Poets of Hope and Despair

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Poets of Hope and Despair Poets of Hope and Despair Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Russian History and Culture Editors-in-Chief Jeffrey P. Brooks (The Johns Hopkins University) Christina Lodder (University of Kent) Volume 21 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/rhc Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Poets of Hope and Despair The Russian Symbolists in War and Revolution, 1914-1918 Second Revised Edition By Ben Hellman Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki This title is published in Open Access with the support of the University of Helsinki Library. This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided no alterations are made and the original author(s) and source are credited. Further information and the complete license text can be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ The terms of the CC license apply only to the original material. The use of material from other sources (indicated by a reference) such as diagrams, illustrations, photos and text samples may require further permission from the respective copyright holder. Cover illustration: Angel with sword, from the cover of Voina v russkoi poezii (1915, War in Russian Poetry). Artist: Nikolai K. Kalmakov (1873-1955). Brill has made all reasonable efforts to trace all rights holders to any copyrighted material used in this work. In cases where these efforts have not been successful the publisher welcomes communications from copyright holders, so that the appropriate acknowledgements can be made in future editions, and to settle other permission matters. The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available online at http://catalog.loc.gov Typeface for the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic scripts: “Brill”. See and download: brill.com/brill-typeface. ISSN1877-7791 ISBN 978-90-04-36680-0 (hardback) ISBN 978-90-04-36681-7 (e-book) Copyright 2018 by the Authors. Published by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Brill Hes & De Graaf, Brill Nijhoff, Brill Rodopi, Brill Sense, Hotei Publishing, mentis Verlag, Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh and Wilhelm Fink Verlag. Koninklijke Brill NV reserves the right to protect the publication against unauthorized use and to authorize dissemination by means of offprints, legitimate photocopies, microform editions, reprints, translations, and secondary information sources, such as abstracting and indexing services including databases. Requests for commercial re-use, use of parts of the publication, and/or translations must be addressed to Koninklijke Brill NV. This book is printed on acid-free paper and produced in a sustainable manner. Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki “The natives of Borneo use glow-worms on sharp poles as candles. This is the fate of writers.” Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, Bylo i budet (1915) ∵ Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Contents Preface to the First Edition ix Preface to the Second Edition x Introduction 1 1 Symbolism Before the War 4 The Birth of Symbolism. Two Generations 4 The Symbolists and Politics 12 2 The War: Act I (1914-1915) 26 First Reactions 26 Realities of the War 40 Valerii Briusov as War Correspondent 40 The Theme of Life at the Front 50 The Burning Questions 63 The Tragedy of Occupied Belgium 63 The Tragedy of Divided Poland 69 The Tragedy of the Victimized Jews 81 The Neo-Slavophiles 86 Viacheslav Ivanov: The Messianic Task of Russia 86 Fedor Sologub: East Against West 96 Valerii Briusov: Slavs Against Germans 106 The Dream of Tsar’grad 115 Patriotic Fiction 122 Fedor Sologub: To Believe or to Doubt 122 Konstantin Bal’mont: Cursing the Satanic Dogs 136 The Critics of Nationalism 143 Zinaida Gippius: Accepting the War Outwardly, Rejecting It Inwardly 143 Dmitrii Merezhkovskii: How to Overcome the War 159 The Outsiders 173 Aleksandr Blok: “Back to You, Russia!” 173 Andrei Belyi: “‘I’ Am the War” 182 Facing Adversity 191 Fedor Sologub: The War as a Sacrificial Feat 191 Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki viii Contents 3 The War: Act II (1915-1917) 198 Defeats and Deadlock: Occasional Verse 198 Viacheslav Ivanov: Behind the German Threat – China! 204 Fedor Sologub: “Our Children Will Save Russia…” 209 Valerii Briusov: The Duty to Remember 219 Konstantin Bal’mont: Betrayed 222 Zinaida Gippius: Waiting for Revolution 226 Dmitrii Merezhkovskii: Waiting for the Apocalypse 231 Andrei Belyi: The Revolt of the Machines 237 Aleksandr Blok: Demoralization on all Sides 247 Valerii Briusov: After Thirty Months of War 253 4 The War: Act III (1917-1918) 258 The February Revolution of the Spirit 258 Who Is for the War? Who Is Against? 271 Russia in Deep Crisis 291 The October Revolution: The End or the Beginning? 312 5 The Symbolist Experience 1914-1918 337 Bibliography 347 Index of Names 365 The system of transliteration used in this study is the Library of Congress sys- tem without diacritical marks. Some exceptions from the general rules (i.e. geographical names) have been made to allow for more commonly accepted spellings. Dates are given according to the Julian, or Old Style calendar, but the corresponding Gregorian calendar dates are in certain cases added. Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Preface to the First Edition This work was began under the tutorship of the late Professor Sven Linnér at Åbo Akademi. His generous support and unfailing belief in my work were of the most decisive importance. I dedicate this book to his memory. My col- league at the University of Helsinki, Associate Professor Pekka Pesonen, him- self a prominent specialist on Russian symbolism, has also wholeheartedly en- couraged me with much valuable advice. Concrete help has further been given by Professor Richard Stites (Georgetown University) and Dr. Efim Kurganov (Helsinki). As my work on the general topic of Russian writers and the First World War has been conducted over a long period of time, I have had the op- portunity to discuss the subject with more colleagues than can be mentioned here. To all of them – unnamed but not forgotten – my sincere gratitude. Help with the English translation has been given by several native-speakers, but the main work was proficiently done by Richard Davies (University of Leeds). I am also grateful to Paul Graves (Helsinki) who thoroughly revised the poetry translations. I myself, needless to say, bear all responsibility for the final version of the book. Financial support for my work was provided by the University of Helsinki, the Research Institute of the Åbo Akademi Foundation, Jenny ja Antti Wihurin rahasto and Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland. Helsinki, 8 October 1995 Ben Hellman Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Preface to the Second Edition The centennial of the First World War brought with it a renewed interest in the topic of the present volume. The Russian literary heritage of the war years was discussed at seminars and conferences and laid out and analyzed in pub- lications. In Russia, a move away from the Soviet limited perception of the war could be seen, resulting in new, more profound perceptions of the emotional and analytical involvement of the individual writers in the event. From hav- ing been a largely forgotten war it was now seen as an integral part of Russia’s tragic twentieth century. The second edition of my Poets of Hope and Despair follows in all essen- tials the first. As fairly little new material connected specially with the Russian Symbolists at war and revolution has been published, I have mainly confined myself to correcting misprints, taking heed of reviews of the first edition of my book and adding references to new research. Helsinki, 6 December 2017 Ben Hellman Ben Hellman - 978-90-04-36681-7 Downloaded from Brill.com02/25/2020 02:42:21PM via University of Helsinki Introduction Fedor Sologub called one of the articles he wrote during the First World War “Why the symbolists accepted the war” (“Pochemu simvolisty priniali voinu”). According to Sologub, the Russian symbolists had welcomed the World War in 1914, not as a struggle for territorial conquests and economic influence, or as mass annihilation, but as a phenomenon which on a spiritual level was in harmony with their world view. In their works the symbolists had repeatedly expressed contempt for the modern world and forebodings of a coming cat- aclysm. The war represented not only the judgement of humankind, but also the threshold to a transfigured world, and therefore it had been accepted by the symbolists. To back up his claim, Sologub quoted poems by Valerii Briusov and Viacheslav Ivanov.1 Presumably only modesty prevented him from refer- ring to his own works. Still Sologub’s declaration was a simplification. Perhaps he realized this, as the title of the manuscript was changed to the less chal- lenging “Faithful until the End” (“Derzanie do kontsa”) when the article was published in 1917.2 In reality the reactions of the symbolists to the World War were complicated and did not even conform to the dichotomy of acceptance or rejection.
Recommended publications
  • During the Second World War
    DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR _______________StK______________ SK MARSHALL LEE MILLER Stanford University Press STANFORD, CALIFORNIA I 975 Stanford University Press Stanford, California © 1975 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University Printed in the United States of America is b n 0-8047-0870-3 LC 74-82778 To my grandparents Lee and Edith Rankin and Evelyn Miller Preface SOS h e p o l it ic a l history of modern Bulgaria has been greatly ne­ T glected by Western scholars, and the important period of the Second World War has hardly been studied at all. The main reason for this has no doubt been the difficulty of obtaining documentary material on the wartime period. Although the Communist regime of Bulgaria has published a large number of books and monographs dealing with the country’s role in the war, these works have been concerned mostly with magnifying the importance of the Bulgarian Communist Party (BKP) and the partisan struggle. Despite this bias, useful information can be found in these works when other sources are available to provide perspective and verification. Within recent years, German, American, British, and other diplo­ matic and intelligence reports from the wartime years have become available, and the easing of travel restrictions in Bulgaria has facili­ tated research there. As recently as 1958, when the doctoral thesis of Marin V. Pundeff was presented (“Bulgaria’s Place in Axis Policy, 1936-1944”), there was very little material on the period after June 1941. It is now possible to fill in many of the important gaps in our knowledge of Bulgaria during the entire war.
