On the Eve
On the Eve (Russian: Накану́не, Nakanune) is the third novel by famous Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, best known for his short stories and the novel Fathers and Sons.[1] Turgenev embellishes this love story with observations on middle class life and interposes some art and philosophy. Nikolay Dobrolyubov was critical of On the Eve, offending Turgenev.[2]
Plot
The story revolves around Elena, a girl with a hypochondriacal mother and an idle father, a retired guards lieutenant with a mistress. On the eve of the Crimean War, Elena is pursued by a free-spirited sculptor (Shubin) and a serious-minded student (Berzyenev). But when Berzyenev's revolutionary Bulgarian friend, Insarov, meets Elena, they fall in love. In secretly marrying Insarov Elena disappoints her mother and enrages her father, who had hoped to marry her to a dull, self-satisfied functionary, Kurnatovski. Insarov nearly dies from pneumonia and only partly recovers. On the outbreak of war Insarov tries to return with Elena to Bulgaria, but tragically dies in Venice. Elena takes Insarov's body to the Balkans for burial and then vanishes.
Main characters
- Pavel Shubin - sculptor
- Andrei Bersyenev - student philosopher
- Dmitri Insarov - Bulgarian student
- Elena Nikolayevna - young girl
Adaptations
Elizabeth Egloff adapted the novel into a stage play titled "The Lover." It premiered at Baltimore's Center Stage theater in 1996.[3]
References
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| Novels | |
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| Short fiction | |
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| Plays |
- A Rash Thing to Do (1843)
- It Tears Where It is Thin (1847)
- Breakfast at the Chief's (1849/56)
- A Conversation on the Highway (1850/51)
- Lack of Money (1846/52)
- A Provincial Lady (1851)
- Fortune's Fool (1857/62)
- A Month in the Country (1855/72)
- An Evening in Sorrento (1882)
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