Saltykov-shchedrin Mikhail Evgrafovich. Short Biography M

02.08.2020

Mikhail Evgrafovich Saltykov (who later added the pseudonym "Shchedrin") was born on January 15 (27), 1826 in the Kalyazinsky district of the Tver province, in the village of Spas-Ugol. This village still exists, but it already belongs to the Taldom district of the Moscow region.

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Mikhail's father was a collegiate adviser and hereditary nobleman Evgraf Vasilyevich Saltykov, his mother was Olga Mikhailovna, born Zabelina, from a family of Moscow merchants who received the nobility for large donations to the army during the war of 1812.

Evgraf Vasilyevich, after retiring, tried not to leave the village anywhere. His main occupation was reading religious and semi-mystical literature. He considered it possible to interfere in church services and allowed himself to call the priest Vanka.

The wife was 25 years younger than her father and kept the entire household in her hands. She was strict, zealous and even in some cases cruel.

Mikhail, the sixth child in the family, was born when she was not even twenty-five years old. For some reason, she loved him more than all the other children.

The boy grasped knowledge well and what other children were given with tears and beating with a ruler, he sometimes memorized simply by ear. From the age of four he was taught at home. At the age of 10, the future writer was sent to Moscow to enter the noble institute. In 1836, Saltykov was enrolled in an educational institution where Lermontov had studied 10 years before him. According to his knowledge, he was immediately enrolled in the third grade of the noble institute, but due to the impossibility of early graduation from the educational institution, he was forced to study there for two years. In 1838, Mikhail, as one of the best students, was transferred to the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum.

It was to this time that his first literary experiments belong. Saltykov became the first poet on the course, although both then and later he understood that poetry was not his destiny. During his studies, he became close to M. Butashevich-Petrashevsky, who had a serious influence on the views of Mikhail. After the lyceum moved to St. Petersburg (after which it began to be called Aleksandrovsky), Saltykov began to attend a meeting of writers with Mikhail Yazykov, where he met V. G. Belinsky, whose views were closer to him than others.

In 1844, the Alexander Lyceum was completed. The future writer was given the rank of X class - collegiate secretary.

Office of the War Office. First stories

In early September of the same year, Saltykov signed an undertaking that he was not a member of any secret society and would not join any of them under any circumstances.

After that, he was accepted into the service in the office of the Ministry of War, where he was obliged to serve after the lyceum for 6 years.

Saltykov was burdened by the bureaucratic service, he dreamed of dealing only with literature. The "vent" in his life is the theater and especially the Italian opera. He “splashes out” literary and political impulses at the evenings that Mikhail Petrashevsky organizes in his house. In soul he adjoins the Westernizers, but those who preach the ideas of the French utopian socialists.

Dissatisfaction with their lives, the ideas of Petrashevists and dreams of universal equality lead to the fact that Mikhail Evgrafovich writes two stories that will drastically change his life and, perhaps, they will turn the writer's work in the direction in which he has remained known to this day. In 1847 he will write "Contradictions", the next year - "A Tangled Case". And although friends did not advise the writer to publish them, they, one after another, appeared in the journal Otechestvennye Zapiski.

Saltykov could not know that in the days of preparation for publication of the second story, the chief of the gendarmes, Count A.F. the monarch ordered the creation of a special committee for the strict supervision of these journals.

The usually slow bureaucratic machine of autocratic power worked very quickly this time. In less than three weeks (April 28, 1848), as a young official of the Office of the Military Ministry, a thinker, full of joyful hopes, Saltykov was sent first to the St. Petersburg guardhouse, and then to exile in the distant city of Vyatka.

Vyatka link

For 9 days on horseback Saltykov has done more than one and a half thousand kilometers. Almost all the way the writer was in some kind of stupor, not understanding at all where and why he was going. On May 7, 1848, a trio of post horses entered Vyatka, and Saltykov realized that there was no accident or mistake and that he would stay in this city as long as the sovereign wished.

