THE BIOGRAHY OF ALEXANDR PUSHKIN
Pushkin's Biography Adapted from J.Thomas Shaw's biographical sketch in
The Letters of Alexander Pushkin, Volume 1 Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin was born in Moscow on May 26, 1799
(Old Style). In 1811 he was selected to be among the thirty
students in the first class at the Lyceum in Tsarskoe Selo .
He attende the Lyceum from 1811 to 1817 and received the best
education available in Russia at the time. He soon not only
became the unofficial laureate of the Lyceum, but found a wider
audience and recognition. He was first published in
the journal The Messenger of Europe in 1814. In 1815 his poem
"Recollections in Tsarskoe Selo" met the approval of Derzhavin,
a great eighteenth-century poet, at a public examination in the Lyceum.
After graduating from the Lyceum, he was given a sinecure
in the Collegium of Foreign Affairs in Petersburg. The next
three years he spent mainly in carefree, light-hearted
pursiut of pleasure. He was warmly received in literary
circles; in circles of Guard-style lovers of wine, women,
and song; and in groups where political liberals debated
reforms and constitutions. Between 1817 and 1820 he reflected
liberal views in "revolutionary" poems, his ode "Freedom,"
"The Village," and a number of poems on Aleksandr I and his
minister Arakcheev. At the same time he was working on
his first large-scale work, Ruslan and Liudmila.
In April 1820, his political poems led to an interrogation
by the Petersburg governor-general and then to exile to South
Russia, under the guise of an administrative transfer in the
service. Pushkin left Petersburg for Ekaterinoslave on May 6,
1820. Soon after his arrival there he traveled around the
Caucasus and the Crimea with the family of General Raevsky.
During almost three years in Kishinev, Pushkin wrote his first
Byronic verse tales, "The Prisoner of the Caucasus" (1820-1821),
"The Bandit Brothers (1821-1822), and "The Fountain of Bakhchisaray" (1821-1823).
He also wrote "Gavriiliada" (1821), a light approach
to the Annunciation, and he started his novel in verse,
Eugene Onegin (1823-1831). With the aid of influential friends,
he was transferred in July 1823 to Odessa, where he engaged
in theatre going, social outings, and love affairs with two
married women. His literary creativeness also continued,as he
completed "The Fountain of Bakhchisaray" and the first chapter
of Eugene Onegin, and began "The Gypsies." After postal
officials intercepted a letter in which he wrote a
thinly-veiled support of atheism, Pushkin was exiled to
his mother's estate of Mikhaylovskoe in north Russia.
The next two years, from August 1824 to August 1826
he spent at Mikhaylovskoe in exile and under surveillance.
However unpleasant Pushkin my have found his virtual
imprisonment in the village, he continued his literary
productiveness there. During 1824 and 1825 at Mikhaylovskoe he
finished "The Gypsies," wrote Boris Godunov , "Graf Nulin"
and the second chapter of Eugene Onegin.
When the Decembrist Uprising took place in Petersburg
on December 14, 1825, Pushkin, still in Makhaylovskoe,
was not a participant. But he soon learned that he was implicated,
for all the Decembrists had copies of his early political poems.
He destroyed his papers that might be dangerous for himself or
others. In late spring of 1826, he sent the Tsar a
petition that he be released from exile.
After an investigation that showed Pushkin had been
behaving himself, he was summoned to leave immediately for an
audience with Nicholas I. On September 8, still grimy from
the road, he was taken in to see Nicholas. At the end of the interview,
Pushkin was jubliant that he was now released from exile
and that Nicholas I had undertaken to be the personal censor
of his works.
Pushkin thought that he would be free to travel as he wished,
that he could freely participate in the publication of journals,
and that he would be totally free of censorship, except in
cases which he himself might consider questionable and wish to
refer to his royal censor. He soon found out otherwise.
Count Benkendorf, Chief of Gendarmes, let Pushkin know that without
advance permission he was not to make any trip, participate
in any journal, or publish -- or even read in literary circles
-- any work. He gradually discovered that he had to account for
every word and action, like a naughty child or a parolee.
Several times he was questioned by the police about poems he had written.
The youthful Pushkin had been a light-hearted scoffer
at the state of matrimony, but freed from exile, he spent the
years from 1826 to his marriage in 1831 largely in search of
a wife and in preparing to settle down. He sought no less than
the most beautiful woman in Russia for his bride. In 1829 he
found her in Natalia Goncharova, and presented a formal
proposal in April of that year. She finally agreed to marry
him on the condition that his ambiguous situation with the
government be clarified, which it was. As a kind of wedding
present, Pushkin was given permission to publish Boris Godunov
-- after four years of waiting for authorization -- under his
"own responsibility." He was formally betrothed on May 6, 1830.
Financial arrangements in connection with his father's wedding
gift to him of half the estate of Kistenevo necessitated
a visit to the neightboring estate of Boldino, in east-central Russia.
When Pushkin arrived there in September 1830, he expected
to remain only a few days; however, for three whole months
he was held in quarantine by an epidemic of Asiatic cholera.
These three months in Boldino turned out to be literarily the
most productive of his life. During the last months of his exile
at Mikhaylovskoe, he had completed Chapters V and VI of Eugene Onegin,
but in the four subsequent years he had written, of major works,
only "Poltava"(1828), his unfinished novel The Blackamoor
of Peter the Great (1827) and Chapter VII of Eugene Onegin
(1827-1828). During the autumn at Boldino, Pushkin wrote
the five short stories of The Tales of Belkin; the verse tale
"The Little House in Kolomna;" his little tragedies, "The
Avaricious Knight," "Mozart and Salieri;" "The Stone Guest;"
and "Feast in the Time of the Plague;" "The Tale of the Priest
and His Workman Balda," the first of his fairy tales in verse;
the last chapter of Eugene Onegin; and "The Devils," among other lyrics.
