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SI
A HISTORY OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE
STUDIES IN LITERATURE FROM THE BORZOI LIST
European Literature in the Nineteenth Century By Benedetto Croce Ideals and Realities in Russian Literature By P. Kropotkin
A New Survey of English Literature By Benjamin Brawley Ireland's Literary Renaissance By Ernest Boyd Contemporary Russian Literature By Prince D. S. Mirsky Contemporary Spanish Literature By Aubrey F. G. Bell Contemporary French Literature By René Lalou
A
HISTORY
RUSSIAN
OF
LITERATURE
From the Earliest Times to the Death of Dostoyevsky (1881)
BY PRINCE D. S. MIRSKY Lecturer in Russian Literature at King's College, London
NEW YORK · ALFRED · A • KNOPF · MCMXXVII
COPYRIGHT 1927 , BY ALFRED A. KNOPF , INC .
MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
To
JANE ELLEN HARRISON
PREFACE This book is planned so as to lead up to and form one whole with Contemporary Russian Literature ( 1881-1925 ) . But, covering as it does a much larger stretch of time and only a slightly greater number of pages, the present volume is on a somewhat less detailed scale than its companion. It is continued to a date which may be regarded as the end of the "classical " age of the Russian novel and which coincides with the death of Dostoyevsky and Turgenev and the conver sion of Tolstoy. No hard and fast divisions being possible in the complex fabric of history, the dividing line between the two volumes is not in all points strictly chronological.
Some
writers who produced much of their best work before 1880, but are not typical of the age, have been included in Con temporary Russian Literature . Leontiev, and Sluchevsky. tween the two books.
This is the case with Leskov,
Tolstoy has been cut in two be
In a few cases there is a slight over
lapping. In writing of the literature of a country whose history is very little known abroad I was all the time under the tempta tion of enlarging on general historical and cultural topics . But for fear of making the book too hideously long ( and, as it is, I had too little time at my disposal to make it as short as I should have liked to ) I have cut out all this general informa tion. I am forced to presume a certain general knowledge of the history of Russian civilization on the part of my readers, a presumption all the more justifiable as the same publishers have recently brought out an excellent general history of Russia by Sir Bernard Pares. The same considerations of space ( as well as of my own
insufficient knowledge ) have prevented me from including chapters on Russian folk-lore, a subject vast enough to make vii
viii
PREFACE
any size of book by itself ; and on Ukrainian literature, which, though in many ways strikingly different, is closely linked with that of the Great-Russians. Some passages of the paragraphs on Avvakum, on Gri boyedov, and on Lermontov originally appeared in prefaces to English translations of their works. They are here re produced with the kind permission of the proprietors of the Hogarth Press (Avvakum) and of the editors of the Slavonic Review (Griboyedov and Lermontov ) . I owe my thanks to Professor Pares for permission to quote an unpublished trans lation by him of a fable of Krylov. D. S. MIRSKY. London June 1926.
CONTENTS
TRANSLITERATION
xiii
CHAPTER I The Literature of Old Russia
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.
The Literary Language Literary Conditions Survey of Translated Works The Kievian Period The Chronicles The Campaign of Igor, and its Family Between Kiev and Moscow The Muscovite Period Muscovite Histories The Beginnings of Fiction The End of Old Muscovy : Avvakum
3 4 6 10 13 17 25 28 31 33 37
CHAPTER II The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Passing of Old Russia The South-Western Revival The Transition in Moscow and Petersburg The First Literary Verse The Drama Fiction and Chap-Books
44 45 48 49 51
CHAPTER III The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Age of Classicism Cantemir and Trediakovsky Lomonosov Narrative and Lyrical Poetry after Lomonosov Derzhavin The Drama Eighteenth-Century Prose Karamzin Contemporaries of Karamzin ix
55 57 62 65 69 74 79 84
CONTENTS
X
9. Krylov 10. The Novel
88 93
CHAPTER IV
The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Golden Age of Poetry General Characteristics Zhukovsky Other Poets of the Older Generation Pushkin Minor Poets Baratynsky Yazykov Metaphysical Poets The Theatre Griboyedov The Poets ' Prose The Rise of the Novel The Prose of Pushkin The Growth of Journalism
95 97 102 106 127 129 134 136 139 140 145 147 150 154
CHAPTER V
The 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Age of Gogol The Decline of Poetry Koltsov Tyutchev Lermontov The Poetry of Reflection The Drama The Novelists of the Thirties Gogol Lermontov's Prose The First Naturalists The Petersburg Journalists The Moscow "Circles" The Slavophils Belinsky
157 160 163 168 177 179 181 183 198 202 203 203 207 210
CHAPTER VI The 1. 2. 3.
Age of Realism : The Novelists ( I) Origin and Character of Russian Realistic Novel The Early Work of Dostoyevsky Aksakov
216 220 225
CONTENTS 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Goncharov Turgenev The Sentimental Philanthropists Pisemsky Novelists of Provincial Character
xi
231 236 253 254 260
CHAPTER VII
The Age of Realism : Journalists, Poets, and Playwrights 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Criticism after Belinsky Apollon Grigoriev Herzen The Radical Leaders Slavophils and Nationalists The Eclectic Poets
Alexey Tolstoy Fet Realistic Poets Nekrasov The Utter Decline of Poetry The Drama, General Survey ; Turgenev Ostrovsky Sukhovo-Kobylin, Pisemsky, and Minor Dramatists The Costume Play
263 264 269 276 281 283 286 289 294 295 302 303 305 312 315
CHAPTER VIII The Age of Realism : The Novelists (II) 1. Tolstoy (Before 1880) 2. Dostoyevsky (After 1849) 3. Saltykov-Shchedrin 4. The Decline of the Novel in the Sixties and Seventies 5. The "Plebeian" Novelists
319 340 358 362 365
BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. English 2. French and German 3. Russian INDEX
371 375 376
879
TRANSLITERATION
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