He begins his service as a simple scribe. The writer categorically cannot come to terms with his position. He asks his mother and brother to take care of him, writes letters to influential friends in the capital. Nicholas I rejects all requests from relatives. But thanks to the letters of influential people from St. Petersburg, the governor of Vyatka takes a closer and benevolent look at the exiled writer. In November of the same year, he was given the position of senior official for special assignments under the governor.

Saltykov is doing a great job helping the governor. Puts in order many complicated cases, demanding of officials.

In 1849, he compiled a report on the province, which was provided not only to the minister, but also to the tsar. Writes a request for leave to his native place. Again, his parents send a petition to the king. But everything turns out to be unsuccessful. Maybe even for the better. Because it was at this time that the trials of the Petrashevites were taking place, some of which ended in execution. And Saltykov at the end of May, on the proposal of the governor, becomes the ruler of his office.

By the beginning of 1850, the writer was instructed by the Minister of the Interior himself to conduct an inventory of the real estate of the cities of the Vyatka province and prepare his thoughts for improving public and economic affairs. Saltykov did everything possible. From August 1850 he was appointed adviser to the provincial government.

In subsequent years, Saltykov himself, his relatives and friends, the Vyatka governors (A.I. Sereda and N.N. Semenov, who followed him), the Orenburg Governor-General V.A. Perovsky, and even the Governor-General of Eastern Siberia N.N. Ants turned to the king with petitions to mitigate the fate of Saltykov, but Nicholas I was adamant.

During the Vyatka exile, Mikhail Evgrafovich prepared and held an agricultural exhibition, wrote several annual reports for governors, and conducted a number of serious investigations into violations of the laws. He tried to work as much as possible in order to forget the reality surrounding him and the gossip of provincial officials. From 1852, life became somewhat easier, he fell in love with the 15-year-old daughter of the lieutenant governor, who would later become his wife. Life is no longer presented in solid black. Saltykov even took up translations from Vivienne, Tocqueville and Cheruel. In April of the same year, he received the title of collegiate assessor.

In 1853, the writer managed to get a short vacation to his native place. Arriving home, he realizes that family and friendship ties are largely broken, and almost no one expects him to return from exile.

On February 18, 1855, Nicholas I died. But no one remembers Mikhail Evgrafovich. And only a chance helps him get permission to leave Vyatka. The Lansky family arrives in the city on state affairs, the head of which was the brother of the new Minister of the Interior. Having met Saltykov and, imbued with ardent sympathy for his fate, Pyotr Petrovich writes a letter to his brother asking for intercession for the writer.

November 12 Saltykov goes on another business trip around the province. On the same day, the Minister of the Interior came out with a report to the emperor about the fate of Saltykov.

Alexander II gives the highest permission - Saltykov to live and serve where he wants.

Work in the Ministry of Internal Affairs. "Provincial Essays"

In February of the following year, the writer was hired by the Ministry of the Interior, in June he was appointed an official for special assignments under the minister, and a month later he was sent to the Tver and Vladimir provinces to check the work of the militia committees. The ministry at that time (1856-1858) was also doing a lot of work to prepare the peasant reform.

Impressions about the work of officials in the provinces, often not only inefficient, but also openly criminal, about the ineffectiveness of the laws governing the economy of the village and the outright ignorance of local "arbiters of fate" were brilliantly reflected in Saltykov's "Provincial Essays" published by him in the journal "Russian Bulletin". » in 1856-1857 under the pseudonym Shchedrin. His name became widely known.

"Provincial essays" went through several editions and laid the foundation for a special type of literature, called "accusatory". But the main thing in them was not so much the display of abuses in the service, but rather the “outline” of the special psychology of officials, both in the service and in everyday life.

Saltykov-Shchedrin wrote essays in the era of the reforms of Alexander II, when the hope of the intelligentsia for the possibility of profound transformations in society and the spiritual world of man was revived. The writer hoped that his accusatory work would serve to combat backwardness and the vices of society, which means it would help change life for the better.

gubernatorial appointments. Cooperation with magazines

In the spring of 1858, Saltykov-Shchedrin was appointed vice-governor in Ryazan, and in April 1860 he was transferred to the same position in Tver. Such a frequent change of duty station was due to the fact that the writer always began his work with the dismissal of thieves and bribe-takers. The local bureaucratic crook, deprived of the usual "feeder", used all connections to send slander to the tsar on Saltykov. As a result, the objectionable vice-governor was appointed to a new duty station.

