Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Many extol Alexander Pushkin not only as Russia's greatest poet, but also as one of the most important writers in history to have influenced Russian culture and literature. During a time when most literature was being written in English and French, Pushkin accentuated the simplicity and beauty of the Russian language , capturing the hearts of his compatriots.

  2. On December 14, 1825, after the death of Alexander I, Pushkin returned to St. Petersburg where there was an attempted coup fomented by members of the secret societies (the Decembrists) Executed on July 13, 1826, by hanging the five main conspirators. The news reaches Pushkin on July 24. Pushkin was summoned by an imperial courier on September 3.

  3. Alexander Pushkin. Glasses, Tea, Pieces. 106 Copy quote. Unrequited love is not an affront to man but raises him. Alexander Pushkin. Unrequited Love, Love Is, Men. 59 Copy quote. I have outlasted all desire, My dreams and I have grown apart; My grief alone is left entire, The gleamings of an empty heart.

  4. Alexander Pushkin was born in Moscow to a father who was a tenant of a ministerial steward and to a mother descended from the Abyssinian black who became the adopted godson and personal secretary ...

  5. Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (Алекса́ндр Серге́евич Пу́шкин) was a Russian author of the Romantic era who is considered by many to be the greatest Russian poet and the founder of modern Russian literature . The major part of his lyrical poetry was written between 1820 and 1830, but some of his poetical masterpieces ...

  6. Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin was born on the 26th of May, 1799 in Moscow in the noble family (his father was the retired major). In the same day the emperor's granddaughter was born. That's way the chimes had been heard all over the town during the whole day.

  7. Jun 2, 2024 · Aleksandr Pushkin - Russian Poet, Exile, Return: After the suppression of the Decembrist uprising of 1825, the new tsar Nicholas I, aware of Pushkin’s immense popularity and knowing that he had taken no part in the Decembrist “conspiracy,” allowed him to return to Moscow in the autumn of 1826. During a long conversation between them, the tsar met the poet’s complaints about censorship with a promise that in the future he himself would be Pushkin’s censor and told him of his plans ...