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Vladimir Sollogub

Count Vladimir Alexandrovich Sollogub (Russian: Влади́мир Алекса́ндрович Соллогу́б; German: Woldemar Graf Sollogub (Sollohub); 20 August 1813 in St. Petersburg – 17 June 1882 in Bad Homburg) was a minor Russian writer, author of novelettes, essays, plays, and memoirs.

Vladimir Sollogub

His paternal grandfather was a Polish aristocrat, and he grew up in the midst of St. Petersburg high society.[1] He graduated from the University of Dorpat in 1834 and was attached to the Ministry of Internal Affairs the following year in Vienna.[2] His literary career began in 1837 in the journal Sovremennik. In 1840 he married Sofya Mikhailovna Velgorskaya. In 1843 he visited Nice and met Gogol. From 1856 he was an Officer for Special Commissions in the imperial court; he took an interest in prison reform, and from 1875 was сhair of the Commission for the Reorganization of Prisons in Russia. In 1858 he was sent abroad to study European theater, and in 1877 he became an official historian at court.

Sollogub was a connoisseur of theatrical life and of St. Petersburg society. He hosted a well-known literary and musical salon where he brought to life the atmosphere of St. Petersburg of that era as related in his Memoirs (1887). He is best known for his 1845 novelette Tarantas ("The Tarantass"), "a satirical journey from Moscow to Kazan in a tumble-down traveling cart. The satire, superficial and uninspired, is directed against the ideas of the Slavophils and the unpractical dreaminess of the romantic idealists."[3]

Biography edit

Ancestry edit

Sollogub's origins were of the highest nobility, close to the court thanks to his grandmother Natalia L. Naryshkina (1761-1819). His grandfather, Yan Sollogub, served as an adjutant of the Polish king and was a prominent magnate in Lithuania. He increased his wealth to 80,000 souls by means of the marriage with Natalia Naryshkina, a daughter of the Russian Emperor's relative Lev Narishkin. Alexander Sollogub (1787–1843), the father of the writer and the son of Yan Sollogub, quickly wasted his share of the bequest. He held a civil rank of master of ceremonies (Russian: Церемониймейстер, from German "Zermonienmeister") at the court, however in public he was mainly known as a dandy. Pushkin mentioned his name ("Eternal Scollogub is having fun") in the drafts to the 1st chapter of "Eugene Onegin". Alexander's love for the theater, music, and painting had a valuable impact on his son, Vladimir.

The mother of the author, Sofia Ivanovna Sollogub (maiden name: Arharova; 1791–1854), was admired by emperor Alexander I, who loved having conversations with her. Сalm and serious, she loved Russian literature and was the addressee of Pyotr Pletnyov's letter "A letter to countess S. I. S. about Russian poets." Vladimir's grandmother was Ekaterina Arharova (1755–1836), a prominent Saint Petersburg's lady, "the keeper of the old-Moscow traditions. Another grandfather, Ivan Arharov (1744–1815), was a military governor of Moscow. Therefore, the family of the author was related both to bureaucratic St. Petersburg and to lordly, patriarchal Moscow.

In childhood, due to his kinship to Alexey Olenin, who was a cousin of his grandmother Ekaterina Arharova, Vladimir became acquainted with a set of famous contemporary writers: Ivan Krylov, Nikolay Gnedich, Alexander Pushkin, and Alexander Griboyedov. This was the time when he started to esteem the arts.

Childhood and studying in Dorpat edit

Sollogub's education, to which his parents paid close attention, started at home. The list of his teachers included Pyotr Pletnev (Russian language and literature) and protoiereus Ioakim Kochetov (law of God). Vladimir's gouverneur was Ernest Charrière, a French playwright, historian, poet, and the future translator of Turgenev's "A Sportsman's Sketches." Ernest was the one who induced the future author's love to the literature.

Vladimir spent winters mostly in Saint Petersburg and summers in Pavlovsk. In both cities he socialized with peers from aristocratic society. Young Sollogub was jaunty and witty, and even though he looked quite plain at the time (as people remember), people often invited him to dinners because he was able to "revive and exhilarate". Among Vladimir's entertainments were participation in the court theater, amateur performances and tableau vivant, which were organized by his father, who also participated as a singer and actor.

