About: Fyodor Tyutchev   Sponge Permalink

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Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (December 3, 1803 - July 27, 1873) was one of the great Russian poets. He wrote about four hundred poems in Russian and French. His favourite themes are chaos and the cosmos, day and night, human beings and nature. Tyutchev was strongly influenced by German romanticism. His love poems dedicated to E.A. Denisyeva were compiled in a "Denisyevski cycle", which depicts love as a great tragedy.

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  • Fyodor Tyutchev
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  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (December 3, 1803 - July 27, 1873) was one of the great Russian poets. He wrote about four hundred poems in Russian and French. His favourite themes are chaos and the cosmos, day and night, human beings and nature. Tyutchev was strongly influenced by German romanticism. His love poems dedicated to E.A. Denisyeva were compiled in a "Denisyevski cycle", which depicts love as a great tragedy.
  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (1803-1873), one of the great russian poet. Dostoevsky used his translation of Schiller's "Ode to Joy" in The Brothers Karamazov. Especially Dostoevsky loved Tyutchev's poem "Eti bednye selenja..." (These poor villages...).
  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (1803-1873) is one of the most brilliant russian poets. His early poems are made in Russian poetic tradition of the XVIII century. In the 1830s we can find an influence of European (especially German) romanticism on Tyutchev’s lyrics. He writes philosophic poems about the universe, nature and human being. In 1840s Tyutchev wrote several articles about relations between Russia and Occidental civilization. In 1850s Tyutchev created several heartfelt poems, in which we can see love as a tragedy. These poems are combined into one cycle, named “Denisievsky”. “Denisievsky” means dedicated to a mistress of Tyutchev – Elena Alexandrovna Denisieva. In 1860s–1870s Tyutchev wrote mainly political poems.
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  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (December 3, 1803 - July 27, 1873) was one of the great Russian poets. He wrote about four hundred poems in Russian and French. His favourite themes are chaos and the cosmos, day and night, human beings and nature. Tyutchev was strongly influenced by German romanticism. His love poems dedicated to E.A. Denisyeva were compiled in a "Denisyevski cycle", which depicts love as a great tragedy.
  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (1803-1873), one of the great russian poet. Dostoevsky used his translation of Schiller's "Ode to Joy" in The Brothers Karamazov. Especially Dostoevsky loved Tyutchev's poem "Eti bednye selenja..." (These poor villages...).
  • Fyodor Ivanovich Tyutchev (1803-1873) is one of the most brilliant russian poets. His early poems are made in Russian poetic tradition of the XVIII century. In the 1830s we can find an influence of European (especially German) romanticism on Tyutchev’s lyrics. He writes philosophic poems about the universe, nature and human being. In 1840s Tyutchev wrote several articles about relations between Russia and Occidental civilization. In 1850s Tyutchev created several heartfelt poems, in which we can see love as a tragedy. These poems are combined into one cycle, named “Denisievsky”. “Denisievsky” means dedicated to a mistress of Tyutchev – Elena Alexandrovna Denisieva. In 1860s–1870s Tyutchev wrote mainly political poems. The most famous Tyutchev's poem is “Silentium!”.
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