Work for the benefit of the state did not prevent the writer from engaging in creative activities. During this period he writes and publishes a lot. First, in many magazines (Russian Bulletin, Sovremennik, Moskovsky Vestnik, Library for Reading, etc.), then only in Sovremennik (with a few exceptions).

From what Saltykov-Shchedrin wrote during this period, two collections were compiled - "Innocent Stories" and "Satires in Prose", which were published in separate editions three times. In these works of the writer, the new “city” of Foolov appears for the first time, as a collective image of a typical Russian provincial town. Mikhail Evgrafovich will write his history a little later.

In February 1862, Saltykov-Shchedrin retired. His main dream is to found a two-week magazine in Moscow. When this fails, the writer moves to St. Petersburg and, at the invitation of Nekrasov, becomes one of the editors of Sovremennik, who at that time is experiencing great personnel and financial difficulties. Saltykov-Shchedrin takes on a huge job and does it with brilliance. The circulation of the magazine is rising sharply. At the same time, the writer organizes the publication of the monthly review "Our Public Life", which becomes one of the best journalistic publications of that time.

In 1864, due to intra-journal disagreements on political topics, Saltykov-Shchedrin was forced to leave the editorial office of Sovremennik.

He again enters the service, but in a department less “dependent” on politics.

At the head of the Treasury Chambers

From November 1864, the writer was appointed manager of the Penza Treasury Chamber, two years later - to the same position in Tula, and in the fall of 1867 - to Ryazan. The frequent change of duty stations is due, as before, to Mikhail Evgrafovich's predilection for honesty. After he began to conflict with the heads of the provinces, the writer was transferred to another city.

During these years, he works on "stupid" images, but publishes practically nothing. For three years, only one of his articles, “A testament to my children”, published in 1866 in Sovremennik, has been published. After a complaint from the Ryazan governor, Saltykov was offered to resign, and in 1868 he ended his service with the rank of real state councilor.

Next year, the writer will write "Letters on the Province", which will be based on his observations of life in those cities where he served in the State Chambers.

"Domestic Notes". The best creative masterpieces

After retiring, Saltykov-Shchedrin accepts Nekrasov's invitation and comes to work in the Otechestvennye Zapiski magazine. Until 1884 he wrote exclusively for them.

In 1869-70, Mikhail Evgrafovich's best satirical work, "The History of a City", was written. Otechestvennye zapiski also published: “Pompadours and Pompadourses” (1873), “Mr. ) and many other famous works.

In 1875-76, the writer spends in Europe for treatment.

After the death of Nekrasov in 1878, Saltykov-Shchedrin became the editor-in-chief of the journal and remained so until the closure of the publication in 1884.

After the closure of Otechestvennye Zapiski, the writer began to publish in Vestnik Evropy. The last masterpieces of his work are published here: “Tales” (the last of those written, 1886), “Colorful letters” (1886), “Little things in life” (1887) and “Poshekhonskaya antiquity” - completed by him in 1889, but published after his death writer.

Last reminder

A few days before his death, Mikhail Evgrafovich began to write a new work, Forgotten Words. He told one of his friends that he wanted to remind people of the forgotten words “conscience”, “fatherland” and the like.

Unfortunately, his plan failed. In May 1889, the writer once again fell ill with a cold. The weakened body did not resist for long. April 28 (May 10), 1889 Mikhail Evgrafovich died.

The remains of the great writer are now buried at the Volkovskoye cemetery in St. Petersburg.

Interesting facts from the life of the writer:

The writer was an ardent fighter against bribe-takers. Wherever he served, they were expelled mercilessly.

Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin is a well-known Russian writer, journalist, editor, government official. His works are included in the compulsory school curriculum. The writer's tales are called so for a reason - they contain not only caricature ridicule and grotesque, thus the author emphasizes that a person is the arbiter of his own destiny.