In 1819–1820, Vladimir traveled to Paris with his parents and brother Lev. In the summer of 1822, the young boy went to his mother's estate, "Nikolskoe", Simbirsk Governorate. There he discovered for himself the world of the Russian province. The manager of the estate was Vasiliy Grigorovich (the father of Dmitry Grigorovich), with whom the writer would keep in touch between 1840–1860.

Having received the perfect home studying and wishing to pursue a diplomatic career, Vladimir entered the philosophical department of the University of Dorpat. The wealth of his family decreased at that time, so his life was modest. However, he didn't skip student games and tried to imitate Nikolay Yazykov, who had studied at the university earlier. Here in the university, Sollogub became acquainted with Vasily Zhukovsky, the family of Karamzin (especially with Andrey Karamzin who also was a student that time), Pyotr Vyazemsky and future surgeons Nikolay Pirogov and Fyodor Inozemtsev, and the future lawyers Pyotr Redkin, Pyotr Kalmikov, Ivan Zolotarev, Yuri Arnold. Sollogub became a habitué of several musical-literary salons hosted by landrat Karl Gotthard von Liphart and Professors Vasiliy Perevoshikov and Ivan Moyer. Besides studying, Vladimir played music, wrote plays, participated in amateur performances, and — all in all — lead a life of a "typical bursch."[4]

Living and studying in Dorpat was a major event in Sollogub's life and was which was reflected in some of his works, e. g., "Dva Studenta" (Russian: "Два Студента", "Two Students"), "Aptekarsha" (Russian: "Аптекарша", "A Lady Chemist"), and a narrative "Neokonchennie Povesti" (Russian: "Неоконченные повести", "Unfinished stories"); and which would later make Sollogub close to Nikolay Yazykov. Summer holidays were spent in St. Petersburg and Pavlovsk, just as before his studying. Here in Pavlovsk in 1831, Sollogub became acquainted with Nikolai Gogol, who was, at that, time a gouverneur of Vladimir's cousin, Count Vasilchikov, who was suffering from dementia.[5] In the same year, he met and became acquainted with Alexander Pushkin.

Sollogub graduated from the university as a "valid student", not as a "candidate." The author himself explained this outcome as the result of a combination of bad luck on exams and a conflict with a professor.

The beginning of career edit

Civil service edit

After the graduation from the university, Sollogub received a rank of Gubernial Secretary. He began his service in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where he held the position of an attaché in the Russian embassy in Vienna. However, he didn't demonstrate an inclination towards diplomatic duties, so he returned to Russia, and on 19 January 1835 he started his career in the Ministry of Internal Affairs as an official "for special missions" (attached to the governor of Tver). Under his new duties, he traveled to Kharkiv, Smolensk, Vitebsk, and Tver, with a mission to create descriptions of the provinces. The mission to Tver also contained a task to search and collect information about the Old Believers. While traveling, Count Sollogub spent a lot of time not performing his duties but rather staying in his estates. Mikhail Bakunin mentioned this in his letter: "Spent the whole week alone with Sollogub in his old estate one hundred versts away from Tver. We read Hoffmann, drank 3 bottles of wine per day, and fantasized. When we became bored, we traveled to the Count's next estate..."

In the beginning of 1838, Sollogub focused on work in the minister's chancellery. On April 19, he was instructed to create a comprehensive statistical description of the Simbirsk governorate, which he successfully finished (with an interruption) in September 1839 and which is currently stored in the Russian State Historical Archive. On February 26, 1839, this task was interrupted when Sollogub was assigned with another task to investigate illegal logging in Velikoustuzhskiy and Vesyegonsky uezds, which he successfully finished by April 12 of the same year. In the end of May, he had another journey to Ustyuzhna, in which Sollogub wrote "And so this is my life... a big road by which I often have to ride in a cart". However, Sollogub abandoned neither secular nor literary life. He participated in both during his frequent visits to Saint Petersburg. The public knew him as a witty young man with perfect dancing skills, though as Avdotya Panaeva and Dmitry Grigorovich noticed, his behavior "varied."

Near the end of 1839, Sollogub was promoted from Government Clerk to Valet de Chambre. In 1840, Sollogub married Sofia Vielgorskoya, a daughter of Mikhail Vielgorsky. In 1842, Vladimir had already reached the rank of Collegiate Accessor and held the post of head clerk in the minister's chancellery, which he changed to a forwarder in the same year. With his wife, he traveled to Europe (Germany, Paris, Nice). His stay in Baden-Baden (July - August 1843) and Nice (autumn 1843 - winter 1844) was marked by the companionship of Alexandra Smirnova and Nikolay Gogol, who, after having read Sollogub's unfinished novel "Tarantas", gave Vladimir some literary advice. Perhaps, under the influence of Gogol, Sollogub decided to rework the novel.

