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

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those who could be described as poetessy—addressed themselves pri-


marily to women. Perhaps they assumed men would not be interested


in the realities of their lives. Or perhaps they chose as their implied


reader an audience that had also experienced those realities. Teplova,


for example, in about twenty of her poems directly addresses women


friends and relations. Pavlova dedicated Dvoinaia zhizn’(A Double Life)


to society women:


-    u u.
[.............]
*
, " 
,   

   
u !

h
(Slaves of noise and vanity.
[.............]
All of you Psyches deprived of wings
The mute sisters of my soul!)

In digressions throughout the work Pavlova’s narrator addresses this


audience. Several other women poets wrote poems to groups of women


friends.^31


The implied reader can affect a poet’s attitude toward the poem’s sub-

ject. Rachel Blau DuPlessis finds that many lyrics by men poets objec-


tify and silence women. Such poems depict “masculine heterosexual de-


sire looking at and framing a silent, beautiful, distant female; an overtly


male ‘I’ speaking as if overheard in front of an unseen but loosely pos-


tulated male ‘us’ about a (beloved) ‘she’“ (“’Corpses of Poesy,’“ 71 ). In


women’s poetry written to women friends, audience and addressee


are the same and such objectification does not occur. Furthermore, in


these Russian women’s poems the male Other is often allowed to speak


or even have the last word, if only to demonstrate his insensitivity


to women. For example, in Garelina’s “Bezumnaia” (The madwoman,


1870 )—in which a count’s son seduces and abandons a priest’s daugh-


ter, who drowns herself—the poem closes with her seducer dismissing


her as a madwoman. We do occasionally find poems by these women


in which the male Other is framed and silenced, for example, Pavlova’s


two poems “ 10 noiabria 1840 ” ( 10 November 1840 , 1840 ) and “Na 10


noiabria” (For 10 November, 1841 ) about Mickiewicz. We also find a


very few poems by men in which a nonaristocratic male Other speaks.


For example, in Pushkin’s “Besy” the coachman speaks to tell his pas-


senger, who narrates the poem, that they are lost in the snowstorm; in


48 Literary Conventions

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