PUSHKIN, ALEXANDER
PUŠKIN, ALEXANDER SERGEJEVIČ
(
Алекса́ндр Серге́евич Пу́шкин)
SELECTED WORKS IN TWO VOLUMES
Volume One
POETRY
(избранные произведения в двух томах - том 1. - поэзия)
Raduga, Moskva, 1985
ISBN 5-05-000544-2
edícia Russian Classics
beletria, poézia, Puškin
208 s., angličtina, 45 obr.
hmotnosť: 354 g
tvrdá väzba, papierový prebal
stav: veľmi dobrý, nepoužívaná
PREDANÉ
Kto bol ALEXANDER SERGEJEVIČ PUŠKIN?
*083* in **S7P**
The present volume of the selected works of Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) contains the lyrical masterpieces written between 1818 and 1836; the verse dramas Mozart and Salieri (1830), The Stone Guest (1830), The Covetous Knight (1830); the folk drama The Water-Nymph (1830); the poems The Gypsies (1826) and The Bronze Horseman (1833); and the fairy-tales in verse based on themes from the legendary past of Russian folklore and magic.
The volume begins with a few words about Pushkin by a leading Soviet poet Alexander Tvardovsky. The illustrations include Pushkin's drawings, portraits of the poet, his relatives and his friends, and pictures of places associated with his name.
"...Pushkin is one of those creative geniuses, those great historical forces who, while working for the present, are preparing the future."
Vissarion Belinsky
"...Pushkin ... is the great Russian poet of the people, the creator of fairy-tales enchanting in their beauty and wit, the author of the first realist novel, Eugene Onegin, the author of our best historical drama, Boris Godunov, a poet hitherto unsurpassed for the beauty of his verse and his power of giving expression to feeling and thought, a poet who was the progenitor of our great Russian literature."
Maxim Gorky
"Pushkin is an extraordinary phenomenon and, perhaps, a unique phenomenon of the Russian spirit: he is what a Russian might perhaps be after two hundred years of development. In him, the Russian world of nature, the Russian soul, the Russian language and the Russian character were reflected with the purity, the purified beauty of a landscape reflected on the convex surface of an optic glass."
Nikolai Gogol