Sollogub received the rank of Court Councillor in 1845 and then Collegiate councillor in 1848. On 30 January 1849, Vladimir resigned (for unknown reasons) and settled in Nikolskoe, occasionally visiting Moscow.

Literature edit

Sollogub first attempted to write at the age of 15. His first texts were full of saloon dilettantisms and imitations. They contained conventional epithets, and the characters were vague. These experiments included poems in Russian and French, couplets for home and student plays, epigrams, elegies, facetious poems, and translations in prose of Lord Byron's stanzas. His most prominent work of that time, in Andrey Nemzer's opinion, was the romantic poem "Stan" (Russian: Стан, Camp).

Vladimir joined Nikolay Karamzin's saloon (which members at the time were Alexander Pushkin, Vyazemsky, Ivan Turgenev, and, later, Mikhail Lermontov), which streightened his literary social network. This was where "Voldemar" (or "Vovo") Sollogub — as Karamzins calls him in their letters — read his first works in public. His first social novels were also read in saloons and to friends without being published.

In the first half of 1830th, before Sollogub's literary debut in "Sovremennik" with the tale “Tri Zheniha” (Russian: Три Жениха, Three Grooms, 1837), Vladimir's name had already been known in the circle of contemporary senior writers. So, in 1832, Sollogub was mentioned as a possible member of a new magazine that had been suggested by Zhukovsky. In 1836, Vladimir was in the list of probable collaborators for the "Russkiy Sbornik" (Russian: Русский Сборник, Russian Digest) magazine of Andrey Krayevsky and Vladimir Odoyevsky, and to “Starina and Novizna” (Russian: Старина и Новизна, Old and New) of Vyazemsky, which was never published. In addition, the author also attempted to write a libretto to "A Life for the Tsar", an opera by Mikhail Glinka, but the composer didn't like it.

Researchers suggest that in the middle of the 1830s the relationship between Sollogub and Pushkin developed beyond secular acquaintance, which explains Vladimir's participation in "Otechestvennye Zapiski." Even after Pushkin was deceased, Sollogub still remained in the "circle of Pushkin". This fact can be confirmed by his publications in “Sovremennik” (“Two Students”, Russian: “Два Студента”, 1838), in “Literary addition to the ‘Russian Invalid’” (“Seryozha”, Russian: “Сережа”, 1838; it was warmly received by the public, including Vissarion Belinsky), and in the renewed "Otechestvennye Zapiski."

He was a permanent visitor of the salons hosted by Nikolay Karamzin and Alexander Odoevsky. Researchers note the influence of Odoyevsky's prose, both musical and secular, on Sollogub's narrative "The History of Two Shoes" (Russian: "История двух калош"), which was published in "Otechestvennye Zapiski" in 1839 and which was very popular among readers. This put the Count into the circle of the most well-known writers of the time and made him known as a "mediator between the aristocracy and the turning-to-democratic literacy." On the other hand, his visits to Karamzins played their role too. It was probably there, in the beginning of 1839, that Sollogub became closer to Yuriy Lermontov. Another salon that Sollogub visited was hosted by the family of Velgorskiy, which became for him the “third school” and taught Vladimir to “understand” the art. Eventually, Sollogub became a "leading singer" there, because he "brought the Russian spirit, the Russian speech, and interest to the Russian literature into this house." Vadim Vatsurov suggested that Sollogub's decision to move from the shallowing "Sovremennik" of Pletnyov to "Otechestvennye Zapiski" of Alexander Kraevsky, Odoyevskiy, and Belinsky was an act of self-determination. Soon, Sollogub's name became firmly associated with this magazine.

