Pavel Ivanovich Melnikov

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Pavel Ivanovich Melnikov

Portrait by Ivan Kramskoi
Born (1818-11-06)November 6, 1818
Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Empire
Died February 13, 1883(1883-02-13) (aged 64)
Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Empire
Pen name Andrey Pechersky

Signature

Pavel Ivanovich Melnikov (alias Andrey Pechersky, Russian: Па́вел Ива́нович Ме́льников (Андре́й Пече́рский), 1818, Nizhny Novgorod1883, ibidem) was a Russian writer, known for his opera magna In the Forests and On the Hills, which describe the unique life of Transvolga and its dialects.

Biography

Pavel Ivanovich Melnikov was born in Nizhny Novgorod to a noble family of moderate means and spent his early years in Semyonov, a small provincial town. His childhood impressions, pictures of Transvolga, its common people's ways of life had a strong impact upon his later worldview.

In 1834 he enrolled at the Kazan University's philological faculty and graduated in 1837. As a student he became interested in the works of Pushkin and Gogol, Belinsky’s critical essays. Melnikov was about to embark upon the academic career at the University when for some kind of wrongdoing (the nature of which remains unknown) he was deported to Perm to start work there as a teacher of history and statistics. In 1838 he was transferred to Nizhny where he spent the major part of his life.[1] From his teens, Melnikov's major interests were the economics and history of Russia.[2]

As a writer, Melnikov debuted in 1839 in Otechestvennye zapiski with the series of sketches called "From Tambov Governorate to Siberia: The Traveller's Notes". But his first stab at fiction, a short story "About Who Epidor Perfilievich Was and Which Preparation Were Taken for his Birthday", published by Literaturnaya gazeta in 1840, proved to be a failure; critics dismissed it as a poor imitation of Gogol. Dismayed, Melnikov stopped writing fiction for the next 12 years.[1]

In 1841 Pavel Melnikov became the associate member of the Russian Archeological society. In 1840-1850 he edited The Nizhny Novgorod Government News (the non-official section of it) where he often published historical and ethnographical materials which he had collected. In 1847 he became the Governor of Nizhny Novgorod's special envoy, then moved to the Russian Interior Ministry to supervise the issues dealing with the Raskol. An 'administrative Don Quixote', as he's been called, he treated his mission with extraordinary zeal which vexed his seniors and got him a bad name in the city. Melnikov has become known as a cruel destroyer of Old believers' sketes and made way into Raskolniki's folklore. According to songs and legends about him, Melnikov had sold his soul to the Devil to obtain a special gift of 'seeing through walls'.[1]

Later, as he studied the history of Raskol, his attitude changed. In his special "Report on the Current Situation in Raskol" (1854) he blamed much on the dismal level of morality among the Orthodox church officials. After the death of Tzar Nikolai the Second he was one of the first to demand the maintenance of religious tolerance in Russia ("The Note on Russian Raskol", a report for Grand Duke Konstantin, 1857; "Letters On Raskol", 1862). In 1862 he declared that the 200 years of Old believers’ persecution was unnecessary and wrong.[3] Melnikov was a liberal, calling for reforms and enlightenment of the people. He remained skeptical of the revolutionary movement's true aims but greatly respected Alexander Hertzen.<ref name="az_melnikov"/ Following his close friend Vladimir Dal's advice, Melnikov resumed writing and in 1852 published the short story "Krasilnikovy" in Moskvityanin. This and other stories and novelets that followed (to be published mostly in Russky vestnik) targeted social and domestic despotism, all-pervading corruption and serfdom. Close to the so-called 'natural school', they were praised by Russian radical critics of the time. Nikolai Chernyshevsky refereed to Melnikov as "one of our most gifted storytellers" and compared him with Saltykov-Schedrin in terms of having "word’s denuniciation power".[4] Nikolai Dobrolyubov too mentioned Melnikov alongside Saltykov-Schedrin as one of the Russia's two most prominent satirists of 1850s.[5] In 1858 the collection of stories by Pavel Melnikov was banned by censorship.[1]

In 1861 the novel Grisha was published; seen as weaker than previous ones, it contained nevertheless interesting Old believers' characters. One of those, a flamboyant fellow Varlaam, recalled Modest Musorgsky Pushkin's Varlaam (in Boris Godunov), and he merged the two, incorporating both the features of Melnikov’s character and the song "As in the city of Kazan" from the Grisha novel, into his opera Boris Godunov.[1]

In 1866 Melnikov retired, moved to Moscow and devoted all of his time to literature, using the pseudonym Andrey Pechersy, contributing mostly to Russky vestnik. Much of this output was motivated by financial issues: his large family relied on the money he earned by writing as their only source of income. His literary friendships were few: Alexei Pisemsky, Apollon Maykov, Konstantin Bestuzhev-Ryumin. Nikolai Nekrasov he knew well but treated without sympathy. For the last 10 years of his life Melnikov lived in Nizhny Novgorod, spending summers on his estate, enjoying himself with gardening.[1] In his Moscow period Melnikov-Pechersky wrote several historical works ("Princess Tarakanova and the Princess of Vladimir", 1867) and started what proved to be his magnum opus, the dilogy In the Forests (1871–1874) and On the Hills (1875–1881). He dictated the last chapters of the latter to his wife while terminally ill.[1]

Legacy

Both In the Forests and On the Hills were immensely popular. Pavel Tretyakov himself commissioned Ivan Kramskoi to paint the author. Maxim Gorky called On the Hills "the glorious poem of Russia" and urged young authors to take lessons from Melnikov-Pechersky and Nikolai Leskov, learning from them "the clarity and richness of language".[6] Melnikov-Pechersky's two novels greatly influenced Vladimir Korolenko and especially Pavel Bazhov.[7] It was Melnikov-Pechersky's dilogy that inspired Mikhail Nesterov to create pictures like "In the Woods", "On the Hills", "Nightingale Sings" and "Beyound the Volga". Rimsky-Korsakov was writing his opera The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh and the Maiden Fevroniya much under the impression of In the Forests novel.[1]

Further reading

  • Thomas H. Hoisington. "Melnikov-Pechersky: Romancer of Provincial and Old Believer Life". Slavic Review, Vol. 33, No. 4 (Dec., 1974), pp. 679–694

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Шешунова, С.В. "Мельников-Печерский П. И". "Русские писатели". Биобиблиографический словарь. Том 2. М--Я. Под редакцией П. А. Николаева. М., "Просвещение", 1990. Retrieved 2011-06-01. 
  2. Полн. собр. соч.-- Т. 12.-- С. 196.
  3. "Северная пчела".-- 1862.-- No 142
  4. Полн. собр. соч.-- М., 1948.-- Т. 4.-- С. 736
  5. Полн. собр. соч.-- М., 1941.-- Т. 5.-- С. 375.
  6. Собр. соч.: В 30 т.-- М., 1955.-- Т. 29.-- С. 2
  7. Собр. соч.: В 3 т.-- М., 1952.-- Т. 3.-- С. 287
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