#alexander sergeevich
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#александр сергеевич#александр пушкин#онегин#евгений онегин#русский#russian#scene#onegin#eugene onegin#alexander sergeevich#alexsandr sergeevich#alexander pushkin#pushkin#aleksander sergeevich#aleksandr sergeevich#aleksander pushkin#aleksandr pushkin#book#отрывок#сцена#spouses#perfect couple#couple#love#martha fiennes#90’s#1998#1999#magnus fiennes#jim clark
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"Among the leaves the mermaid hides…" (A.S. Pushkin "Ruslan and Ludmila")
Honouring the birthday of Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin, "the Sun of Russian poetry".
P.S.: Haters and cancellers can bark, foaming at their mouths, until they're blue in their faces, but, eventually, they all will perish, insignificant and fruitless. All the while, the Great will be remembered and revered. After all, the paths, well trodden by common folk, to monuments raised not built with hands do not get overgrown with grass.
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I finished writing a second fic for my “The Master and Margarita” AU!!!
This AU combines Goethe’s Faust and M&M into one timeline and borrows a lot of themes from Fight Club.
You can expect a lot of manipulative demonic behavior, philosophical discussions and a little bit of physical violence :)
The illustration is a reference to a painting called “The Prophet” by Michael Alexandrovich Vrubel (which is in turn is inspired by a poem by the same name by Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin)
The first part:
The second part:
#this took so much time#maybe I will translate them to english one day#master and margarita#woland#goethe faust#мастер и маргарита#воланд#массир#art
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Pushkin Alexander Sergeevich
pushkin alexander sergeevich
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I will never not be unwell about your post about Alyosha that you tagged “when you lose someone you love like that you have to create a way for them to never die” because HE. Also where did the whole idea of Alyosha kills the tsar come from? I read the book over a year ago so there might be some stuff I’m forgetting
i had to go back and find that post bc i was shocked that i was coherent enough about fedya d to articulate a single thought
in the author's preface, dostoevsky says "that while i have just one biography, i have two novels. the main novel is the second one--about the activities of my hero in our time, that is, in our present, current moment." (page 3 in the p&v translation)
the first novel is tbk proper, which takes place 13 years ago, placing it in 1866. our main source for tbk 2: alyosha kills the tsar comes from an article by james l. rice called "dostoevsky's endgame: the projected sequel to the brothers karamazov" which references a letter dostoevsky wrote during the novel's serialization:
"i can only say that aleksei in time becomes the village schoolmaster and, influenced by some sort of special psychological processes at work in his soul, he actually arrives at the idea of assassinating the tsar."
of course, dostoevsky died months after tbk was published in its complete form, at a time when people were trying to assassinate alexander ii, like, every two weeks. so that's our source for tbk: electric boogaloo existing. the other big source is from a guy named aleksei sergeevich suvorin, one of dotoevsky's friends, whose diary was published in 1923. here's him on the subject:
"he [alyosha] would commit a political crime. he would be executed. he would have sought the truth and in those seekings he would, naturally, have become a revolutionary."
we also know that the provisional title for tbk 2: who gave the baby a gun was "the children", referring to the titular boys of book 10 of tbk. according to dostoevsky's widow anna, alyosha "was to endure a complex psychological drama with lise [...] marry [her], then leave her for grushenka"*. there's more about how this sequel would work on a thematic and psychological level in the article and its sister article "foreshadowing the karamazov sequel" (also by rice). this isn't relevant but rice essentially diagnosis alyosha with victorian woman disease by calling him a "textbook case of male hysteria," which i enjoy.
