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When was Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky born? Biography The last years of the poet’s life (Tvardovsky A. T.). Awards and prizes

Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky (1910-1971) - Soviet writer and poet, public figure.
Born in the Smolensk province, on the Zagorye farm in the family of the village blacksmith Trifon Gordeevich Tvardovsky. Tvardovsky’s mother, Maria Mitrofanovna, came from the same household. Trifon Gordeevich was a well-read man, and in the evenings in their house they often read aloud Pushkin, Gogol, Lermontov, Nekrasov, A.K. Tolstoy, Nikitin, Ershov. Alexander began to compose poems early, while still illiterate, and not being able to write them down. The first poem was an angry denunciation of the boys who destroyed birds' nests.
While studying at school, Tvardovsky at the age of 14 became a village correspondent for Smolensk newspapers, and in 1925 his poems were published there.
In 1929, Tvardovsky left for Moscow in search of permanent literary work; in 1930 he returned to Smolensk, where he entered the Pedagogical Institute and lived until 1936. This period coincided with difficult trials for his family: his parents and brothers were dispossessed and exiled. Nevertheless, it was precisely during these years that a series of essays by Tvardovsky “Across the Collective Farm Smolensk Region” and his first prose work “The Chairman’s Diary” (1932) were published.
A serious stage in Tvardovsky’s poetic work was the poem “The Country of Ant” (1934-36), dedicated to collectivization. Nikita Morgunk's search for the fabulous Country of Ant leads him to certain conclusions about the good or evil of the “great turning point”; the open ending of the poem is based on the contradictory fate of the poet himself and his family.
In 1936, Tvardovsky moved to Moscow, where he entered the Moscow Institute of History, Philosophy and Literature to study. During these years, he translated a lot of classics of the peoples of the USSR. While still a student, he was awarded the Order of Lenin for his services in the field of literature. All-Union recognition and literary fame allow the poet to achieve the return of his relatives from exile.
Tvardovsky's military career began in 1939. As a military officer, he took part in the campaign in Western Belarus, and later in the Finnish campaign of 1939-40.
Alexander Tvardovsky’s true fame comes from works created during the Great Patriotic War, especially the poem “Vasily Terkin”, the hero of which gains truly popular love. The horrors of war, its cruelty and senselessness are described in the poem “House by the Road”, in the poems “Two Lines”, “I Was Killed Near Rzhev”...
In 1947, a book of essays and stories was published under the general title “Motherland and Foreign Land.” In the same year he was elected deputy of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR for the Vyaznikovsky district of the Vladimir region; in 1951 - in Nizhnedevitsky, Voronezh region.
Since 1950, Tvardovsky has been editor of the New World magazine and holds this post (with a short break) almost until his death.
In the 1960s, Tvardovsky, in the poems “By the Right of Memory” (published in 1987) and “Terkin in the Next World,” reconsidered his attitude towards Stalin and Stalinism. At the same time (early 1960s), Tvardovsky received Khrushchev’s permission to publish the story “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich” by Solzhenitsyn in the magazine.
The new direction of the magazine caused discontent among the so-called “neo-Stalinists” in Soviet literature. For several years, there was a literary controversy between the magazines “New World” and “October” (editor-in-chief V. A. Kochetov).
After the removal of Khrushchev, a campaign was carried out in the press against the “New World”. Glavlit waged a fierce struggle with the magazine, systematically not allowing the most important materials to be published. Since the leadership of the Writers' Union did not dare to formally dismiss Tvardovsky, the last measure of pressure on the magazine was the removal of Tvardovsky's deputies and the appointment of people hostile to him to these positions. In February 1970, Tvardovsky was forced to resign as editor, and the magazine staff left with him.
Soon after the defeat of his magazine (December 18, 1971), Tvardovsky fell ill and died. He was buried at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow.

The first poems of Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky were published in Smolensk newspapers in 1925-1926, but fame came to him later, in the mid-30s, when “The Country of Ant” (1934-1936) was written and published - a poem about the fate of a peasant - individual farmer, about his difficult and difficult path to the collective farm. The poet's original talent clearly manifested itself in it.

In his works of the 30-60s. he embodied the complex, turning-point events of the time, shifts and changes in the life of the country and the people, the depth of the national historical disaster and feat in one of the most brutal wars that humanity experienced, rightfully occupying one of the leading places in the literature of the 20th century.

Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky was born on June 21, 1910 in the “farm of the Stolpovo wasteland”, belonging to the village of Zagorye, Smolensk province, into a large large family of a peasant blacksmith. Note that later, in the 30s, the Tvardovsky family suffered a tragic fate: during collectivization they were dispossessed and exiled to the North.

From a very early age, the future poet imbibed love and respect for the land, for the hard work on it and for blacksmithing, the master of which was his father Trifon Gordeevich - a man of a very original, tough and tough character and at the same time literate, well-read, who knew by heart a lot of poems. The poet's mother, Maria Mitrofanovna, had a sensitive, impressionable soul.

As the poet later recalled in “Autobiography,” long winter evenings in their family were often devoted to reading aloud books by Pushkin and Gogol, Lermontov and Nekrasov, A.K. Tolstoy and Nikitin... It was then that a latent, irresistible craving for poetry arose in the boy’s soul, which was based on rural life itself, close to nature, as well as traits inherited from his parents.

In 1928, after a conflict and then a break with his father, Tvardovsky broke up with Zagorye and moved to Smolensk, where for a long time he could not get a job and survived on a pittance of literary earnings. Later, in 1932, he entered the Smolensk Pedagogical Institute and, while studying, traveled as a correspondent to collective farms, wrote articles and notes about changes in rural life for local newspapers. At this time, in addition to the prose story “The Diary of a Collective Farm Chairman,” he wrote the poems “The Path to Socialism” (1931) and “Introduction” (1933), in which colloquial, prosaic verse predominates, which the poet himself later called “riding with the reins lowered.” They did not become a poetic success, but played a role in the formation and rapid self-determination of his talent.

In 1936, Tvardovsky came to Moscow, entered the philological faculty of the Moscow Institute of History, Philosophy, Literature (MIFLI) and in 1939 graduated with honors. In the same year he was drafted into the army and in the winter of 1939/40 he participated in the war with Finland as a correspondent for a military newspaper.

From the first to the last days of the Great Patriotic War, Tvardovsky was an active participant - a special correspondent for the front-line press. Together with the active army, having started the war on the Southwestern Front, he walked along its roads from Moscow to Konigsberg.

After the war, in addition to his main literary work, poetry itself, he was for a number of years the editor-in-chief of the New World magazine, consistently defending in this post the principles of truly artistic realistic art. Heading this magazine, he contributed to the entry into literature of a number of talented writers - prose writers and poets: F. Abramov and G. Baklanov, A. Solzhenitsyn and Yu. Trifonov, A. Zhigulin and A. Prasolov, etc.

The formation and development of Tvardovsky as a poet dates back to the mid-20s. While working as a rural correspondent for Smolensk newspapers, where his notes on village life had been published since 1924, he also published his youthful, unpretentious and still imperfect poems there. In the poet’s “Autobiography” we read: “My first published poem “New Hut” appeared in the newspaper “Smolenskaya Village” in the summer of 1925. It started like this:

Smells like fresh pine resin
The yellowish walls shine.
We'll live well in the spring
Here in a new, Soviet way...”

With the appearance of “The Country of Ant” (1934-1936), which testified to the entry of its author into a period of poetic maturity, the name of Tvardovsky became widely known, and the poet himself asserted himself more and more confidently. At the same time, he wrote cycles of poems “Rural Chronicle” and “About Grandfather Danila”, poems “Mothers”, “Ivushka”, and a number of other notable works. It is around the “Country of Ant” that the emerging contradictory artistic world of Tvardovsky has been grouped since the late 20s. and before the start of the war.

Today we perceive the work of the poet of that time differently. One of the researchers’ remark about the poet’s works of the early 30s should be recognized as fair. (with certain reservations it could be extended to this entire decade): “The acute contradictions of the collectivization period in the poems, in fact, are not touched upon; the problems of the village of those years are only named, and they are solved in a superficially optimistic way.” However, it seems that this can hardly be attributed unconditionally to “The Country of Ant,” with its peculiar conventional design and construction, and folklore flavor, as well as to the best poems of the pre-war decade.

During the war years, Tvardovsky did everything that was required for the front, often spoke in the army and front-line press: “wrote essays, poems, feuilletons, slogans, leaflets, songs, articles, notes...”, but his main work during the war years was the creation lyric-epic poem “Vasily Terkin” (1941-1945).

