Reinventing Romantic Poetry : Russian Women Poets of the Mid-nineteenth Century

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(What is it, or not?...
... And he sails on.)

Zotov made line 36 even less intelligible by removing Khvoshchinskaia’s


comma after “chto.”


It might be argued that in the last case Zotov censored the lines that

question whether the Christian God created the world and whether


that world is real because he feared government or religious censor-


ship. However, this poem appeared in September 1847 , six months be-


fore Nicholas I launched the “censorship terror” in reaction to the Eu-


ropean revolutions of 1848. One historian characterizes the decade


before 1848 as “a time of reasonably benign censorship controls.” I


would argue that Zotov censored the lines, just as he rewrote the


poem, for himself.^42


Zotov also succeeded in obscuring the meaning of “Byvalo, s ses-

trami veseloi i shumnoi tolpoi” (My sisters and I in a cheerful and noisy


crowd used to, no. 75 in the notebook, published in Literaturnaia gazeta,


no. 38 [ 1847 ], see appendix), a poem that describes the withering effects


of poverty. The speaker and her sisters are walking along a small-town


lane, loudly talking and laughing, when the speaker notices a young


woman in the window of a rundown house, enviously observing them.


The young married woman, a poor seamstress, already feels there is no


joy or hope for joy in her life.


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(Young but pale [.. .]
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A little ring on her pale hand [.. .]

126 Nadezhda Khvoshchinskaia

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