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Despite a physical infirmity that gradually took hold of him, Khodasevich worked relentlessly during the last decade of his life. Most notably, he wrote an important biography of
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in 2007) in 1931, which he attempted to style in the language of
Pushkin's epoch. Several weeks before Khodasevich's death, his brilliant book of memoirs,
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to be his only model. He even penned several scholarly articles exploring the master-stroke of the great
Russian poet.
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130:, a reflection on the biblical image of wheat as a plant that cannot live if it does not first die. This poem is
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During his first years in Berlin, Khodasevich wrote his two last and most metaphysical collections of verse,
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1st
Edition. Peter Daniels (Translator), Michael Wachtel (Introduction). The Overlook Press. 2014. Page 26
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1st
Edition. Peter Daniels (Translator), Michael Wachtel (Introduction). The Overlook Press. 2014.
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In the mid-1920s, Khodasevich switched his literary activities from poetry to criticism. He joined
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after understanding that poetry was his true vocation. Khodasevich's first collections of poems,
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with
Khodasevich's best known collection of verse, first published in 1920 and revised in 1922.
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254:, Columbia University Press, 2019 (The Russian Library). Translated by Sarah Vitali.
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In the year 1917, Khodasevich gained wider renown by writing a superb short piece
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276:. Angela Brintlinger (Translator). University of Wisconsin Press. 2007.
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descent whose family had converted to
Christianity. His grandfather
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Life beyond the lyric: the prose autobiographies of
Russian poets
172:(1927). The former contained the most important rendition of the
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nobleman, and Sofiia
Iakovlevna (née Brafman), a woman of
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62:into a family of Felitsian Khodasevich (Polish:
42:poet and literary critic who presided over the
385:English translations of 4 blank verse poems,
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242:. He died from cancer of the liver in 1939.
16:Russian poet and literary critic (1886–1939)
222:(translated into English and published by
195:as the co-editor of the Berlin periodical
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215:, who would always cherish his memory.
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176:theme in Russian poetry, the esoteric
89:(1869), a polemical forerunner of the
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28:Vladislav Felitsianovich Khodasevich
351:. University of Wisconsin--Madison.
36:Владисла́в Фелициа́нович Ходасе́вич
78:was famous as a Jewish convert to
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473:20th-century Russian male writers
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92:Protocols of the Elders of Zion
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418:Works by Vladislav Khodasevich
361:Khodasevich, Vladislav. 2014.
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345:Loewen, Donald James (2001).
224:University of Wisconsin Press
424:(public domain audiobooks)
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468:20th-century Russian poets
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318:Jason, Philip K. (2003).
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411:by Vladislav Khodasevich
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149:. Later they moved to
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64:Felicjan Chodasiewicz
23:Vladislav Khodasevich
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246:English translations
105:A Happy Little House
387:"November the 2nd,"
483:Russian memoirists
458:Russian male poets
401:The Hopkins Review
240:Mikhail Gershenzon
193:Alexander Kerensky
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371:978-1-4683-0810-5
331:978-1-58765-075-8
282:978-0-299-22420-2
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236:Andrei Bely
232:Maxim Gorky
168:(1923) and
155:Andrei Bely
139:Maxim Gorky
103:(1907) and
437:Categories
305:References
252:Necropolis
228:Necropolis
166:Heavy Lyre
95:. He left
409:The Poems
390:"Midday,"
288:See also
132:eponymous
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122:in 1925
120:Sorrento
397:"House"
174:Orpheus
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32:Russian
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101:Youth
86:Kahal
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