This, as the poet himself called it, “A Book about a Soldier,” recreates a reliable picture of front-line reality, reveals the thoughts, feelings, and experiences of a person in war. At the same time, Tvardovsky wrote a cycle of poems “Front-line Chronicle” (1941-1945), and worked on a book of essays “Motherland and Foreign Land” (1942-1946).

At the same time, he wrote such lyrical masterpieces as “Two Lines” (1943), “War - there is no crueler word...” (1944), “In a field dug with streams...” (1945), which were first published after the war, in the January book of the magazine “Znamya” for 1946.

Even in the first year of the war, the lyrical poem “House by the Road” (1942-1946) was started and soon after its end. “Its theme,” as the poet noted, “is war, but from a different side than in “Terkin” - from the side of home, family, wife and children of a soldier who survived the war. The epigraph of this book could be lines taken from it:

Come on people, never
Let's not forget about this."

In the 50s Tvardovsky created the poem “Beyond the Distance - Distance” (1950-1960) - a kind of lyrical epic about modernity and history, about a turning point in the lives of millions of people. This is an extended lyrical monologue of a contemporary, a poetic narrative about the difficult destinies of the homeland and people, about their complex historical path, about internal processes and changes in the spiritual world of man in the 20th century.

In parallel with “Beyond the Distance, the Distance,” the poet is working on a satirical poem-fairy tale “Terkin in the Other World” (1954-1963), depicting the “inertia, bureaucracy, formalism” of our life. According to the author, “the poem “Terkin in the Other World” is not a continuation of “Vasily Terkin”, but only refers to the image of the hero of “The Book about a Fighter” to solve special problems of the satirical and journalistic genre.”

In the last years of his life, Tvardovsky wrote the lyrical poem-cycle “By the Right of Memory” (1966-1969) - a work of tragedy. This is a social and lyrical-philosophical reflection on the painful paths of history, on the fate of an individual, on the dramatic fate of one’s family, father, mother, brothers. Being deeply personal and confessional, “By the Right of Memory” at the same time expresses the people’s point of view on the tragic phenomena of the past.

Along with major lyric-epic works in the 40s and 60s. Tvardovsky writes poems that poignantly echo the “cruel memory” of the war (“I was killed near Rzhev,” “On the day the war ended,” “To the son of a dead warrior,” etc.), as well as a number of lyrical poems that made up the book “ From the lyrics of these years” (1967). These are concentrated, sincere and original thoughts about nature, man, homeland, history, time, life and death, the poetic word.

Written back in the late 50s. and in his programmatic poem “The whole essence is in one single covenant...” (1958), the poet reflects on the main thing for himself in working on the word. It is about a purely personal beginning in creativity and about complete dedication in the search for a unique and individual artistic embodiment of the truth of life:

The whole point is in one single covenant:
What I will say before the time melts,
I know this better than anyone in the world -
Living and dead, only I know.

Say that word to anyone else
There's no way I could ever
Entrust. Even Leo Tolstoy -
It is forbidden. He won’t say - let him be his own god.

And I'm only mortal. I am responsible for my own,
During my lifetime I worry about one thing:
About what I know better than anyone in the world,
I want to say. And the way I want.

In Tvardovsky’s late poems, in his heartfelt, personal, deeply psychological experiences of the 60s. First of all, the complex, dramatic paths of people's history are revealed, the harsh memory of the Great Patriotic War resounds, the difficult destinies of the pre-war and post-war villages resonate with pain, evoke a heartfelt echo of events in people's life, and find a sad, wise and enlightened solution to the “eternal themes” of the lyrics.

Native nature never leaves the poet indifferent: he vigilantly notices, “how after the March snowstorms, / Fresh, transparent and light, / In April, the birch forests suddenly turned pink / Palm-like,” he hears “indistinct talk or hubbub / In the tops of centuries-old pines ” (“That sleepy noise was sweet to me...”, 1964), the lark that heralded spring reminds him of the distant time of childhood.

Often the poet constructs his philosophical thoughts about the life of people and the change of generations, about their connections and blood relationships in such a way that they grow as a natural consequence of the depiction of natural phenomena (“Trees planted by grandfather...”, 1965; “Lawn in the morning from under a typewriter ...”, 1966; “Birch”, 1966). In these poems, the fate and soul of man directly connect with the historical life of the homeland and nature, the memory of the fatherland: they reflect and refract the problems and conflicts of the era in their own way.