In the end of September, beginning of November 1839, Sollogub went to Kazan with the painter Prince Grigory Gagarin. The painter's cousin Prince Ivan Gagarin wrote to Vyzaemsky on 30 September 1839 about this art tandem as a "union of a novelist and a painter for the utilization of couleur locale." His words described the initial plan for the future publication. In winter 1940, the work was discussed in literary and musical salons, e.g., in the salons of Karamzins and Odoyevsky. In "Pushkin’s circle", the text received a sceptical reception. However, seven chapters of "Tarantas" were published in "Otechestvennye Zapiski" (No.10) with an editorial note about the publication of the new book. In 1840, Sollogub published "Bolshoy Svet" (Russian: "Большой Свет", "Noble Society"), which was written, as Sollogub reminisced, at the order of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna and was dedicated to her (Sollogub often wrote vaudevilles and couplets for the court). One of the main character's prototype was Lermontov, who made fun of the Grand Dutchess (or, according to other sources, of the Empress) on the masquerade on the night of 31 December 1839, and the plot's motive was Sollogub's love to S. Vengerskaya, a lady-in-waiting of the Empress. The second part was written after almost a year.

The next year (1841) was remarkable for Sollogub, as the first part of the digest of his works, "For the Upcoming Dream" (Russian: "На сон грядущий"), was published in Saint Petersburg. The second part was published in 1843. The digest included about 20 of the writer's narratives. As it had obtained great popularity, it was re-published in 1844-1845 (this was very uncommon at the time). The 2nd edition included "Unfinished Narratives" (Russian: "Неоконченные повести"), and it was highly praised in Belinsky's review. Ivan Kireyevsky suggested that the distinguishing features of the digest were its "style and genuine feelings." In his review, he wrote that the narratives were "very intriguing, the language was simple and correct, the plots were vivid, and the feelings were sensuous." Sollogub's "A Lady Chemist" (Russian: "Аптекарша") was praised by Belinsky in 1842. "It was a long time since we had read something, in Russian, that contained such a beautiful, deeply humanitarian content; delicate diplomacy, and the mastery of the shape..." he wrote. The middle of the 1840s was the time when Sollogub gained the most of his popularity. As Ivan Panaev reminisced, "he became the most favorite and fashionable writer."

In 1842, Sollogub publisheds the article "About conscious of a writer," in which he wrote, with a negative tone, about the commercial part of the literary life. Initially, it was harsher than in the final, printed version. Faddey Bulgarin wrote a response to the article, and since that time he became Sollogub's opponent. Vladimir also attempted to write in styles other than of a narrative. So, he wrote a physiological essay "A Bear" (Russian: "Медведь"), a vaudeville "A Lion" (Russian: "Лев", 1841), a lyrical confession "An Occurrence on a Railroad" (Russian: "Случай на железной дороге", 1842). Sollogub's memorialists noted different set of features of the writer. Thus, along with aristocracy and, sometimes, even hauteur, there was awere the strong love to literature and the earnest interest for new talent. He highly esteemed Dostoyevsky's "Poor Folk" and Ostrovsky's "It's a Family Affair-We'll Settle It Ourselves," although later, as he wrote to Countess Sofia Tolstova, he would consider Ostrovsky a mediocre writer. Sollogub warmly welcomed Turgenev and Aleksey Tolstoy, too. Generally, all prominent writers were awarded with nice comments in his memoirs (e.g., he wrote about Nekrasov's literary activity as a "brilliant one"). Sollogub initiated the charity called "The charity of attendance of the poor people under the leadership of Duke Maximilian de Beauharnais" in 1846. In December 1850, Sollogub became acquainted with Lev Tolstoy. Vladimir often visited Nizhniy Novgorod where he stayed at Nikolay Sheremetyev's place. In autumn 1844, Sollogub wrote a libretto for "Undina," an opera of Alexey Lvov, whose plot was based on Zhukovsky's interpretation of Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué's fairy tale. The performance occurred in 1848 and was recommenced in 1860. Tchaikovsky later used this libretto in his own opera of the same name.

English translations edit

  • The Tarantas: Travelling Impressions of Young Russia, Chapman and Hall, London, 1850. from Google Books
  • His Hat and Cane: A Comedy in One Act, Walter H. Baker, Boston, 1902. from Google Books
  • The Snowstorm, (Story), from Russian Romantic Prose: An Anthology, Translation Press, 1979.

References edit

  1. ^ Michael Pursglove, "V.A. Sollogub and High Society," in The Society Tale in Russian Literature: From Odoevskii to Tolstoi, ed. Neil Cornwell (Rodopi, 1998).
  2. ^ Arnold Christian Theodor Hasselblatt: "Album Academicum der Kaiserlichen Universität Dorpat", Dorpat: C. Mattiesen, 1889, No. 2834, pp.202-203
  3. ^ D. S. Mirsky, A History of Russian Literature from its Beginnings to 1900 (repr. Northwestern Univ. Press, 1999), p. 165.
  4. ^ Розанова, С. А. (1990). Русские писатели". Биобиблиографический словарь. Moscow. pp. Vol. 2, p. 242. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Соллогуб, Владимир. Гоголь в воспоминаниях современников // ПЕРВАЯ ВСТРЕЧА С ГОГОЛЕМ. p. 42.

