latitude of St. Petersburg are a prolonged twilight. â©
Refers to Mouravieffâs Goddess of the Neva. At St. Petersburg the banks of the Neva are lined throughout with splendid granite quays. â©
A street running parallel to the Neva, and leading from the Winter Palace to the Summer Palace and Garden. â©
The strong influence exercised by Byronâs genius on the imagination of Pushkin is well known. Shakespeare and other English dramatists had also their share in influencing his mind, which, at all events in its earlier developments, was of an essentially imitative type. As an example of his Shakespearian tastes, see his poem of Angelo, founded upon Measure for Measure. â©
The poet was, on his motherâs side, of African extraction, a circumstance which perhaps accounts for the southern fervour of his imagination. His great-grandfather, Abraham PetrĂČvitch Hannibal, was seized on the coast of Africa when eight years of age by a corsair, and carried a slave to Constantinople. The Russian Ambassador bought and presented him to Peter the Great who caused him to be baptized at Vilnius. Subsequently one of Hannibalâs brothers made his way to Constantinople and thence to St. Petersburg for the purpose of ransoming him; but Peter would not surrender his godson who died at the age of ninety-two, having attained the rank of general in the Russian service. â©
Refers to two of
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