Pushkin was married to Natalia Goncharova on February 18, 1831,
in Moscow. In May, after a honeymoon made disagreeable by "Moscow
aunties" and in-laws, the Pushkins moved to Tsarskoe Selo,
in order to live near the capital, but inexpensively and
in "inspirational solitude and in the circle of sweet
recollections." These expectations were defeated when the
cholera epidemic in Petersburg caused the Tsar and the court
to take refuge in July in Tsarskoe Selo. In October 1831 the
Pushkins moved to an apartment in Petersburg, where they
lived for the remainder of his life. He and his wife became
henceforth inextricably involved with favors from the Tsar and
with court society. Mme. Pushkina's beauty immediately made a
sensation in society, and her admirers included the Tsar
himself. On December 30, 1833, Nicholas I made Pushkin a
Kammerjunker, an intermediate court rank usually granted at the
time to youths of high aristocratic families. Pushkin
was deeply offended, all the more because he was convinced that
it was conferred, not for any quality of his own, but only to
make it proper for the
beautiful Mme. Pushkina to attend
court balls. Dancing at one of these balls was followed
in March 1834 by her having a miscarriage. While she was convalescing
in the provinces, Pushkin spoke openly in letters to her of his
indignation and humiliation. The letters were intercepted and sent
to the police and to the Tsar. When Pushkin discovered this,
in fury he submitted his resignation from the service on June 25, 1834.
However, he had reason to fear the worst from the Tsar's displeasure
at this action, and he felt obliged to retract his resignation.
Pushkin could ill afford the expense of gowns for Mme. Pushkina
for court balls or the time required for performing court duties.
His woes further increased when her two unmarried sisters
came in autumn 1834 to live henceforth with them. In addition,
in the spring of 1834 he had taken over the management of his
improvident father's estate and had undertaken to settle
the debts of his heedless brother. The result was endless cares,
annoyances, and even outlays from his own pocket. He came to be
in such financial straits that he applied for a leave of absence
to retire to the country for three or four years, or if that
were refused, for a substatial sum as loan to cover his
most pressing debts and for the permission to publish a journal.
The leave of absence was brusquely refused, but a loan of thirty
thousand rubles was, after some trouble, negotiated; permission
to publish, beginning in 1836, a quarterly literary journal,
The Contemporary, was finally granted as well. The
journal was not a financial success, and it involved him in
endless editoral and financial cares and in difficulties
with the censors, for it gave importantly placed enemies
among them the opportunity to pay him off. Short visits to
the country in 1834 and 1835 resulted in the completion of
only one major work, "The Tale of the Golden Cockerel"(1834),
and during 1836 he only completed his novel on Pugachev,
The Captain's Daughter, and a number of his finest lyrics.
Meanwhile, Mme. Pushkina loved the attention which her beauty
attracted in the highest society; she was fond of "coquetting"
and of being surrounded by admirers, who included the Tsar himself.
In 1834 Mme. Pushkina met a young man who was not content with
coquetry, a handsome French royalist emigre in Russian
service, who was adopted by the Dutch ambassador, Heeckeren.
Young d'Anthes-Heeckeren pursued Mme. Pushkina for two years,
and finally so openly and unabashedly that by autumn 1836,
it was becoming a scandal. On November 4, 1836 Pushkin received
several copies of a "certificate" nominating him
"Coadjutor of the International Order of Cuckolds." Pushkin immediately
challenged d'Anthes; at the same time, he made desperate
efforts to settle his indebtedness to the Treasury. Pushkin
twice allowed postponements of the duel, and then
retracted the challenge when he learned "from public rumour"
that d'Anthes was "really" in love with Mme. Pushkina's
sister, Ekaterina Goncharova. On January 10, 1837, the
marriage took place, contrary to Pushkin's expectations.
Pushkin refused to attend the wedding or to receive the couple
in his home, but in society d'Anthes pursued Mme. Pushkina even
more openly. Then d'Anthes arranged a meeting with her,
by persuading her friend Idalia Poletika to invite Mme. Pushkina
for a visit; Mme. Poletika left the two alone, but one of her
children came in, and Mme. Pushkina managed to get away.
Upon hearing of this meeting, Pushkin sent an insulting letter to
old Heeckeren, accusing him of being the author of the
"certificate" of November 4 and the "pander" of his
"bastard." A duel with d'Anthes took place on
January 27, 1837. D'Anthes fired first, and Pushkin was mortally
wounded; after he fell, he summoned the strength to fire his
shot and to wound, slightly, his adversary. Pushkin died two
days later, on January 29.
As Pushkin lay dying, and after his death, except for a few
friends, court society sympathized with d'Anthes, but
thousands of people of all other social levels came to
Pushkin's apartment to express sympathy and to mourn.
The government obviously feared a political demonstration.
To prevent public display, the funeral was shifted from
St. Isaac's Cathedral to the small Royal Stables Church,
with admission by ticket only to members of the court and
diplomatic society. And then his body was sent away,
in secret and at midnight. He was buried beside his mother
at dawn on February 6, 1837 at Svyatye Gory Monastery, near
Mikhaylovskoe.The End