Bibliography edit

  • Neil Cornwell and Nicole Christian (eds.), Reference Guide to Russian Literature (Taylor & Francis, 1998), pp. 759–760.

External links edit

  • Saint Petersburg Encyclopaedia entry

vladimir, sollogub, count, vladimir, alexandrovich, sollogub, russian, Влади, мир, Алекса, ндрович, Соллогу, german, woldemar, graf, sollogub, sollohub, august, 1813, petersburg, june, 1882, homburg, minor, russian, writer, author, novelettes, essays, plays, m. Count Vladimir Alexandrovich Sollogub Russian Vladi mir Aleksa ndrovich Sollogu b German Woldemar Graf Sollogub Sollohub 20 August 1813 in St Petersburg 17 June 1882 in Bad Homburg was a minor Russian writer author of novelettes essays plays and memoirs Vladimir Sollogub His paternal grandfather was a Polish aristocrat and he grew up in the midst of St Petersburg high society 1 He graduated from the University of Dorpat in 1834 and was attached to the Ministry of Internal Affairs the following year in Vienna 2 His literary career began in 1837 in the journal Sovremennik In 1840 he married Sofya Mikhailovna Velgorskaya In 1843 he visited Nice and met Gogol From 1856 he was an Officer for Special Commissions in the imperial court he took an interest in prison reform and from 1875 was shair of the Commission for the Reorganization of Prisons in Russia In 1858 he was sent abroad to study European theater and in 1877 he became an official historian at court Sollogub was a connoisseur of theatrical life and of St Petersburg society He hosted a well known literary and musical salon where he brought to life the atmosphere of St Petersburg of that era as related in his Memoirs 1887 He is best known for his 1845 novelette Tarantas The Tarantass a satirical journey from Moscow to Kazan in a tumble down traveling cart The satire superficial and uninspired is directed against the ideas of the Slavophils and the unpractical dreaminess of the romantic idealists 3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Ancestry 1 2 Childhood and studying in Dorpat 1 3 The beginning of career 1 3 1 Civil service 1 3 2 Literature 2 English translations 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksBiography editAncestry edit Sollogub s origins were of the highest nobility close to the court thanks to his grandmother Natalia L Naryshkina 1761 1819 His grandfather Yan Sollogub served as an adjutant of the Polish king and was a prominent magnate in Lithuania He increased his wealth to 80 000 souls by means of the marriage with Natalia Naryshkina a daughter of the Russian Emperor s relative Lev Narishkin Alexander Sollogub 1787 1843 the father of the writer and the son of Yan Sollogub quickly wasted his share of the bequest He held a civil rank of master of ceremonies Russian Ceremonijmejster from German Zermonienmeister at the court however in public he was mainly known as a dandy Pushkin mentioned his name Eternal Scollogub is having fun in the drafts to the 1st chapter of Eugene Onegin Alexander s love for the theater music and painting had a valuable impact on his son Vladimir The mother of the author Sofia Ivanovna Sollogub maiden name Arharova 1791 1854 was admired by emperor Alexander I who loved having conversations with her Salm and serious she loved Russian literature and was the addressee of Pyotr Pletnyov s letter A letter to countess S I S about Russian poets Vladimir s grandmother was Ekaterina Arharova 1755 1836 a prominent Saint Petersburg s lady the keeper of the old Moscow traditions Another grandfather Ivan Arharov 1744 1815 was a military governor of Moscow Therefore the family of the author was related both to bureaucratic St Petersburg and to lordly patriarchal Moscow In childhood due to his kinship to Alexey Olenin who was a cousin of his grandmother Ekaterina Arharova Vladimir became acquainted with a set of famous contemporary writers Ivan Krylov Nikolay Gnedich Alexander Pushkin and Alexander Griboyedov This was the time when he started to esteem the arts Childhood and studying in Dorpat edit Sollogub s education to which his parents paid close attention started at home The list of his teachers included Pyotr Pletnev Russian language and literature and protoiereus Ioakim Kochetov law of God Vladimir s gouverneur was Ernest Charriere a French playwright historian poet and the future translator of Turgenev s A Sportsman s Sketches Ernest was the one who induced the future author s love to the literature Vladimir spent winters mostly in Saint Petersburg and summers in Pavlovsk In both cities he socialized with peers from aristocratic society Young Sollogub was jaunty and witty and even though he looked quite plain at the time as people remember people often invited him to dinners because he was able to revive and exhilarate Among Vladimir s