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The Bronze Horseman. Poems. Poems

4.99 €
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The Bronze Horseman. Poems. Poems
4.99 €
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (1799-1837) was a Russian poet, playwright and prose writer. Even during his lifetime, his contemporaries called him the greatest national poet. The poem "The Bronze Horseman" (1833) tells the story of Eugene, a poor official living in St. Petersburg, who loses his beloved in a flood. Driven mad with grief, Eugene begins to wander around the capital and in a fit of emotion blames all his troubles on the Bronze Horseman, a monument to Peter the Great on the Neva. During Alexander Pushkin's lifetime, "The Bronze Horseman" was published in a small excerpt, as Emperor Nicholas I demanded major adjustments, to which Pushkin did not agree. The first publication of the entire verse story was already after the poet's death - in 1837. The collection also includes the main works of Alexander Pushkin, the study of which is included in the compulsory school program - poems ("The Prisoner of the Caucasus" (1822), "The Fountain of Bakhchisarai" (1824), etc.), lyrics.
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