    [Show full text]
  • Aleksandr Blok in the Changing Russian Literary Canon
    Olga Sobolev The symbol of the symbolists: Aleksandr Blok in the changing Russian literary canon Book Section Original citation: Sobolev, Olga (2017) The symbol of the symbolists: Aleksandr Blok in the changing Russian literary canon. In: Hodgson, Katharine and Shelton, Joanne and Smith, Alexandra, (eds.) Twentieth-Century Russian Poetry: Reinventing the Canon. Open Book Publishers, Cambridge, UK, pp. 123-155. ISBN 9781783740888 Reuse of this item is permitted through licensing under the Creative Commons: © 2017 The Author CC BY 4.0 This version available at: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/85314/ Available in LSE Research Online: November 2017 LSE has developed LSE Research Online so that users may access research output of the School. Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. You may freely distribute the URL (http://eprints.lse.ac.uk) of the LSE Research Online website. 5. The Symbol of the Symbolists: Aleksandr Blok in the Changing Russian Literary Canon Olga Sobolev Прославленный не по программе И вечный вне школ и систем, Он не изготовлен руками И нам не навязан никем. Eternal and not manufactured, Renown not according to plan, Outside schools and systems, he has not Been foisted upon us by man.1 The turn of the twentieth century has always been regarded as a period of extreme dynamism in Russian culture — a time when many traditional values were questioned and transformed. During this period the genuine creative power in verse and prose came from the symbolists, who drew upon the aesthetic revival inaugurated in the 1890s by Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, and freed it of spuriousness and self- gratifying over-refinement.
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of Military Education in Harmonizing Civil-Military Relations (The Bulgarian Case)
    THE ROLE OF MILITARY EDUCATION IN HARMONIZING CIVIL-MILITARY RELATIONS (THE BULGARIAN CASE) FINAL REPORT Todor D. Tagarev Presented in fulfillment of the Fellowship Agreement NATO Democratic Institutions Fellowship Programme Sofia, Bulgaria June 10, 1997 Tagarev, T.D. The Role of Military Education in Harmonizing Civil- Military Relations (the Bulgarian Case). NATO Democratic Institutions Individual Fellowship Project, Final Report, June 1997. - 50 pp. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This research was supported by an individual grant from the NATO Democratic Institutions Fellowships Programme. The author received helpful suggestions from Col. (Ret.) J.A. Warden, USAF, Dr. Karl Magyar and Dr. Abigail Gray, US Air Command and Staff College, Lt.Col. Jan Kinner, USAF, Dr. Plamen Pantev, Director of the Institute for Security and International Studies, Bulgaria, and Col. Valeri Ratchev, Center for National Security Studies, Bulgarian Ministry of Defense. The author is especially grateful to Col. (Ret.) Russi Russev, Bulgarian Ministry of Defense, and Lt.Col. Georgi Tzvetkov, General Staff of the Bulgarian Armed Forces, for their assistance in providing all necessary documentation and invitations for participation in all major events, related to the reform of the Bulgarian system of military education, as well as to Dr. Detlef Herold who provided a copy of the NATO Defense College Monograph Series, No. 3 on “Democratic and Civil Control Over Military Forces - Case Studies and Perspectives.” Ms Petya Ivanova’s technical assistance, especially in preparing computer charts and tables, saved valuable time and allowed the author to accomplish the project on schedule. The selfless support of all these people made the study possible. However, the author alone is responsible for the concepts, opinions, omissions, and mistakes in this report.
