« A Google Earth Tour Of McCain's McMansions |
Main
| The Kindle »
21 Aug 2008 01:46 pm
Yes, Pushkin!
A reader writes:
Your reader couldn't be more wrong. When Russian dissidents and democracy advocates gathered bravely in the late sixties and early seventies, frequently led by Elena Bonner and Andrei Sakharov, they had a favorite place--before the statue of Pushkin on Pushkin Square in central Moscow. They would stand quiet vigil before the great poet, and read some lines of his poetry gathering strength and resolve from it, and remembering that the Russia that crushed freedom in Prague and trampled demonstrators in Vilnius, Baku and Tbilisi was not the only Russia. There was a richer tradition and vision to be safeguarded.
Pushkin, who was descended from a dark-skinned servant of Peter the
Great and was proud of his exotic part-African heritage, is the
greatest of Russia's poets and he presents the most noble vision of
what it means to be Russian--a generosity of spirit, graciousness and
liberality in dealing with foreigners that reflects the very antithesis
of the soul-less KGB man now at the nation's helm. He shared the
Romanticist fascination with the Caucasus, and no Georgian would ever
resent his voice being heard at a time like this one. There is a
wonderful poetic tradition in Georgia, but not much of it in English
translation. Though Boris Pasternak translated a great deal of it into
Russian. Chavchavadze is the winner from the Pushkin era, I think.
Share This
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e5541e91688834
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Yes, Pushkin!'