entertainments were participation in the court theater amateur performances and tableau vivant which were organized by his father who also participated as a singer and actor In 1819 1820 Vladimir traveled to Paris with his parents and brother Lev In the summer of 1822 the young boy went to his mother s estate Nikolskoe Simbirsk Governorate There he discovered for himself the world of the Russian province The manager of the estate was Vasiliy Grigorovich the father of Dmitry Grigorovich with whom the writer would keep in touch between 1840 1860 Having received the perfect home studying and wishing to pursue a diplomatic career Vladimir entered the philosophical department of the University of Dorpat The wealth of his family decreased at that time so his life was modest However he didn t skip student games and tried to imitate Nikolay Yazykov who had studied at the university earlier Here in the university Sollogub became acquainted with Vasily Zhukovsky the family of Karamzin especially with Andrey Karamzin who also was a student that time Pyotr Vyazemsky and future surgeons Nikolay Pirogov and Fyodor Inozemtsev and the future lawyers Pyotr Redkin Pyotr Kalmikov Ivan Zolotarev Yuri Arnold Sollogub became a habitue of several musical literary salons hosted by landrat Karl Gotthard von Liphart and Professors Vasiliy Perevoshikov and Ivan Moyer Besides studying Vladimir played music wrote plays participated in amateur performances and all in all lead a life of a typical bursch 4 Living and studying in Dorpat was a major event in Sollogub s life and was which was reflected in some of his works e g Dva Studenta Russian Dva Studenta Two Students Aptekarsha Russian Aptekarsha A Lady Chemist and a narrative Neokonchennie Povesti Russian Neokonchennye povesti Unfinished stories and which would later make Sollogub close to Nikolay Yazykov Summer holidays were spent in St Petersburg and Pavlovsk just as before his studying Here in Pavlovsk in 1831 Sollogub became acquainted with Nikolai Gogol who was at that time a gouverneur of Vladimir s cousin Count Vasilchikov who was suffering from dementia 5 In the same year he met and became acquainted with Alexander Pushkin Sollogub graduated from the university as a valid student not as a candidate The author himself explained this outcome as the result of a combination of bad luck on exams and a conflict with a professor The beginning of career edit Civil service edit After the graduation from the university Sollogub received a rank of Gubernial Secretary He began his service in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where he held the position of an attache in the Russian embassy in Vienna However he didn t demonstrate an inclination towards diplomatic duties so he returned to Russia and on 19 January 1835 he started his career in the Ministry of Internal Affairs as an official for special missions attached to the governor of Tver Under his new duties he traveled to Kharkiv Smolensk Vitebsk and Tver with a mission to create descriptions of the provinces The mission to Tver also contained a task to search and collect information about the Old Believers While traveling Count Sollogub spent a lot of time not performing his duties but rather staying in his estates Mikhail Bakunin mentioned this in his letter Spent the whole week alone with Sollogub in his old estate one hundred versts away from Tver We read Hoffmann drank 3 bottles of wine per day and fantasized When we became bored we traveled to the Count s next estate In the beginning of 1838 Sollogub focused on work in the minister s chancellery On April 19 he was instructed to create a comprehensive statistical description of the Simbirsk governorate which he successfully finished with an interruption in September 1839 and which is currently stored in the Russian State Historical Archive On February 26 1839 this task was interrupted when Sollogub was assigned with another task to investigate illegal logging in Velikoustuzhskiy and Vesyegonsky uezds which he successfully finished by April 12 of the same year In the end of May he had another journey to Ustyuzhna in which Sollogub wrote And so this is my life a big road by which I often have to ride in a cart However Sollogub abandoned neither secular nor literary life He participated in both during his frequent visits to Saint Petersburg The public knew him as a witty young man with perfect dancing skills though as Avdotya Panaeva and Dmitry Grigorovich noticed his behavior varied Near the end of 1839 Sollogub was promoted from Government Clerk to Valet de Chambre In 1840 Sollogub married Sofia Vielgorskoya a daughter of Mikhail Vielgorsky In 1842 Vladimir had already reached the rank of Collegiate Accessor and held the post of head clerk in the minister s chancellery