Eugene Onegin and Other Stories

Predný obal
Wordsworth Editions, 2005 - 306 strán (strany)
Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) is, for Russians, their greatest writer; Eugene Onegin is his greatest work. Yet it remains little known outside Russia. Attempts to render Pushkin's Russian stanzas into verse have tried in vain to imitate the most inimitable features of the original, while masking many of its other glories. This prose version, for the first time, gives us a Eugene Onegin that is easy and enjoyable to read. Where previous versions lost the novel in the verse, Roger Clarke has discarded the verse to bring us the novel. And more than the novel: what shines through here are not only Puskin's touching story and subtle characterisation, but his incisive pictures of contemporary Russian life and landscapes, his social and literary comment, his humour, and indeed the essential poetry of the work. The addition of four captivating verse-tales from Pushkin's early maturity makes this book a must for anybody interested in Russian or European literature.
 

Obsah

EUGENE ONÉGIN I
121
A PRISONER IN THE CAUCASUS
131
THE FOUNTAIN of BahcHISARÁY
165
GYPSIES
179
POLTÁVA
195
Notes on Eugene Onegin
231
Notes on Onegins journey
263
Notes on The fountain of Bahchisaráy
269
Notes on Poltáva
276
A selective biographical note
285
A historical note on Russias southern frontier
291
Maps
303
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O tomto autorovi (2005)

Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin, one of Russian's greatest poets, was born in Moscow on June 6, 1799. He studied Latin and French literature at the Lyceum. Pushkin was often in conflict with the government and was kept under surveillance for much of his later life. He was also exiled for a period of time. His works include Eugene Onegin and Ruslan and Ludmila. Pushkin died on February 10, 1837 in St. Petersburg of a wound received during a duel protecting the honor of his wife.

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