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Boris Pasternak [1890-1960] RUS
Ranked #154 in the top 380 poets
Votes 94%: 132 up, 8 down

Reluctant to conform to Socialist Realism.

Russian novelist and poet Boris Leonidovich Pasternak ( Борис Леонидович Пастернак )  was born in Moscow, into a upper-class Jewish family of artists. His father was Leonid Osipovich Pasternak who held a position as professor at the Moscow School of Painting, and his mother was Rosa Kaufman who was an acclaimed concert pianist. Many artists and poets frequented the family home in Moscow, including Ranier Maria Rilke, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Aleksandr Scriabin, and Leo Tolstoy. Pasternak studied music at the Moscow Conservatory, but aHis father, Leonid Osipovich Pasternak, held a position as professor at the Moscow School of Painting, and his mother, Rosa Kaufman, was an acclaimed concert pianist. Artists and poets frequented his home in Moscow, including Ranier Maria Rilke, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Aleksandr Scriabin, and Leo Tolstoy. Pasternak studied music at the Moscow Conservatory, but at age twenty he gave up this ambition and went to Germany to become a student of philosophy in the Marburg University. Rturning to Moscow in late 1913, he published his first collection of poetry, entitled Bliznets V Tuchakh. When World War 1 arrived, he went to the Ural Mountains to work as a tutor and in a chemical factory. He was unfit for army service owing to a leg injury. His stay in the Ural Mountains would later supply the inspiration for DOKTOR ZHIVAGO. Following the Russian Revolution of 1917, Pasternak worked as a libranian. Within five years, he had published two more books of poetry. Boris Pasternak married twice, and had one son from his first wife. After this, he began to write more of the Revolution, both in prose and poetry. He earned a living by translating Shakespeare, Gothe, and others. Pasternak`s works were not appreciated by the Russian authority, based on his asthetic views, and many of his books were not printed by the government. His famous novel, DOKTOR ZHIVAGO, was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1958.

Bipolar disorder, Futurism, Realism, Silver age

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1814-1841
RUS
Mikhail Lermontov
→ influenced Boris Pasternak
1880-1921
RUS
Aleksandr Blok
→ influenced Boris Pasternak
1893-1930
RUS
Vladimir Mayakovsky
→ influenced Boris Pasternak
1564-1616
ENG
William Shakespeare
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1749-1831
DEU
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1759-1805
DEU
Friedrich Schiller
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1844-1896
FRA
Paul Verlaine
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1861-1941
IND
Rabindranath Tagore
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1875-1926
BOH/DEU
Rainer Maria Rilke
← translated by Boris Pasternak
1889-1966
RUS
Anna Akhmatova
← friend of Boris Pasternak
1892-1941
RUS
Marina Tsvetaeva
← influenced by Boris Pasternak


WorkLangRating
Hops
eng
21
Black spring! Pick up your pen, and weeping...
eng
14
Soul
eng
7
Definition of Poetry
eng
5
Fairy Tale
eng
5
Hamlet
eng
4
A Dream
eng
3
Parting
eng
3
The shiv`ring piano, foaming at the mouth
eng
3
The Weeping Garden
eng
3
To Anna Akhmatova
eng
3
After The Storm
eng
2
August
eng
2
In everything I seek to grasp...
eng
2
When It Clears Up
eng
2
A Sultrier Dawn
eng
1
A Walts With a Tear in It
eng
1
After the Interval
eng
1
Autumn
eng
1
Imitators
eng
1
Marburg
eng
1
March
eng
1
Meeting
eng
1
O had I known that thus it happens...
eng
1
Sparrow Hills
eng
1
The Wind(Four fragments concerning Blok)
eng
1
Venice
eng
1
Wet Paint
eng
1
Wind
eng
1
‘Like a brazier’s bronze cinders,’
eng
1
1918
eng
0
A tall, strapping shot, you, considerate hunter...
eng
0
About These Poems
eng
0
Autumn Frost
eng
0
Bad Days
eng
0
Beloved, with the spent and sickly fumes...
eng
0
Change
eng
0
Confession
eng
0
Craft
eng
0
Crossed Oars
eng
0
Definition of Creative Art
eng
0
Do not fret, do not cry, do not tax...
eng
0
Eve
eng
0
False Alarm
eng
0
Feasts
eng
0
Fiat
eng
0
First Snow
eng
0
From A Poem
eng
0
From early dawn the thirtieth of April...
eng
0
God`s World
eng
0
Here a riddle has drawn a strange nailmark
eng
0
Here will be echoes in the mountains...
eng
0
Here—now—our
eng
0
How few are we. Probably three...
eng
0
Humble home. But rum, and charcoal...
eng
0
I grew. Foul weather, dreams, forebodings.
eng
0
I hang limp on the Creator`s pen
eng
0
I would go home again—to rooms...
eng
0
Improvisatio
eng
0
In Hospital
eng
0
In Memory of Marina Tsvetaeva
eng
0
In the Wood
eng
0
Intoxication
eng
0
It is not seemly to be famous...
eng
0
It`s spring, I leave a street where poplars...
eng
0
July
eng
0
Lessons of English
eng
0
Margarita
eng
0
Mary Magdalene I
eng
0
Mary Magdalene II
eng
0
Music
eng
0
My desk is not so wide that I might lean
eng
0
Night
eng
0
Nostalgia
eng
0
Oh terrible, beloved! A poet`s loving
eng
0
On a fateful day, an unlucky time
eng
0
On Early Trains
eng
0
On The Steamer
eng
0
Out of Superstition
eng
0
Ploughing Time
eng
0
Poetry
eng
0
Railway Station
eng
0
Snow Is Falling
eng
0
So they begin. With two years gone...
eng
0
Sometime at a concert hall, in recollection
eng
0
Spasskoe
eng
0
Spring
eng
0
Spring (Fragment 3)
eng
0
Spring Shower
eng
0
Stars were racing
eng
0
Storm, Momentary, Forever
eng
0
Storm-Wind
eng
0
Sultry Night
eng
0
Swifts (2)
eng
0
The Earth
eng
0
The garden scatters burnt-up beetles...
eng
0
The Girl
eng
0
The Linden Avenue
eng
0
The patient watches
eng
0
The Patient`s Sweater
eng
0
The Road
eng
0
The spring-it had simply been you
eng
0
The Steppe
eng
0
The Swifts (1)
eng
0
There`ll be no one in the house...
eng
0
Things of great worth shall come to pass...
eng
0
Three Variants
eng
0
Thunderstorm
eng
0
To Boris Pilnyak
eng
0
To the Memory of Demon
eng
0
Try and don`t let me grieve
eng
0
Unique Days
eng
0
White Night
eng
0
Winter Nears
eng
0
Winter Night
eng
0
Winter Sky
eng
0
With Oars at Rest
eng
0
Without A Title
eng
0
You are disappointed
eng
0
Your Picture
eng
0
‘February. Take ink and weep,’
eng
0
‘My sister – Life’s overflowing today’
eng
0

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