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Alexander Pushkin: Eugene Onegin PDF

128 Pages·1992·0.96 MB·English
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Landmarks of world literature Alexander Pushkin EUGENE ONEGIN Landmarks of world literature General Editor: J. P. Stern Dickens: Bleak House Graham Storey - Homer: The Iliad Michael Silk - Dante: The Divine Comedy - Robin Kirkpatrick Rousseau: Confessions - Peter France Goethe: The Sorrows of Young Werther Martin Swales - Constant: Adolphe Dennis Wood - Balzac: Old Goriot David Hellos - Mann: Buddenbrooks Hugh Ridley - Homer: The Odyssey Jasper Griffin - Tolstoy: Anna Karenina Anthony Thorlby - Conrad: Nostromo Ian Watt - Camus: The Stranger Patrick McCarthy - Murasaki Shikibu: The Tale of Genji Richard Bowring - Sterne: Tristram Shandy - Wolfgang Iser Shakespeare: Hamlet Paul A. Cantor - Stendhal: The Red and the Black Stirling Haig - Bronte: Wuthering Heights U.C. Knoepflmacher - Pasternak: Doctor Zhivago - Angela Livingstone Proust: Swann's Way Sheila Stern - Pound: The Cantos - George Kearns Beckett: Waiting for Godot Lawrence Graver - Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales Winthrop Wetherbee - Virgil: The Aeneid K. W. Gransden - Garcia Marquez: One Hundred Years of Solitude - Michael Wood Cervantes: Don Quixote - A. J. Close Celine: Journey to the End of the Night John Sturrock - Boccaccio: Decameron David Wallace - Wordsworth: The Prelude Stephen Gill - Eliot: Middlemarch Karen Chase - Hardy: Tess of the d'Urbervilles - Dale Kramer The Bible Stephen Prickett and Robert Barnes - Flaubert: Madame Bovary Stephen Heath - Baudelaire: Les Fleurs du ma/ F. W. Leakey - Zola: L 'Assommoir David Baguley - Boswell: The Life of Johnson Greg Clingham - Pushkin: Eugene Onegin A.D.P. Briggs - Dostoyevsky: The Brothers Karamazov - W. J. Leatherbarrow Gald6s: Fortunato and Jacinta - Harriet S. Turner Aeschylus: The Oresteia Simon Goldhill - Byron: Don Juan Anne Barton - Lawrence: Sons and Lovers M. H. Black - ALEXANDER PUSHKIN EugenOen egin A. D. P. BRIGGS Professor of Russian Language and Literature, University of Birmingham � CAMBRIDGE � UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, Sao Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521384728 ©Cambridge University Press 1992 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions ofrelevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1992 This digitally printed version 2008 A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Briggs, A.D.P. Alexander Pushkin, Eugene Onegin I A.D.P. Briggs. p. cm. -(Landmarks of world literature) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0 521 38472 9 (hardback) ISBN 0 521 38618 7 (paperback) l. Pushkin, Aleksandr Sergeevich, 1799-183 7. Ev genii Onegin. I. Title. II. Series. PG3343.E83B75 1992 891.71 '3 -dc20 91-43489 CIP ISBN 978-0-521-38472-8 hardback ISBN 978-0-521-38618-0 paperback Contents Preface page vii Note on translations and references viii Chronology ix The poetry of Eugene Onegin Introduction 1 The Russian language 2 Problems of translation 4 The Onegin stanza 8 A close look at two stanzas 15 2 Shades of unreality 28 The story 29 The presence of Pushkin 30 Inherited perceptions of Eugene Onegin 35 Morning into midnight 38 3 The unreal reputations of Eugene Onegin and Tatyana Larina 48 Eugene Onegin 48 Guilty or not guilty? 48 Imaginary superiority 50 The Byronic background 51 In and out of character 53 Tatyana Larina 60 The two Tatyanas and two Eugenes 60 The two rejection scenes 63 The earlier Tatyana 71 4 Olga, Lensky and the duel 80 The younger sister 80 v vi Contents Vladimir Lensky 81 The duel 87 Why did he do it? 94 S It is in verse, but is it a novel? 99 'The careless fruit of my amusements' 100 An educated pen 101 In search of the serious content 103 Privacy of conscience and moral awareness 103 History and fate 104 The possibility and closeness of happiness 1 OS Dealing with death 108 Knowledge of human nature 110 Eugene Onegin as a landmark 111 Guide to English translations and further reading 114 Preface The most important event in the story of Eugene Onegin occurred at nine o'clock on the morning of 21 January 1821 when a boy of eighteen was shot dead in a duel. His victorious opponent was a mature man of twenty-five and an experienced duellist. The circumstances of the duel had been manipulated in the older man's favour. It was the offended party, Vladimir