Pyotr Vyazemsky
Pyotr Andreyevich Vyazemsky | |
---|---|
Born | 23 July 1792 Moscow, Russian Empire |
Died | 22 November 1878 Baden-Baden |
Buried | Tikhvin Cemetery |
Noble family | Vyazemsky |
Spouse(s) | Princess Vera Gagarina |
Issue | Pavel Vyasemsky Maria Vyazemskaya Praskoviya Vyazemskaya Nadejda Vyazemskaya |
Father | Prince Andrey Vyazemsky |
Mother | Jenny Quinn O'Reilly |
Occupation | Poet |
Prince Pyotr Andreyevich Vyazemsky
Biography
His parents were a Russian prince of
In the 1820s Vyazemsky was the most combative and brilliant champion of what then went by the name of
Vyazemsky and the other leading Russian liberals such as Pushkin and Aleksandr and Nikolay Turgenev, were all heavily shaped by the Kantian teachings of Aleksandr Kunitsyn, and often discussed their attitudes on serfdom, the Russian administration and legal system, civil society, and foreign policy through private correspondence, where Vyazemsky was highly critical of the administrations abuses in the western province.[3] He also published a prospectus declaring an "uncompromising war to all the prejudices, vices and absurdity that reign in our society."[4]
At that time, the elderly poet gained admission to the Russian court, in part through his daughter's marriage to
Literary output
Vyazemsky is probably best remembered as the closest friend of Alexander Pushkin. Their correspondence is a treasure house of wit, fine criticism, and good Russian. In the early 1820s, Pushkin proclaimed Vyazemsky the finest prose writer in the country. His prose is sometimes exaggeratedly witty, but vigor and raciness are ubiquitous. His best is contained in the admirable anecdotes of his Old Notebook, an inexhaustible mine of sparkling information on the great and small men of the early nineteenth century. A major prose work of his declining years was the biography of Denis Fonvizin.
Though Vyazemsky was the journalistic leader of Russian Romanticism, there can be nothing less romantic than his early poetry: it consists either of very elegant, polished, and cold exercises on the set commonplaces of poetry, or of brilliant essays in word play, where pun begets pun, and conceit begets conceit, heaping up mountains of verbal wit. His later poetry became more universal and essentially classical.
Bibliography
- ISBN 978-80-263-1581-0, pp. 259–279 (open access), here pp. 272–273.
- Венгеров С. А. Источники словаря русских писателей, т. I, СПб. 1900.
- Бондаренко В.В. Вяземский. М., 2004 (серия "Жизнь замечательных людей")
- Гинзбург А. Вяземский литератор, Сборник «Русская проза», под ред. Б. Эйхенбаума и Ю. Тынянова, Л., 1926.
- Грот Я., Сухомлинов М., Пономарев С., в Сборнике 2 отделения Академии наук, т. XX, 1880.
- Кульман H. Вяземский как критик. Известия Академии наук. книга 1. 1904.
- Собрание сочинений Вяземского в 12 тт. СПб. 1878—1886, его переписка, «Остафьевский архив», т. I—V.
- Спасович В. Вяземский и его польские отношения и знакомства. Сочинения Спасовича, т. VIII, 1896.
- Трубачев С. С. Вяземский как писатель 20-х гг., «Исторический вестник», Ї 8, 1892.
- Языков Д. П. Вяземский. — М. 1904.
References
This article includes a improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (July 2017) ) |
- ^ Also transliterated Petr Andreevich Viazemsky
- ^ Newerkla, Stefan Michael (2020). Das irische Geschlecht O'Reilly und seine Verbindungen zu Österreich und Russland [The Irish O'Reilly family and their connections to Austria and Russia], in: Diachronie – Ethnos – Tradition: Studien zur slawischen Sprachgeschichte [Diachrony – Ethnos – Tradition: Studies in Slavic Language History]. Eds. Jasmina Grković-Major, Natalia B. Korina, Stefan M. Newerkla, Fedor B. Poljakov, Svetlana M. Tolstaja. Brno: Tribun EU, pp. 259–279 (open access), here pp. 272–273.
- ^ Berest, Julia (2011). The Emergence of Russian Liberalism: Alexander Kunitsyn in Context, 1783-1840. Springer. p. 60.
- ^ Berest, Julia (2011). The Emergence of Russian Liberalism: Alexander Kunitsyn in Context, 1783-1840. Springer. p. 87.
- This article incorporates text from D.S. Mirsky's "A History of Russian Literature" (1926-27), a publication now in the public domain.
External links
- Petr Vyazemsky. Complete Works in Russian
- Petr Vyazemsky. Poems
- Works by or about Pyotr Vyazemsky at Internet Archive
- Works by Pyotr Vyazemsky at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)