    [Show full text]
  • States, Societies and Individuals in Central and Eastern Europe
    FOUREMPIRES ANDAN ENLGARGEMENT States, Societies and Individuals in Central and Eastern Europe Edited by Daniel Brett, Claire Jarvis, Irina Marin FOUR EMPIRES AND AN ENLARGEMENT States, Societies and Individuals: Transfiguring Perspectives and Images of Central and Eastern Europe Edited by DANIEL BRETT, CLAIRE JARVIS AND IRINA MARIN Papers from the 5th International Postgraduate Conference held at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL 2008 FOUR EMPIRES AND AN ENLARGEMENT STATES, SOCIETIES AND INDIVIDUALS: TRANSFIGURING PERSPECTIVES AND IMAGES OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE EDITED BY DANIEL BRETT, CLAIRE JARVIS AND IRINA MARIN Studies in Russia and Eastern Europe No. 4 ISBN: 978-0-903425-80-3 Editorial matter, selection and introduction © Daniel Brett, Claire Jarvis, Irina Marin 2008. Individual chapters © contributors 2008 All rights reserved. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Contents Mysterious knocks, flying potatoes and rebellious servants: Spiritualism and social conflict in late imperial Russia 1 Julia Mannherz The Ukrainian Stundists and Russian Jews: a collaboration of evangelical peasants with Jewish intellectuals in late imperial Russia 17 Sergei Zhuk “Forebears”, “saints” and “martyrs”: the politics of commemoration in Bulgaria in the 1880s and 1890s 33 Stefan Detchev Celebrating the nation: the case of Upper Silesia after the plebiscite in 1921 49
    [Show full text]
  • Ex·Te·N.Sions of Remarks
    September 23, 1970 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS 33515 of. general sessions, for the term of 15 years, Eugene N. Hamilton, of Maryland, to be an ate judge, District of Columbia court of gen­ as prescribed by Public Law 91-358, approved associate judge, District of Columbia court eral sessions, for the term of 15 years vice a July 29, 1970, vice Milton S. Kronheim, term of general sessions, for the term of 15 years new position created by Public Law 91-358 expired. vice a new position created by Public Law approved July 29, 1970. Paul F. McArdle, of Maryland, to be an as­ 91-358, approved July 29, 1970. George H. Revercomb, of Virginia, to be sociate judge of the District of Colwnbia Stanley S. Harris, of Maryland, to be an associate judge, District of Columbia court of court of general sessions, for the term of 15 associate judge, District of Columbia court general sessions for the term of 15 yea.rs years as prescribed by Public Law 91-358, ap­ of general sessions, for the term of 15 years vice a new position created by Public Law proved July 29, 1970, vice Thomas C. Scalley, vice a new position created by Publlc Law 91-358, approved July 29, 1970. term expired. 91-358 approved July 29, 1970. William E. Stewart, Jr., of Maryland, to be Sylvia A. Bacon, of the District of Colum­ Theodore R. Newman, Jr., of the District of an associate judge, District of Columbia bia, to be an associate judge, District of Columbia, to be an associate judge, District court of general sessions for the term of 15 Columbia court of general sessions, for the of Columbia court of general sessions, for the years vice a new position created by Public term of 15 years, vice a new position created term of 15 years vice a new position created Law 91-358, approved July 29, 1970.
    [Show full text]
  • Intellectual Culture: the End of Russian Intelligentsia
    Russian Culture Center for Democratic Culture 2012 Intellectual Culture: The End of Russian Intelligentsia Dmitri N. Shalin University of Nevada, Las Vegas, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/russian_culture Part of the Asian History Commons, Cultural History Commons, European History Commons, Intellectual History Commons, Other Languages, Societies, and Cultures Commons, Political History Commons, Slavic Languages and Societies Commons, and the Social History Commons Repository Citation Shalin, D. N. (2012). Intellectual Culture: The End of Russian Intelligentsia. In Dmitri N. Shalin, 1-68. Available at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/russian_culture/6 This Article is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Article in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Article has been accepted for inclusion in Russian Culture by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Intellectual Culture: The End of Russian Intelligentsia Dmitri Shalin No group cheered louder for Soviet reform, had a bigger stake in perestroika, and suffered more in its aftermath than did the Russian intelligentsia. Today, nearly a decade after Mikhail Gorbachev unveiled his plan to reform Soviet society, the mood among Russian intellectuals is decidedly gloomy.
    [Show full text]
  • Landmarks Revisited the Vekhi Symposium 100 Years on C U Lt U R a L R E V O Lu T I O N S : R U S S I a I N T H E 20 T H C E N T U Ry
    Landmarks Revisited The Vekhi Symposium 100 Years On C u lt u r a l r e v o lu t i o n s : r u s s i a i n t h e 20 t h C e n t u ry s e r i e s e d i to r Boris Wolfson—Amherst College e d i to r i a l B oa r d : Anthony Anemone—The New School Robert BiRd—The University Of Chicago eliot BoRenstein—New York University Angela BRintlingeR—The Ohio State University Karen evAns-RomAine—Ohio University Jochen HellBeck—Rutgers University lilya KAgAnovsKy—University Of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Christina KiAeR—Northwestern University Alaina lemon—University Of Michigan simon morrison—Princeton University eric NaimAn—University Of California, Berkeley Joan neuBeRgeR—University Of Texas, Austin ludmila Parts—Mcgill University ethan Pollock—Brown University Cathy Popkin—Columbia University stephanie SandleR—Harvard University Landmarks Revisited The Vekhi Symposium 100 Years On E di t E d b y R o b i n A i z l E w o o d A nd R u t h C oAt E s BOSTON / 2013 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: A bibliographic record for this title is available from the Library of Congress. Copyright © 2013 Academic Studies Press All rights reserved ISBN 978-1-618811-286-6 (hardback) ISBN 978-1-61811-287-3 (electronic) Book design by Ivan Grave Published by Academic Studies Press in 2013 28 Montfern Avenue Brighton, MA 02135, USA [email protected] www.academicstudiespress.com Effective December 12th, 2017, this book will be subject to a CC-BY-NC license.