Childhood and youth

The genius of Russian literature comes from a noble family. Father Evgraf Vasilyevich was a quarter of a century older than his wife Olga Mikhailovna. The daughter of a Moscow merchant got married at the age of 15 and left for her husband in the village of Spas-Ugol, which was then located in the Tver province. There, on January 15, 1826, according to the new style, the youngest of six children, Mikhail, was born. In total, the Saltykov family (Shchedrin is part of the pseudonym that followed over time) grew up three sons and three daughters.

According to the descriptions of the researchers of the writer's biography, the mother, who eventually turned from a cheerful girl into an imperious mistress of the estate, divided the children into favorites and hateful ones. Little Misha was surrounded by love, but sometimes he even got hit with rods. At home there was constant screaming and crying. As Vladimir Obolensky wrote in his memoirs about the Saltykov-Shchedrin family, in conversations the writer described his childhood in gloomy colors, once he said that he hated "this terrible woman", talking about his mother.

Saltykov knew French and German, received an excellent primary education at home, which allowed him to enter the Moscow Noble Institute. From there, the boy, who showed remarkable diligence, ended up on full state support in the privileged Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum, in which education was equated to university, and graduates were assigned ranks according to the Table of Ranks.


Both educational institutions were famous for graduating the elite of Russian society. Among the graduates are Prince Mikhail Obolensky, Anton Delvig, Ivan Pushchin. However, unlike them, Saltykov turned from a wonderful smart boy into an untidy, foul-mouthed boy, often sitting in a punishment cell, who never made close friends. It is not without reason that Mikhail's classmates nicknamed him "The Gloomy Lyceum Student".

The atmosphere within the walls of the lyceum contributed to creativity, and Mikhail, in imitation of his predecessors, began to write free-thinking poetry. Such behavior did not go unnoticed: a graduate of the Lyceum, Mikhail Saltykov, received the rank of collegiate secretary, although for academic success he was given a higher rank - a titular adviser.


At the end of the lyceum, Mikhail got a job serving in the office of the military department and continued to compose. In addition, he became interested in the works of the French socialists. The themes raised by the revolutionaries were reflected in the first stories "A Tangled Case" and "Contradictions".

But the novice writer did not guess with the source of the publication. The journal Otechestvennye Zapiski at that time was under tacit political censorship and was considered ideologically harmful.


By decision of the supervisory commission, Saltykov was sent into exile in Vyatka, to the office under the governor. In exile, in addition to official affairs, Mikhail studied the history of the country, translated the works of European classics, traveled a lot and communicated with the people. Saltykov almost stayed to vegetate in the provinces for good, even if he rose to the rank of adviser to the provincial government: in 1855 he was crowned the imperial throne, and they simply forgot about the ordinary exile.

Peter Lanskoy, a representative of a noble noble family, the second husband, came to the rescue. With the assistance of his brother, the Minister of Internal Affairs, Mikhail was returned to St. Petersburg and given the position of an official for special assignments in this department.

Literature

Mikhail Evgrafovich is considered one of the brightest satirists of Russian literature, masterfully fluent in the Aesopian language, whose novels and stories have not lost their topicality. For historians, the works of Saltykov-Shchedrin are a source of knowledge of the mores and customs common in the Russian Empire in the 19th century. Peru of the writer owns such terms as "bungling", "soft-bodied" and "stupidity".


Upon returning from exile, Saltykov reworked his experience of communicating with officials of the Russian hinterland and, under the pseudonym Nikolai Shchedrin, published a cycle of stories “Provincial Essays”, recreating the characteristic types of Russian residents. The writings were a great success, the name of the author, who subsequently wrote many books, will be primarily associated with the Essays, researchers of the writer's work will call them a landmark stage in the development of Russian literature.

In the stories, ordinary working people are described with particular warmth. Creating images of nobles and officials, Mikhail Evgrafovich spoke not only about the basics of serfdom, but also focused on the moral side of the representatives of the upper class and the moral foundations of statehood.


The pinnacle of creativity of the Russian prose writer is considered to be "The History of a City". The satirical story, full of allegory and grotesque, was not immediately appreciated by contemporaries. Moreover, the author was initially accused of mocking society and trying to denigrate historical facts.

