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| Tyutchev's amazingly, sonorous, musical and lyric verse is something
every Russian gets to know at an early age. Many of his lines now enjoy
wide currency here in Russia and Russia's greatest poet Alexander Pushkin
and the formidable Leo Tolstoy both heaped praise on Tyutchev's inimitable
verse.
On the face of it, his life looked so quiet and successful, but hiding under that impression of well-established felicity was intense moral endeavor. Tyutchev the poet never sought fame and public admiration and only a chosen few of his contemporaries managed to recognize in him the big time poet he really was. Fyodor Dostoyevsky was the first to appreciate Tyutchev's larger than life talent describing him as “the finest poet of a truly philosophic caliber, after Alexander Pushkin.” Christian philosophy factored in very heavily m Tyutchevs writings where he managed to portray the hard hitting elements, the fear and helplessness man feels when confronted by their all-crushing might, wrote about God's will which brings man's life and the Orthodox faith into one as the eternal moral foundation of Russian life. Twenty two years spent outside Russia, his foreign wives and his mingling
with the European cultural elite never made him embrace the European civilization
values. As a
Russia is baffling to the mind,
Her ways - of a peculiar kind, One only can have faith in Russia... This stirring verse still rings very true today and it always will... Tyutchev's inimitable lyrics inspired many equally stirring love songs written by leading Russian composers, including Sergei Rakhmaninovv who wrote this beautiful romance based on Tyutchev's famous Spring Waters poem. |