which he changed to a forwarder in the same year With his wife he traveled to Europe Germany Paris Nice His stay in Baden Baden July August 1843 and Nice autumn 1843 winter 1844 was marked by the companionship of Alexandra Smirnova and Nikolay Gogol who after having read Sollogub s unfinished novel Tarantas gave Vladimir some literary advice Perhaps under the influence of Gogol Sollogub decided to rework the novel Sollogub received the rank of Court Councillor in 1845 and then Collegiate councillor in 1848 On 30 January 1849 Vladimir resigned for unknown reasons and settled in Nikolskoe occasionally visiting Moscow Literature edit Sollogub first attempted to write at the age of 15 His first texts were full of saloon dilettantisms and imitations They contained conventional epithets and the characters were vague These experiments included poems in Russian and French couplets for home and student plays epigrams elegies facetious poems and translations in prose of Lord Byron s stanzas His most prominent work of that time in Andrey Nemzer s opinion was the romantic poem Stan Russian Stan Camp Vladimir joined Nikolay Karamzin s saloon which members at the time were Alexander Pushkin Vyazemsky Ivan Turgenev and later Mikhail Lermontov which streightened his literary social network This was where Voldemar or Vovo Sollogub as Karamzins calls him in their letters read his first works in public His first social novels were also read in saloons and to friends without being published In the first half of 1830th before Sollogub s literary debut in Sovremennik with the tale Tri Zheniha Russian Tri Zheniha Three Grooms 1837 Vladimir s name had already been known in the circle of contemporary senior writers So in 1832 Sollogub was mentioned as a possible member of a new magazine that had been suggested by Zhukovsky In 1836 Vladimir was in the list of probable collaborators for the Russkiy Sbornik Russian Russkij Sbornik Russian Digest magazine of Andrey Krayevsky and Vladimir Odoyevsky and to Starina and Novizna Russian Starina i Novizna Old and New of Vyazemsky which was never published In addition the author also attempted to write a libretto to A Life for the Tsar an opera by Mikhail Glinka but the composer didn t like it Researchers suggest that in the middle of the 1830s the relationship between Sollogub and Pushkin developed beyond secular acquaintance which explains Vladimir s participation in Otechestvennye Zapiski Even after Pushkin was deceased Sollogub still remained in the circle of Pushkin This fact can be confirmed by his publications in Sovremennik Two Students Russian Dva Studenta 1838 in Literary addition to the Russian Invalid Seryozha Russian Serezha 1838 it was warmly received by the public including Vissarion Belinsky and in the renewed Otechestvennye Zapiski He was a permanent visitor of the salons hosted by Nikolay Karamzin and Alexander Odoevsky Researchers note the influence of Odoyevsky s prose both musical and secular on Sollogub s narrative The History of Two Shoes Russian Istoriya dvuh kalosh which was published in Otechestvennye Zapiski in 1839 and which was very popular among readers This put the Count into the circle of the most well known writers of the time and made him known as a mediator between the aristocracy and the turning to democratic literacy On the other hand his visits to Karamzins played their role too It was probably there in the beginning of 1839 that Sollogub became closer to Yuriy Lermontov Another salon that Sollogub visited was hosted by the family of Velgorskiy which became for him the third school and taught Vladimir to understand the art Eventually Sollogub became a leading singer there because he brought the Russian spirit the Russian speech and interest to the Russian literature into this house Vadim Vatsurov suggested that Sollogub s decision to move from the shallowing Sovremennik of Pletnyov to Otechestvennye Zapiski of Alexander Kraevsky Odoyevskiy and Belinsky was an act of self determination Soon Sollogub s name became firmly associated with this magazine In the end of September beginning of November 1839 Sollogub went to Kazan with the painter Prince Grigory Gagarin The painter s cousin Prince Ivan Gagarin wrote to Vyzaemsky on 30 September 1839 about this art tandem as a union of a novelist and a painter for the utilization of couleur locale His words described the initial plan for the future publication In winter 1940 the work was discussed in literary and musical salons e g in the salons of Karamzins and Odoyevsky In Pushkin s circle the text received a sceptical reception However seven chapters of Tarantas were published in Otechestvennye Zapiski No 10 with an editorial note about the publication of the new book In 1840 Sollogub published Bolshoy Svet Russian