so that's all we know about the hypothetical sequel, and i think about it a lot regarding a biographical reading of the novel because i think it's so interesting to take a character, based on your son who died of a hereditary disease you gave him, who you say is "like an angel, nothing touches [him]," and then plan a sequel where he is not untouchable and undergoes the same disillusionment and trauma as you experienced as a young man, only he dies in the end. and that's not even getting into the other biographical details like dostoevsky's own father dying under mysterious maybe-murder circumstances in 1839! or the fact that he looked at the loathsome father-figure he created for tbk whose hereditary "stain" he passes down to his sons as a black smear over their name and was like yeah i'm going to name him after ME. fyodor what was going on in your head.
i don't know, i sort of want to make a whole other post about this. he created a world in which his son survives and is loved so desperately by everyone he meets, but even still cannot save him, even in fiction. something something sons doomed to become their fathers.
tl, dr:
*this is from the rice article but is specifically referencing nina hoffman's interview with anna in 1898.
#long post#fyodor dostoyevsky#the brothers karamazov#tbk 2: alexei kills the tsar#that is my Official tag on this matter#leftenantjopson#answered#this is incomprehensible i'm sorry
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Commemorating the great writer and poet Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin.
On June 6, Pushkin Day, also known as the Russian Language Day, commemorating the great writer and poet Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin’s birthday is celebrated. Notably, 2024 is his anniversary, which makes the celebration even more significant and valuable.
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Hi! Could you maybe explain how Old Russian differs from modern day Russian? And why/how did you become fluent in Old Russian? That’s so cool! ✨
Hi my friend!
1. The Old Russian language is the very first language (according to archival history) that existed on Earth. It was spoken by all the inhabitants. This was confirmed by archaeological excavations of documentation, stones, steles, on which the inscriptions were precisely in the Old Russian language.
2. With the advent of various rulers (including those who were against the people and wanted to enslave them), the Russian language underwent about 4 changes. And still it changes as there are more and more foreign words in the lexicon.
3. There are 147 letters in the Old Russian alphabet. Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin wrote about this in his works. In modern Russian, the alphabet consists of 33 letters. The number of letters kept decreasing. From 147 it reached 100, later 56, even later 41 letters.
4. The main difference in these two languages is that modern letters already have almost no power (they do not help humanity), and in the Old Russian language every letter is important, since it carries its own meaning. This deep meaning can both help a person and change the lives of many people, influencing the Universe. Everything worked for the benefit of our planet, other planets, including the Sun, as well as the behavior and life of people. For example, to preserve the tradition of procreation; to keep boys becoming men (protectors) and girls women (keepers of the hearth).
5. All the words that we say have their direct meaning. After many changes in languages (here I count all languages, because all people on Earth are one people), many words we simply do not understand (do not realize) what they mean. But each word (spoken or thought) is divisible by 10 000 Particles and scatters across the universe. The more people say the same words that interpret bad events, the faster these events come in the world.
From childhood, something constantly tormented me, as if I didn’t know something, and it also tormented me when I saw people at Christian churches. It seemed to me that there was something wrong. I always wanted to get to the Truth, to find answers to my questions. But my parents couldn't give answers. Therefore, when I first got acquainted with the alphabet of the Old Russian language, I realized that it already looked like what I was looking for. During the study, I doubted the correctness of the information a couple of times, but then I met the meaning of letters in nature (on trees, in people) and again delved into the study. In fact, for several hundred years, the study of Old Russian was forbidden by the government. But now we can study it again, restore the First Truth, revive relations between people according to around the world, start reviving traditions and finally change the world for the better so that all people live happily.
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I am not very good at English, how can I understand what they will tell me, but unfortunately I will not be able to answer :D That's why I'm sitting and writing through a translator. It's nice to meet everyone. I am Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin. It's not a joke if anything. I am 29 and I am from Yaroslavl, Russia.
#cars#jdm#nfs heat#anirise#bmw#nissan#ford#subaru#corvette#fandub#vinil#tuning#street style#itasha#anime#brzd_performance#itashahunters#Kolhoz_Work4op#Youtube
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composition on the theme "Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin".
Watercolor, liners, acrylic.