The main characters-town governors show a rich palette of human characters and social principles - bribe-takers, careerists, indifferent, obsessed with absurd goals, outright fools. The common people, on the other hand, act as a blindly obeying, ready to endure everything gray mass, which acts decisively only when it is on the verge of death.


Saltykov-Shchedrin ridiculed such cowardice and cowardice in The Wise Scribbler. The work, despite the fact that it is called a fairy tale, is not addressed to children at all. The philosophical meaning of the story about a fish endowed with human qualities lies in the fact that a lonely existence, closed only on its own well-being, is insignificant.

Another fairy tale for adults is “The Wild Landowner”, a lively and cheerful work with a slight touch of cynicism, in which the simple working people are openly opposed to the tyrant landowner.


The literary work of Saltykov-Shchedrin received additional nourishment when the prose writer began working in the editorial office of the Otechestvennye Zapiski magazine. The general management of the publication since 1868 belonged to the poet and publicist.

At the personal invitation of the latter, Mikhail Evgrafovich headed the first department dealing with the publication of fiction and translated works. The bulk of Saltykov-Shchedrin's own writings also appeared on the pages of Zapiski.


Among them - "The Refuge of Mon Repos", according to literary critics - a tracing paper of the family life of the writer who became vice-governor, "The Diary of a Provincial in St. Petersburg" - a book about adventurers who are not translated in Rus', "Pompadours and Pompadourses", "Letters from the provinces".

In 1880, the epoch-making sharply social novel “Lord Golovlevs” was published in a separate book - a story about a family in which the main goal is enrichment and an idle lifestyle, children have long become a burden for their mother, in general, the family does not live according to God's law and, not noticing moreover, is heading towards self-destruction.

Personal life

Mikhail Saltykov met his wife Elizabeth in Vyatka exile. The girl turned out to be the daughter of the writer's immediate superior, Vice-Governor Apollon Petrovich Boltin. The official made a career in education, economic, military and police departments. At first, an experienced campaigner was afraid of the freethinker Saltykov, but over time, the men became friends.


In the family, Lisa was called Betsy, the girl called the writer, who was 14 years older than her, Michel. However, Boltin was soon transferred to work in Vladimir, and the family left for him. Saltykov was forbidden to leave the Vyatka province. But, according to legend, he twice violated the ban to see his beloved.

The writer's mother, Olga Mikhailovna, categorically opposed the marriage with Elizaveta Apollonovna: not only is the bride too young, but also the dowry for the girl is not solid. The difference in years also raised doubts among the Vladimir vice-governor. Mikhail agreed to wait one year.


The young people got married in June 1856, the groom's mother did not come to the wedding. Relations in the new family were difficult, the spouses often quarreled, the difference in characters affected: Mikhail was direct, quick-tempered, they were afraid of him in the house. Elizabeth, on the contrary, is soft and patient, not burdened with knowledge of the sciences. Saltykov did not like the affectation and coquetry of his wife, he called the ideals of his wife "not very demanding."

According to the memoirs of Prince Vladimir Obolensky, Elizaveta Apollonovna entered into a conversation at random, made remarks that were not relevant to the case. The nonsense uttered by the woman baffled the interlocutor and angered Mikhail Evgrafovich.


Elizabeth loved a beautiful life and demanded appropriate financial support. In this, the husband, who had risen to the rank of lieutenant governor, could still contribute, but he constantly got into debt and called the acquisition of property a careless act. From the works of Saltykov-Shchedrin and studies of the life of the writer, it is known that he played the piano, understood wines and was known as a connoisseur of profanity.

Nevertheless, Elizabeth and Michael lived together all their lives. The wife copied the works of her husband, turned out to be a good housewife, after the death of the writer she competently disposed of the inheritance, thanks to which the family did not feel the need. The marriage produced a daughter, Elizabeth, and a son, Konstantin. The children did not show themselves in any way, which upset the famous father, who loved them boundlessly. Saltykov wrote:

"My children will be unhappy, no poetry in their hearts, no rosy memories."