Lensky, who died - not the offender, Eugene Onegin. The facts are clear. Onegin not only caused the duel, un­ provoked, but carried it through ruthlessly, having been like a cheat and a murderer. Why, then, has he been treated so lightly by almost all the critics who have written about him? Why are they so ready to explain his conduct in terms of external cir­ cumstances bearing upon him and diminishing his guilt? Why do some people even forget that a duel took place, believing that the unsuccessful relationship between Onegin and Tatyana is all that matters in this story? This book addresses these questions and, in view of the answers to them, attempts a reappraisal of all the main events and characters. Eugene Onegin is not just a novel; it is a novel written in poetry of the highest quality. An explanation is given of the 'Onegin stanza', and two such stanzas are examined in detail. Pushkin's role as a linguistic and literary innovator is also described. Finally, this novel is placed in its literary-historical context. Drawing inspiration from writers as diverse as Sterne, Constant and Byron, and standing also at the head of the great tradition of nineteenth-century Russian realist fiction, Eugene Onegin may be seen to have emerged from, and contributed to, the mainstream of European culture. It is a true landmark in world literature. vii Note on translations and references In the first chapter, four complete stanzas of Eugene Onegin have been given in Charles Johnston's verse translation in order to give some idea to non-Russian speakers of the feel and flow of an Onegin stanza. Subsequently literal translations of passages under discussion have been supplied. Extracts from the text are indicated by chapter and stanza number, e.g. (one, XX). Numerous references have been made to Vladimir Nabokov's literal translation and commentary; these indicate volume and page, e.g. (vol. 3, p. 41). viii Chronology Pushkinl'isfa en dw orks Relatleidt eraanrdyh istoreivceanlt s 1799 May 26: Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin born Birth of Balzac Moscow. 1800-11 Entrusted to nursemaids, French tutors and governesses, Pushkin grew up without parental affection. A lazy child, but an avid, precocious reader. Learned Russian from household serfs and especially his nanny, Arina Rodionovna. 1801 Murder of Tsar Paul. Accession of Alexander I. Chateaubriand: Atala. 1802 Death of Radishchev, political radical, author of A Journefyr omS tP etersbtuorM go scowB.ir th of Hugo. Mme de Stael: DelphiCnhea.te aubriand: Rene. 1803 Death of Bogdanovich, poet, author of Dushe'nk a. 1804 Birth of George Sand. Death of Kant. 1805 Battles of Trafalgar and Austerlitz. Death of Schiller. 1807 Mme de Stael: Corinne. 1808 Scott: MarmionG.o ethe: FaustPa,r t One. 1809 Birth of Gogol. Krylov: first book of Fables. 1810 Birth of Musset. Mme de Stael: De l'Allemagne. Pushkinl'isfa en dw orks Relatleidt eraanrdyh istoriecvaeln ts 1811 Zhukovsky: SvetlaAnuas.te n: Sensaen dS ensibility. Byron: Chi/dHea roldP'isl grimaCganeto,s One and Two. Birth of Belinsky, radical literary critic. 1811-17 Studied at the new lycee of Tsarskoye Selo, near St Petersburg 1812 Napoleon's invasion of Russia. Battle of Borodino. Seizure of Moscow, followed by Napoleon's retreat. 1813 Austen: Pridaen dP rejudiBcyreo.n: TheG iaour. 1814 Paris taken by Allied Forces. Birth of Lermontov. Scott: Waverley. 1815 Battle of Waterloo. Holy Alliance initiated by Alexander I. 1816 Deaths of the poet Derzhavin and playwright Ozerov. Byron: TheP risonoef Crh i/IoCnol.er idge: Christabel. Constant: AdolphGeo.e the: ItalienRisecishee. 1817 Byron: ManfredC.h i/de HarPoilldg'rsi mafignael , cantos. 1817-20 Occupied an undemanding government post in St Petersburg. Dissipated life style. Tenuous connections with revolutionary-minded young people. Some poems, unpublishable because of their liberal sentiments, circulated in manuscript form. 1818 Birth of Turgenev. Death of satirical journalist Novikov. Byron: Beppo.

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This is a lively and readable guide to Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse Eugene Onegin, a landmark of European Romanticism, and arguably the best of all Russian poetry. Professor Briggs addresses the question of how such remarkable poetry can have been composed about a rather banal plot, and consid
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