Selected PoemsList of Collaborators
Introduction
POEMSI know the truth
What is this gypsy passion for separation
We shall not escape Hell
Some ancestor of mine
I'm glad your sickness
We are keeping an eye on the girls
No one has taken anything away
You throw back your head
Where does this tenderness come from?
Bent with worry
Today or tomorrow the snow will melt
VERSES ABOUT MOSCOW
From INSOMNIA
POEMS FOR AKHMATOVA
POEMS FOR BLOK
A kiss on the head
From SWANS' ENCAMPMENT
Yesterday he still looked in my eyes
To Mayakovsky
Praise to the Rich
God help us Smoke!
Ophelia: in Defence of the Queen
Wherever you are I can reach you
From WIRES
Sahara
The Poet
Appointment
Rails
You loved me
It's not like waiting for post
My ear attends to you
As people listen intently
Strong doesn't mate with strong
In a world
POEM OF THE MOUNTAIN
POEM OF THE END
An Attempt at Jealousy
To Boris Pasternak
From THE RATCATCHER:
From Chapter 1
From Chapter 2: Dreams
From The Children's ParadiseFrom POEMS TO A SON
Homesickness
I opened my veins
Epitaph
Readers of Newspapers
Desk
Bus
When I look at the flight of the leaves
From POEMS TO CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Notes on Working Method: Angela Livingstone
Notes
Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow in 1892, the daughter of
a pianist and a museum curator. After enjoying a relatively secure
and comfortable childhood, she published her first poems in 1910
and in 1911 married fellow poet Sergei Efron. They had two
daughters before the Russian revolution broke out, and it was at
that time she began to experience the turmoil and brutality of
early twentieth-century Russia. During the years of famine that
ensued, she was forced to place her daughters in a State orphanage,
where one of them died of malnutrition. Tsvetaeva later followed
her husband to Czechoslovakia, where they lived in exile until
Efron's return to Russia in 1937. Efron subsequently was arrested
and died in a labor camp. Tsvetaeva returned to Russia with their
son in 1939 but was driven to despair by the difficulty of finding
food for the both of them, and, in 1941, she hanged herself. Along
with Pasternak, Mandelstam, and Akhmatova, Marina Tsvetaeva stands
as one of the four great Russian poets of this century and is one
of the most important woman writers in the Western canon.
Elaine Feinstein is a prizewinning poet and novelist and the
author of highly praised biographies of Alexander Pushkin, Marina
Tsvetaeva, and Ted Hughes. She lives in London.
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