Композиция на тему "Александр Сергеевич Сушкин"
Акварель, линеры, акрил.
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On May 25, 1803, exactly 220 years ago, Edward George Earle Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton, was born, the author of the famous Rosicrucian novel "Zanoni" ("Ghost"), written in 1842. In "Zanoni" the author presents a description of the action of the “Guardian of the Threshold,” protecting the esoteric truth from unprepared and unworthy students of the occult sciences. The preface to the Rosicrucian novel was published in "Serpent of the Book of Genesis" by Stanisals de Guaita. This preface states that the manuscript of this novel fell into the hands of Bulwer-Lytton in a ciphered form from the old Rosicrucian. Thus, there was a reason to believe that Bulwer-Lytton himself is a Rosicrucian. Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia declared Bulwer-Lytton its "grand patron", which Bulwer-Lytton himself could not influence in any way. For the first time, the novel “Zanoni” was translated into Russian by an unknown translator in 1879, but the translation was incomplete and imperfect. In 1994, the translator G. Parkhomenko made the literary processing and correction of the old translation, and O. Chorakaev translated the missing chapters.
It should be noted that the novels by Bulwer-Lytton enjoyed considerable popularity among his contemporaries, and his name was well-known. In the Russian Empire, Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin, inspired by the work of Bulwer-Lytton "Pelham; Or, The Adventures of a Gentleman" (1828), was going to write the novel "Russian Pelham" based on its motives.
Another work by Bulwer-Lytton concerns occult matters - "The Coming Race" (1871). It describes the concept of "Vril" - magical power, the owner of which becomes the master of his destiny and the whole world.
#lordLytton #Vrill #Vrill-ya #thecomingrace #the_coming_race
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY, ALEXANDER SERGEEVICH!
“Are you asking how I live and whether I have become prettier? First of all, I grew a beard; a mustache and a beard - praise to the young man; I go out into the street, they call me uncle. 2) I wake up at seven o’clock, drink coffee and lie in bed until three o’clock. I recently signed, and have already written the abyss. At three o’clock I sit on horseback, at five in the bath and then I dine on potatoes and sinner porridge until nine o’clock - I read for you, and everything looks the same.” (A.S. Pushkin - N.N. Pushkina, October 30, 1833 From Boldin to St. Petersburg)
Author generations.
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Alexander Kozlov
Position Unknown - Major Unit: Unknown Cargo ID: #1290 Call Sign: English (Russian) English Name: Alexander Sergeevich Kozlov Russian Name: Козлов Александр Сергеевич Place of Birth: Nikolsk, Penza re Source : topcargo200.com/1290/
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Read More 2023 Hello, My Name Is
Fiction The Mystery of Mrs. Christie by Marie Benedict The Inheritance of Orquidea Divina by Zoriada Córdova The Last Confessions of Sylvia P. by Lee Kravetz Eileen by Ottessa Moshfegh The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout Mrs. Pringle of Fairacre by Miss Read
Romance Lady Derring Takes a Lover by Julie Anne Long Desiring Lady Caro by Ella Quinn
Mystery Miss Kopp Just Won't Quit by Amy Stewart The Talented Mr. Varg by Alexander McCall Smith Mrs. Mohr Goes Missing by Maryla Szymiczkowa
Science Fiction and Fantasy Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke How Rory Thorne Destroyed the Multiverse by K. Eason
Horror The Haunting of Leigh Harker by Darcy Coates Carrie by Stephen King The Death of Jane Lawrence by Caitlin Starling
Classics Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra The Curious Case of Benjamin Button by F. Scott Fitzgerald Eugene Onegin by Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
Graphic Novels Battle Angel Alita by Yukito Kishiro Emma by Kaoru Mori
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Alexander Sergeevich Martynkin (RUS)
#Alexander Sergeevich Martynkin#Alex Martynkin#Bodybuilder#Russia#White#90kg#Muscular#Hyper Muscle#IFBB
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