Death

The health of the middle-aged writer, who suffered from rheumatism, was greatly undermined by the closure of the Notes of the Fatherland in 1884. In a joint decision of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, Justice and Public Education, the publication was recognized as a distributor of harmful ideas, and the editorial staff were recognized as members of a secret society.


Saltykov-Shchedrin spent the last months of his life in bed, asking the guests to convey: "I am very busy - I am dying." Mikhail Evgrafovich died in May 1889 from complications caused by a cold. According to the will, the writer was buried next to the grave at the Volkovskoye cemetery in St. Petersburg.

  • According to one source, Mikhail Evgrafovich does not belong to the aristocratic boyar family of the Saltykovs. According to others, his family is the descendants of an untitled branch of the family.
  • Mikhail Saltykov - Shchedrin coined the word "softness".
  • Children in the writer's family appeared after 17 years of marriage.
  • There are several versions of the origin of the pseudonym Shchedrin. First: many peasants with such a surname lived on the Saltykov estate. Second: Shchedrin is the surname of a merchant, a member of the schismatic movement, whose case the writer investigated due to official duties. "French" version: one of the translations of the word "generous" into French is libéral. It was the excessive liberal chatter that the writer denounced in his works.

Bibliography

  • 1857 - "Provincial essays"
  • 1869 - "The Tale of How One Man Feeded Two Generals"
  • 1870 - "The history of one city"
  • 1872 - "Diary of a provincial in St. Petersburg"
  • 1879 - "The Refuge of Mon Repos"
  • 1880 - "Lord Golovlevs"
  • 1883 - "The wise scribbler"
  • 1884 - "Karas-idealist"
  • 1885 - Horse
  • 1886 - "Crow petitioner"
  • 1889 - "Poshekhonskaya antiquity"

Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin- Russian writer, journalist, editor of the Otechestvennye Zapiski magazine, Ryazan and Tver Vice-Governor. Saltykov-Shchedrin was a master of the island of the word and was the author of many.

He managed to create excellent works in the genre of satire and realism, as well as help the reader analyze his mistakes.

Perhaps his most famous graduate was.

While studying at the Lyceum, Saltykov-Shchedrin stopped monitoring his appearance, began to swear, smoke, and also often ended up in a punishment cell for misbehavior.

As a result, the student graduated from the lyceum with the rank of collegiate secretary. Interestingly, it was during this period of his biography that he tried to write his first works.

After that, Mikhail began working in the office of the military department. He continued to engage in writing and became seriously interested in the work of the French socialists.

Link to Vyatka

The first stories in the biography of Saltykov-Shchedrin were "A Tangled Case" and "Contradictions". In them, he raised important issues that run counter to the policy of the current government.

When he was on the throne in 1855 (see), he was allowed to return home. The following year, he was appointed officer for special assignments at the Ministry of the Interior.

Creativity Saltykov-Shchedrin

Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin is one of the most prominent representatives of satire in. He had a subtle sense of humor and was able to brilliantly convey it on paper.

An interesting fact is that it was he who coined such expressions as "bungling", "soft-bodied" and "stupidity".

One of the most popular portraits of the writer M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin

After Saltykov-Shchedrin returned from exile in , he published a collection of short stories "Provincial Essays" under the name of Nikolai Shchedrin.

It is worth noting that even after he gained all-Russian popularity, many of his admirers will remember this particular work.

In his stories, Saltykov-Shchedrin portrayed many different characters, who, in his opinion, were prominent representatives.

In 1870, Saltykov-Shchedrin wrote one of the most famous stories in his biography, The History of a City.

It is worth noting that this work was not initially appreciated, since it contained a lot of allegories and unusual comparisons.

Some critics even accused Mikhail Evgrafovich of intentional distortion. The story presented ordinary people of different minds and who unquestioningly obeyed the authorities.

Soon, from the pen of Saltykov-Shchedrin came out a very interesting and deep in content fairy tale "The Wise Piskar". It told about a piskar who was afraid of everything, who lived in fear and loneliness until his death.

Then he began working as an editor in the publication "Domestic Notes", which he owned. In this journal, in addition to his direct duties, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin also published his own works.

