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Anna Akhmatova—Poetess of Tragic Love

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2018

Leonid I. Strakhovsky*
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Extract

It was a wintry evening in 1911. The weekly Wednesday gathering at the “tower”, the residence of the erudite poet Vyacheslav Ivanov, was in full swing. Here was represented the flower of the St. Petersburg poetical world. Poets well established, those less established, and the beginners recited in turn and awaited the verdict of the host. Usually this verdict was politely deadly. The sentence thus pronounced was mitigated only by the realization that it was always to the point and always just. Hence even the slightest approval was a triumph for the victim.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1947

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References

1 See Leonid I. Strakhovsky, “Nicholas Gumilyov The Poet-Warrior,” The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. xxii, No. 60, October 1944.

2 Translated by Gerard Shelley in Modern Poems from Russia, London 1942; slightly revised by the author.

3 Ivanov, Georgi, Peterburgskiya Zimy, Paris, 1928, p. 67.Google Scholar

4 Akhmatova, Anna, Vecher, St. Petersburg, 1912.Google Scholar

5 Aikhenvald, Yuli, “Anna Akhmatova” in Siluety russkikh pisatelei, Berlin, 1923, Vol. III, p. 279.Google Scholar

6 Translated by Shelley, Modem Poets; revised by the author.

7 See Strakhovsky, “Gumilyov,” pp. 14-17.

8 L'vov-Rogachevsky, V., Noveishaya russkaya literatura, Moscow, 1927, p. 303.Google Scholar

9 Zhirmunsky, V., “Proedolevshiye simvolizm,” Russkaya Mysl', December, 1916, p. 33.Google Scholar

10 Lileraturnaya Entsiklopediya, I (Moscow-Leningrad, 1930), 280; Vladislavlev, I. V., Literatura velikogo desyatiletiya, I (Moscow-Leningrad, 1928), 39.Google Scholar

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15 Quoted in Anichkov, Novaya, pp. 115-116.

16 Strakhovsky, Leonid I., “Anna Akhmatova: the Sapho of Russia,” The Russian Student, Vol. vi, No. 3, November, 1929, p. 8.Google Scholar

17 Translated by the author.

18 Zhirmunsky, “Preodolevshiye,” p. 34.

19 Aikhenvald, “Akhmatova,” p. 281.

20 Translated by the author. This poem is dated 1913.

21 Tr. by Shelley, Modern Poets; slightly revised by the author. This poem is dated January 1914.

22 Strakhovsky, “Akhmatova,” p. 8.

23 Tr. by Shelley; slightly revised by the author.

24 Anichkov, , Novaya, p. 112.Google Scholar

25 Tr. by Shelley, revised by the author. This poem is dated January 1, 1913.

26 Tr. by the author.

27 Tr. by Shelley.

28 Tr.by the author.

29 Tr. by Shelley, slightly revised by the author.

30 Aikhenvald, “Akhmatova,” p. 282.

31 Mikhailovsky, , Russkaya, p. 337.Google Scholar

32 L'vov-Rogachevsky, , Noveishaya, p. 303.Google Scholar

33 Gumilyov, N., “Pis'mo o russkoi poezii,” Apollon, No. 5, May 1914, pp. 3638.Google Scholar

34 Aikhenvald, “Akhmatova,” p.285.

35 Anna Akhmatova “U samago morya,” Apollon, No. 3, March 1915, pp. 25-32. Published in book form in 1921.

36 G. Lelevich, Na Postu, 1923, quoted in Literaturnaya Entsiklopediya, I, 281.

37 Tr. by the author.

38 Tsekhnovitser, Orest, Literature i mirovaya voina, Moscow, 1938, p. 279.Google Scholar

39 Akhmatova, Anna, Belaya Staya, Petrograd, 1917.Google Scholar

40 Literaturnaya Entsiklopediya, I, 282.

41 Tr. by Shelley.

42 Translated by Babette Deutsch and Avrahm Yarmolinsky in Russian Poetry: An Anthology, New York-London, 1928.

43 Tr. by the author.

44 Tr. by Deutsch-Yarmolinsky.

45 Tr. by Deutch-Yarmolinsky; revised by the author.

46 Akhmatova, Anna, Podorozhnik, Petrograd, 1921.Google Scholar

47 Tr. by the author.

48 Mikhailovsky, , Russkaya, p. 335.Google Scholar

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50 Tr. by the author.

51 Ivanov, , Peterburgskiya, p. 74.Google Scholar

52 Tr. by Deutsch-Yarmolinsky.

53 Ivanov, , Peterburgskiya, p. 74.Google Scholar

54 Akhmatova, Anna, Anno Domini MCMXXI, Petrograd, 1922.Google Scholar

55 Neither without you nor with you can I live.

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58 Akhmatova, Anna, Iva, Leningrad, 1940.Google Scholar

59 Akhmatova, Anna, Iz shesti knig, Leningrad, 1940.Google Scholar

60 Tr. by the author.

61 Tr. by Deutsch-Yarmolinsky.

62 Zhirmunsky, “Preodolevshiye,” p. 32.

63 Literaturnaya Entsiklopediya, I, 282.

64 Aikhenvald, “Akhmatova,” p. 293.