    [Show full text]
  • Freedom from Violence and Lies Essays on Russian Poetry and Music by Simon Karlinsky
    Freedom From Violence and lies essays on russian Poetry and music by simon Karlinsky simon Karlinsky, early 1970s Photograph by Joseph Zimbrolt Ars Rossica Series Editor — David M. Bethea (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Freedom From Violence and lies essays on russian Poetry and music by simon Karlinsky edited by robert P. Hughes, Thomas a. Koster, richard Taruskin Boston 2013 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: A catalog record for this book as available from the Library of Congress. Copyright © 2013 Academic Studies Press All rights reserved ISBN 978-1-61811-158-6 On the cover: Heinrich Campendonk (1889–1957), Bayerische Landschaft mit Fuhrwerk (ca. 1918). Oil on panel. In Simon Karlinsky’s collection, 1946–2009. © 2012 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn Published by Academic Studies Press in 2013. 28 Montfern Avenue Brighton, MA 02135, USA [email protected] www.academicstudiespress.com Effective December 12th, 2017, this book will be subject to a CC-BY-NC license. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. Other than as provided by these licenses, no part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, or displayed by any electronic or mechanical means without permission from the publisher or as permitted by law. The open access publication of this volume is made possible by: This open access publication is part of a project supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book initiative, which includes the open access release of several Academic Studies Press volumes. To view more titles available as free ebooks and to learn more about this project, please visit borderlinesfoundation.org/open.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bulgarian Monarchy: a Politically Motivated Revision of a Historical Image in a Post-Socialist Transitional Society
    The Bulgarian monarchy: a politically motivated revision of a historical image in a post-socialist transitional society Markus Wien American University, Bulgaria From its foundation in 1878, which was a consequence of the previous Russian- Turkish war, up to 1946 pre-socialist Bulgaria had a monarchic constitution. It was finally abandoned on 8 September 1946 by a manipulated referendum, which turned Bulgaria into a ‘People’s Republic’. The last king, Simeon II, had to leave the country, but did not abdicate formally instead, but he kept his title as a monarch in exile.1 During the years of communist rule, which lasted until 1989, it was unthinkable for Simeon to return to his home country – let alone resume political functions. The rejection of the monarchy and its representatives as reactionary and feudalist by the communists was too clear. On the contrary, they were eager to eliminate any positive memory of the monarchy in the public. They did so by creating an official image of history which blamed the monarchy for being the main reason, or at least, a very important precondition for all negative developments in the history of Bulgaria since 1878. Significant terms, such as “adventurism” for Bulgaria’s participation in the Balkan wars and the First World War under King Ferdinand or ‘monarcho-fascism’ for the authoritarian regime of Boris III, were chosen in order to make the period before 1944 a part of the public memory as a past which was dark but had been overcome.2 After the change of 1989 and the end of the communist monopoly on public opinion, all of a sudden the possibility of a historical re-evaluation of the Bulgarian monarchy occurred.