In 1880 Saltykov-Shchedrin wrote the brilliant novel The Golovlevs. It told about a family that all their adult life thought only about increasing their capital. Ultimately, this led the entire family to spiritual and moral decay.

Personal life

In the biography of the writer there was only one wife - Elizaveta Boltina. Saltykov-Shchedrin met her during her exile. The girl was the daughter of the vice-governor and was 14 years younger than the groom.

Initially, the father did not want to give Elizabeth in marriage to the disgraced writer, however, after talking with him, he changed his mind.

An interesting fact is that Mikhail's mother was categorically opposed to him marrying Boltina. The reason for this was the young age of the bride, as well as a small dowry. In the end, in 1856, Saltykov-Shchedrin did get married.


Saltykov-Shchedrin with his wife

Soon, frequent quarrels began to occur between the newlyweds. By nature, Saltykov-Shchedrin was a straightforward and courageous person. Elizabeth, on the contrary, was a calm and patient girl. In addition, she did not have a sharp mind.

According to the recollections of Mikhail Evgrafovich's friends, Boltina liked to intervene in the conversation, saying a lot of unnecessary things, which, moreover, were often irrelevant.

At such moments, the writer simply lost his temper. In addition, Saltykov-Shchedrin's wife loved luxury, which further increased the distance between the spouses.

Despite this, they lived together all their lives. In this marriage, they had a girl, Elizabeth, and a boy, Konstantin.

Biographers of Saltykov-Shchedrin claim that he was well versed in wines, played on and was an expert in matters relating to profanity.

Death

In recent years, the writer seriously suffered from rheumatism. In addition, his health deteriorated after Otechestvennye Zapiski was closed in 1884. Censorship considered the publication a distributor of harmful ideas.

Shortly before his death, Saltykov-Shchedrin was bedridden, in need of outside help and care. However, he did not lose his optimism and sense of humor.

Often, when he could not receive guests due to weakness, he asked me to tell them: "I am very busy - I am dying."

Mikhail Evgrafovich Saltykov-Shchedrin died on April 28, 1889 at the age of 63. According to his request, he was buried next to the grave at the Volkovsky cemetery.

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Saltykov-Shchedrin was not only a talented writer, but also an organizer who tried to be useful for the Motherland and serve her. He was born in the Tver province 27 January 1826 d. He spent his childhood in his father's estate. This is reflected in his works.
Michael had an excellent education, thanks to which in 10 years, he enters the Moscow Institute and spends there 2 of the year. After that, he was transferred to the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum. The lyceum student was greatly influenced by the work of such great writers as Belinsky and Herzen.
After graduating from high school 1844 year, the young man becomes an assistant secretary and enters the service of the War Department. But he was drawn to another life. He liked to communicate with scientists, writers, philosophers. He began attending Petrashevsky "Fridays", where he frankly wafted an anti-serf mood. This led to the search for standards of a just society. Shchedrin reveals acute social problems in his first works "Contradiction" and "A Tangled Case". Frightened by the French Revolution, the authorities turned their attention to the writer and sent him to Vyatka.
There, in 1850, he received a councilor's seat in the provincial government. This makes it possible for Saltykov to often travel around the cities and see the world of officials and the life of peasants from the inside. The impressions received from these trips were reflected in the writings of the writer in the form of satirical remarks.
When Nicholas I died in 1855, Mikhail was allowed to live wherever he wanted, and he again goes to St. Petersburg.
In 1856 -1857 years, his work "Provincial Essays" was published. All reading Russia calls Shchedrin Gogol's heir.
Saltykov-Shchedrin married the vice-governor of Vyatka. He combines public service with writing.
WITH 1856 By 1858 Mikhail worked for a year in the Ministry of Internal Affairs. He only did special assignments. At that time, it was there that the center for the preparation of the peasant reform was located.
In 1858 -1862 he lived in Ryazan, later in Tver. He served as Lieutenant Governor. The writer recruited educated and necessarily honest young people into his team.
During these years, Saltykov published articles reflecting peasant problems.
Saltykov resigns in 1862 year and moved to Petersburg. Gets to the editorial office of the magazine "Interlocutor" at the invitation of Nekrasov. At this time, the magazine is experiencing great difficulties. Shchedrin takes all responsibility, all writing and editing of articles. He devotes his main attention to the review of Our Social Life, which is published monthly. It subsequently became a monument to Russian journalism. 1860 of the year.
IN 1864 In the year Saltykov leaves the editorial staff due to disagreements that have appeared within the team. Disputes concerned questions of tactics of conducting public struggle in the changed conditions.
Returning to the municipal service, the writer becomes the head of the State Chambers, moving from Tula to Ryazan, and then to Penza. He closely observes the life that goes on in the cities. This becomes the main plot of the Letters on the Province.
in his grotesque pamphlets, Saltykov openly mocked the heads of the provinces. This was due to the frequent change of cities and places of his service. After another complaint to the Ryazan governor Saltykov, in the rank of acting state councilor, he is dismissed. The writer returns to St. Petersburg again and becomes one of the editors of the Otechestvennye Zapiski magazine.
He devotes himself entirely to writing. During this period, the "History of a City" appears - which is the pinnacle of his satirical art.
In the last months of his life, the writer worked fruitfully. The writer died 1889 year.

