The Project Gutenberg EBook of Marie, by Alexander Pushkin
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Title: Marie
Author: Alexander Pushkin
Release Date: August, 2003 [Etext# 4344]
Posting Date: January 11, 2010
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARIE ***
Produced by Hanh Vu and Douglas Levy
MARIE
A Story of Russian Love
By Alexander Pushkin
Translated by Marie H. de Zielinska
CONTENTS.
I. THE SERGEANT OF THE GUARDS.
II. THE GUIDE.
III. THE FORTRESS.
IV. THE DUEL.
V. LOVE.
VI. POUGATCHEFF.
VII. THE ASSAULT.
VIII. THE UNEXPECTED VISIT.
IX. THE SEPARATION.
X. THE SIEGE.
XI. THE REBEL CAMP.
XII. MARIE.
XIII. THE ARREST.
XIV. THE SENTENCE.
TRANSLATOR'S NOTE.
Alexander Pushkin, the most distinguished poet of Russia, was born at
Saint Petersburg, 1799. When only twenty-one years of age he entered
the civil service in the department of foreign affairs. Lord Byron's
writings and efforts for Greek independence exercised great influence
over Pushkin, whose "Ode to Liberty" cost him his freedom. He was exiled
to Bessarabia [A region of Moldova and western Ukraine] from 1820 to
1825, whence he returned at the accession of the new emperor, Nicholas,
who made him historiographer of Peter the Great. Pushkin's friends
now looked upon him as a traitor to the cause of liberty. It is not
improbable that an enforced residence at the mouth of the Danube
somewhat cooled his patriotic enthusiasm. Every Autumn, his favorite
season for literary production, he usually passed at his country seat
in the province Pekoff. Here from 1825 to 1829 he published "Pultowa,"
"Boris Godunoff," "Eugene Onegin," and "Ruslaw and Ludmila," a tale
in verse, after the Manner of Ariosto's "Orlando Furioso." This is
considered as the first great poetical work in the Russian language,
though the critics of the day attacked it, because it was beyond their
grasp; but the public devoured it.
In 1831 Pushkin married, and soon after appeared his charming novel,
"Marie," a picture of garrison life on the Russian plains. Peter and
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