Bolshoj Svet Noble Society which was written as Sollogub reminisced at the order of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna and was dedicated to her Sollogub often wrote vaudevilles and couplets for the court One of the main character s prototype was Lermontov who made fun of the Grand Dutchess or according to other sources of the Empress on the masquerade on the night of 31 December 1839 and the plot s motive was Sollogub s love to S Vengerskaya a lady in waiting of the Empress The second part was written after almost a year The next year 1841 was remarkable for Sollogub as the first part of the digest of his works For the Upcoming Dream Russian Na son gryadushij was published in Saint Petersburg The second part was published in 1843 The digest included about 20 of the writer s narratives As it had obtained great popularity it was re published in 1844 1845 this was very uncommon at the time The 2nd edition included Unfinished Narratives Russian Neokonchennye povesti and it was highly praised in Belinsky s review Ivan Kireyevsky suggested that the distinguishing features of the digest were its style and genuine feelings In his review he wrote that the narratives were very intriguing the language was simple and correct the plots were vivid and the feelings were sensuous Sollogub s A Lady Chemist Russian Aptekarsha was praised by Belinsky in 1842 It was a long time since we had read something in Russian that contained such a beautiful deeply humanitarian content delicate diplomacy and the mastery of the shape he wrote The middle of the 1840s was the time when Sollogub gained the most of his popularity As Ivan Panaev reminisced he became the most favorite and fashionable writer In 1842 Sollogub publisheds the article About conscious of a writer in which he wrote with a negative tone about the commercial part of the literary life Initially it was harsher than in the final printed version Faddey Bulgarin wrote a response to the article and since that time he became Sollogub s opponent Vladimir also attempted to write in styles other than of a narrative So he wrote a physiological essay A Bear Russian Medved a vaudeville A Lion Russian Lev 1841 a lyrical confession An Occurrence on a Railroad Russian Sluchaj na zheleznoj doroge 1842 Sollogub s memorialists noted different set of features of the writer Thus along with aristocracy and sometimes even hauteur there was awere the strong love to literature and the earnest interest for new talent He highly esteemed Dostoyevsky s Poor Folk and Ostrovsky s It s a Family Affair We ll Settle It Ourselves although later as he wrote to Countess Sofia Tolstova he would consider Ostrovsky a mediocre writer Sollogub warmly welcomed Turgenev and Aleksey Tolstoy too Generally all prominent writers were awarded with nice comments in his memoirs e g he wrote about Nekrasov s literary activity as a brilliant one Sollogub initiated the charity called The charity of attendance of the poor people under the leadership of Duke Maximilian de Beauharnais in 1846 In December 1850 Sollogub became acquainted with Lev Tolstoy Vladimir often visited Nizhniy Novgorod where he stayed at Nikolay Sheremetyev s place In autumn 1844 Sollogub wrote a libretto for Undina an opera of Alexey Lvov whose plot was based on Zhukovsky s interpretation of Friedrich de la Motte Fouque s fairy tale The performance occurred in 1848 and was recommenced in 1860 Tchaikovsky later used this libretto in his own opera of the same name English translations editThe Tarantas Travelling Impressions of Young Russia Chapman and Hall London 1850 from Google Books His Hat and Cane A Comedy in One Act Walter H Baker Boston 1902 from Google Books The Snowstorm Story from Russian Romantic Prose An Anthology Translation Press 1979 References edit Michael Pursglove V A Sollogub and High Society in The Society Tale in Russian Literature From Odoevskii to Tolstoi ed Neil Cornwell Rodopi 1998 Arnold Christian Theodor Hasselblatt Album Academicum der Kaiserlichen Universitat Dorpat Dorpat C Mattiesen 1889 No 2834 pp 202 203 D S Mirsky A History of Russian Literature from its Beginnings to 1900 repr Northwestern Univ Press 1999 p 165 Rozanova S A 1990 Russkie pisateli Biobibliograficheskij slovar Moscow pp Vol 2 p 242 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sollogub Vladimir Gogol v vospominaniyah sovremennikov PERVAYa VSTREChA S GOGOLEM p 42 Bibliography editNeil Cornwell and Nicole Christian eds Reference Guide to Russian Literature Taylor amp Francis 1998 pp 759 760 External links editSaint Petersburg Encyclopaedia entry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vladimir Sollogub amp oldid 1218343633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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