Mikhail Evgrafovich Saltykov-Shchedrin (1826-1889) - prose writer, publicist, critic.

The great Russian satirist Saltykov-Shchedrin was born and raised in a wealthy landowner's family, but there was an atmosphere of stinginess, mutual enmity, hypocrisy and inhumanity in the house.

Saltykov studied first at the Moscow Noble Institute and, as an excellent student, was sent to St. Petersburg, to the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum. In 1844, Saltykov graduated from the Lyceum and entered the military ministry.

In his first works, the writer opposed social inequality. The hero of his story "A Tangled Case" (1848) imagined the social system of Russia as a huge pyramid of people, at the base of which are the poor, hunted down by the unbearable hardships of life. Nicholas I found in the story "the desire to spread revolutionary ideas", so in 1848 the young writer was exiled to Vyatka, where he spent 8 years. Only after the death of the tsar, in 1855, the writer was able to return to St. Petersburg.

In 1857, the writer's new book, Provincial Essays, was published. The work was directed against the oppression of the landowners and bureaucratic arbitrariness.

In the 60s, the great satirist resolutely opposed the autocracy in his remarkable book "The History of a City" (1869-1870), in which he sought to destroy the people's faith in the "good king". In this work, Shchedrin painted a horrifying picture of people's lack of rights, grief and poverty (see "History of a City").

From 1868 to 1884, he prints all his works only on the pages of Otechestvennye Zapiski. The readers of the magazine get acquainted with the series of satirical stories and essays by Saltykov: "Pompadours and Pompadours" (1863-1874), "Letters about the Province" (1868), "Signs of the Times" (1868), "Lords of Tashkent" (1869-1872), " Well-intentioned speeches" (1872-1876), "In the midst of moderation and accuracy" (1874-1877), "The Refuge of Mon Repos" (1878-1879), "Letters to Aunt" (1881-1882), novels "Golovleva" (1875 -1880) and "Modern Idyll" (1877-1883). Saltykov creates a kind of satirical encyclopedia of Russian life.

The fairy tales of Saltykov-Shchedrin are the most popular. His first fairy tales were published in 1869: "The Wild Landowner", "How One Man Feeded Two Generals".

Fairy tales are the result of many years of life observations of the writer. In them, he acts as a defender of popular interests, an exponent of popular ideals, advanced ideas of his time (see "Tales of M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin").

In the novel "Poshekhonskaya antiquity" the writer painted terrible pictures of serf life, and in the book "Little Things in Life" (1886) Shchedrin showed the tragedy of the life of "small", ordinary people.

Many of Shchedrin's satirical types have survived both their era and their creator. They have become common nouns, denoting new and at the same time having their own long-standing pedigree social phenomena in Russian and world life.

Throughout his life, Saltykov-Shchedrin retained faith in his people, his history. "I love Russia to the point of pain in my heart, and I can't even conceive of myself anywhere but Russia."



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