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[personal profile] proximoception
Shelley's first putative impact on Russian literature occurred just two years after his death, fittingly in the context of an encounter between a rebel poet and an autocratic ruler. The nineteenth-century literary critic P.V. Annenkov (1813-87), who was working on Aleksandr Pushkin's biography at the height of Shelley's Russian fame in the 1870s, speculates that the English poet's early effect on the curse of Russian literature may have been decisive, though indirect. In the spring of 1824, Pushkin told his friend Petr Vyazemsky what he was working on: 'I am writing motley stanzas of a Romantic poem - and am taking lessons in pure atheism. There is an Englishman here, a deaf philosopher, the only intelligent atheist I have ever met.' The Englishman was William Hutchinson, a physician, who, Annenkov speculates, was 'in all probability an admirer of Shelley, who taught our poet the philosophy of atheism and made himself into an unintentional instrument of his second catastrophe.' When Pushkin's letter became known to the authorities, it prompted his second sentence of exile, to his father's state at Mikhailovskoe.

Where he wrote most of Eugene Onegin.

Nothing I'm writing about. One drifts sideways around dawn.

It's an interesting book - I hadn't known Stendhal made up a meeting with him.

Date: 2013-04-24 12:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nightspore.livejournal.com
I like "curse of Russian literature."

Pwned!

Date: 2013-04-24 01:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] proximoception.livejournal.com
A pwnj, I do cnfss't. Though, you know, superfluous nihilists and all that.

Date: 2013-04-24 12:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nightspore.livejournal.com
Also Bloom said that when he was in the Cambridge he went to the British Museum looking for Shelleyana, and he found some poems he didn't know existed. They were, literally, posthumous. In the early part of the twentieth century, a medium contacted Shelley and took down the poems he was writing from the intense inane. Apparently they were intensely inane. Bloom said that poetic talent didn't seem to survive death. At least he'd thought that before reading the Book of Ephraim. When we visited the BM we found the book Bloom had mentioned in their catalogue. (Apparently it's not widely available.) But didn't have time to examine the actual volume.

Date: 2013-04-24 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jones-casey.livejournal.com
speaking of dead poets, i was wondering whether you had class(es) with ammons? how did you find him?

Date: 2013-04-24 04:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nightspore.livejournal.com
No, but coffee. I'll post on this, when I get a minute.

Date: 2013-04-24 04:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] grashupfer.livejournal.com
I went looking. It was 5 years ago that I read a lot of Shelley. Had some troubles though:

http://grashupfer.livejournal.com/367230.html

Now I want to go back.

Date: 2013-04-24 04:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] proximoception.livejournal.com
Ha! Forgot about that.

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