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Alexander Pushkin
(1799 - 1837)
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Alexander Pushkin, the father of Russian
letters, was the author of over seven hundred lyric
poems. He wrote also the volumes of narrative poetry, dramatic works, short stories, and made adaptations of Russian fairy tales. It is one of the Russia's tragedies that Pushkin, involved by the court into a duel over his wife's honour, died when he was only 37 years old.
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Mikhail Lermontov
(1814 - 1841)
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A young hussar officer, Mikhail
Lermontov, expressing his wrath against the society and his
sorrow about Pushkin's death, wrote the verses The Death of the Poet. Lermontov was arrested for his apparent call for freedom and exiled to the Caucasus. In 1841, the rebellious poet was also killed in a duel. In Caucasus, he started writing his most celebrated work, A Hero of Our Time. So remarkable is his craftsmanship that Anton Chekhov recommended anyone to read the first chapter of this novel in order to learn how to write.
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Nicholai Gogol
(1809 - 1852).
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The real master of the art of satire
was Nicholai Gogol. When he arrived to St. Petersburg
Pushkin encouraged him as a writer. Gogol is best known as the author of The Government Inspector and Dead Souls. He is famous for telling bitter truths about Russia's troubles.
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Ivan Turgenev
(1818 - 1883)
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Novels of Ivan Turgenev were translated into several
languages long before the works of any other Russian
writer. His first published work Sportsman's Sketches, demonstrated the author's gift for depicting Russian nature and characters. Turgenev became famous with his Nest of Gentlefolk and his masterpiece Fathers and Sons.
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Feodor Dostoevsky
(1821 – 1881)
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Feodor Dostoevsky established his name in the literature
with his novel Crime and Punishment, published in 1866.
This novel made him famous not only at home but also in the whole world. In this work, Dostoevsky gave the brilliant analysis of the Russian character. The hero, Raskolnikov, after committing a crime, experienced deep feeling of repentance.
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Dostoevsky, the real master of psychological prose, is
often compared with Leo Tolstoy. Tolstoy is the greatest
Russian thinker and one of the world's supreme novelists. The secret of Tolstoy's literary success lays in his truthfulness to life.
Tolstoy was born in 1828 at the family estate in Yasnaya Polyana. As a young man, he served in the army in the Caucasus and in the Crimea. There he wrote his first Sevastopol's Stories. After marriage to Sophia Behrs in 1862, he spent the next fifteen years in the countryside where he finished his War and Peace in 1869 and Anna Karenina in 1877. Two years later he came to deep spiritual crisis, described in his Confession. Rejecting the inventions of urban civilization, Tolstoy declared a return to the simplicity of primitive agricultural life. He was deeply unhappy about the fact that he was living in conditions of luxury while surrounded by poverty. In the end of his life Tolstoy left Yasnaya Polyana forever at the age of eighty-two.
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Among Tolstoy's contemporaries, one of the finest prose
writers was Anton Chekhov. He was praised by Tolstoy
as "an incomparable artist." Chekhov, an outstanding master of the short story, had become a professional writer by 1888. Yet, he did not abandon his medical training and served as a doctor at his country estate, Melikhovo, near Moscow. When his own health became worse, he moved to the Crimea, and after 1900 most of his life, he spent in Yalta. His best-known short stories and plays were written in the last years of his life. Soon after his marriage to Olga Knipper, an actress of the Moscow Art Theatre, Chekhov died of tuberculosis in 1904.
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Around the turn of the century a brilliant
new generation of prose writers and poets was appearing.
Their works contributed to the Silver Age of Russian culture in the years between 1885 and 1915.