    [Show full text]
  • IV. the Contradictions of the Northern Pilgrim Dmitry Merezhkovsky
    IV. The Contradictions of the Northern Pilgrim Dmitry Merezhkovsky mitry Sergeyevich Merezhkovsky, the forerunner of the modernist movement in Russia, played a considerable role in Dcreating the image of ancient Rome for the Russian reader. Born in St. Petersburg and educated at St. Petersburg University, Merezhkovsky (1865-1941) embarked on a successful literary career very early. In 1889 he married Zinaida Gippius, an exceptionally talented young poet. They created and maintained a literary salon that influenced the entire literary environment in St. Petersburg, and later in Paris where they emigrated after the Communist take-over. With a degree in history and philosophy, vast traveling experience, and fluency in Greek and Latin, Merezhkovsky was perfectly equipped to contribute to the revival of the symbolism of antiquity, and of ancient Rome in particular. He did so primarily in The Death of the Gods (Smert’ bogov, Julian the Apostate in the English translation)1 and the first part of his renowned historical trilogy entitled Christ and Antichrist (Khristos i Antikhrist), which brought him fame, first outside of Russia, and subsequently in his own country, where a novel on an ancient subject was still a rarity.2 In the trilogy Christ and Antichrist Merezhkovsky formulated his religious and philosophical concept—a concept very insightfully described by Nikolai Berdyayev: He was possessed by the pathos of globalism, of coercive universalism, typical for the Latin spirit, for the Roman idea. He apparently received this yearning for global unity from Dostoevsky. He perceives the entire world and the whole of world history either as poles, or as aspects of Christ and Antichrist.
    [Show full text]
  • D. Merezhkovsky's Civil Mission in the Second Polish Republic in 1919
    20 D. MEREZHKOvsky’s civil MISSION IN THE SECOND POLISH REPUBLIC IN 1919-1920-TH: MEDIA AND RELIGIOUS ASPECTS Mykola Rashkevych1 Abstract The article discusses the issue of how Dmitry Merezhkovsky thinks about Polish Republic new religious consciousness, appearances of anti-bolshevists. Researches are based on the anal- ysis of publications in periodicals of Polish Republic. The main issue is religious messianism of Russian and Polish peoples. Key words: messianism, missionism, journalism, nations, communism. In 1920, the Russian publicist, religious philosopher and interpreter Dmytry Mere- zhkovsky speaking with correspondent of Vilna (Vilnius) newspaper “Nasz kraj” Eu- geniusz Świerczewski expressed prophetic symbolic maxim: “Russia is extremely feminine; however she has never had a husband. She was raped by Tatars, Tsars, and Bolshevists. The only possible husband Russia could be Poland – but Poland looks too weak nowadays” [Świerczewski, 1920]. The founder of the “new religious consciousness” did not say a word about Europe as a possible spouse or any Slavic country. However, a century afterwards his opinion could be interpreted only in context of European ambitions of Russia and Poland. The former one, as it is known, is still being raped by oligarchs headed by Putin, and the later one deliberately connected its own fate with the Old world. The forced seizure of Ukrainian Donbass and Crimea performed by the troops of the Russian Federation ac- tually copies the aggression of Lenin’s RSFSR (Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Re- public) of the Lithuanian, Belarusian and Polish territories in the twenties of the twenti- eth century. Therefore historians and intellectuals with national persuasion are frankly sorry about the weak efficiency of D.
    [Show full text]
  • Amherst Center for Russian Culture Zinaida Gippius and Dmitrij
    Amherst Center for Russian Culture Zinaida Gippius and Dmitrij Merezhkovsky Papers 1903-1957 Bulk dates: 1906-1934 Accession Number: CRC91-0002 Quantity: 5.5 linear feet Containers: 3 Records Storage Boxes 5 Archival Boxes Processed: 1993 April-Ju ly By: Tanya Chebotarev, Center for Russian Culture Associate Daria D'Arienzo, Archivist of t he College Finding Aid: Date: 1993 July-August Prepared by: Tanya Chebotarev, Center for Russian Culture Associate Edited by: Daria D'Arienzo, Archivist of t he College Access: In general, there is no restriction on access to Zinaida Gippius and Dmitrij Merezhkovsky Papers for research use. Selected items may be restricted to protec t the pri vacy right s of indi viduals or for ot her legal reasons. Fragil e items may be restricted for preservation reasons. Photocopying: No photocopying is permitted. Copyright: It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of copyrights. Requests for permission to publish material from the papers should be directed to the Director of Amherst Center for Russian Culture. Funding: The processing of Zinaida Gippius and Dmitrij Merezhkovsky Papers was supported by a grant from the Social Science Research Council and the American Council for Learned Societies as part of their "Program to Alleviate Backlog in Soviet and East European Collections in the United States." © Amherst Center for Russian Culture 1993 August Page 1 Zinaida Gippius and Dmitrij Merezhkovsky Papers Description of the Papers Scope and Content Note The papers document the life and activities of Russian symbolist poet Zinaida Gippius (1869-1945); her husband, Russian philosopher and writer, Dmitrij Merezhkovsky (1865-1941); and their longtime secretaries, editors and writers, Dmitrij Filosofov (1872-1940) and Vladimir Zlobin (1894-1967).
    [Show full text]