The theme and image of the mother occupy a special place in the poet’s work. So, already at the end of the 30s. in the poem “Mothers” (1937, first published in 1958), in the form of blank verse, which is not quite usual for Tvardovsky, not only childhood memory and a deep filial feeling, but also a heightened poetic ear and vigilance, and most importantly - an increasingly revealing and the growing lyrical talent of the poet. These poems are clearly psychological, as if reflected in them - in the pictures of nature, in the signs of rural life and everyday life inseparable from it - a maternal image so close to the poet’s heart appears:

And the first noise of leaves is still incomplete,
And a green trail on the grainy dew,
And the lonely knock of the roller on the river,
And the sad smell of young hay,
And the echo of a late woman's song,
And just sky, blue sky -
They remind me of you every time.

And the feeling of filial grief sounds completely different, deeply tragic in the cycle “In Memory of the Mother” (1965), colored not only by the acute experience of irreparable personal loss, but also by the pain of nationwide suffering during the years of repression.

In the land where they were taken in droves,
Wherever there is a village nearby, let alone a city,
In the north, locked by the taiga,
All there was was cold and hunger.

But my mother certainly remembered
Let's talk a little about everything that has passed,
How she didn’t want to die there, -
The cemetery was very unpleasant.

Tvardovsky, as always in his lyrics, is extremely specific and precise, right down to the details. But here, in addition, the image itself is deeply psychologized, and literally everything is given in sensations and memories, one might say, through the eyes of the mother:

So-and-so, the dug earth is not in a row
Between centuries-old stumps and snags,
And at least somewhere far from housing,
And then there are the graves right behind the barracks.

And she used to see in her dreams
Not so much a house and a yard with everyone on the right,
And that hillock is in the native side
With crosses under curly birch trees.

Such beauty and grace
In the distance is a highway, road pollen smokes.
“I’ll wake up, I’ll wake up,” the mother said, “
And behind the wall is a taiga cemetery...

In the last of the poems of this cycle: “Where are you from, / Mother, did you save this song for old age?..” - a motif and image of “crossing” that is so characteristic of the poet’s work appears, which in “The Country of Ant” was represented as a movement towards the shore.” new life”, in “Vasily Terkin” - as the tragic reality of bloody battles with the enemy; in the poems “In Memory of a Mother,” he absorbs pain and sorrow about the fate of his mother, bitter resignation with the inevitable finitude of human life:

What has been lived is lived through,
And from whom what is the demand?
Yes, it's already nearby
And the last transfer.

Water carrier,
Gray old man
Take me to the other side
Side - home...

In the poet’s later lyrics, the theme of continuity of generations, memory and duty to those who died in the fight against fascism sounds with new, hard-won strength and depth, which enters with a piercing note in the poems “At night all the wounds hurt more painfully...” (1965), “I know no fault of mine...” (1966), “They lie there, deaf and dumb...” (1966).

I know it's not my fault
The fact that others did not come from the war,
The fact that they - some older, some younger -
We stayed there, and it’s not about the same thing,
That I could, but failed to save them, -
That's not what this is about, but still, still, still...

With their tragic understatement, these poems convey a stronger and deeper sense of involuntary personal guilt and responsibility for human lives cut short by the war. And this persistent pain of “cruel memory” and guilt, as one could see, applies to the poet not only to military victims and losses. At the same time, thoughts about man and time, imbued with faith in the omnipotence of human memory, turn into an affirmation of the life that a person carries and keeps within himself until the last moment.

In Tvardovsky's lyrics of the 60s. the essential qualities of his realistic style were revealed with particular completeness and force: democracy, the internal capacity of the poetic word and image, rhythm and intonation, all poetic means with external simplicity and uncomplicatedness. The poet himself saw the important advantages of this style, first of all, in the fact that it gives “reliable pictures of living life in all its imperious impressiveness.” At the same time, his later poems are characterized by psychological depth and philosophical richness.

Tvardovsky owns a number of thorough articles and speeches about poets and poetry containing mature and independent judgments about literature (“The Tale of Pushkin”, “About Bunin”, “The Poetry of Mikhail Isakovsky”, “On the Poetry of Marshak”), reviews and reviews about A. Blok, A. Akhmatova, M. Tsvetaeva, O. Mandelstam and others, included in the book “Articles and Notes on Literature”, which went through several editions.

Continuing the traditions of Russian classics - Pushkin and Nekrasov, Tyutchev and Bunin, various traditions of folk poetry, without bypassing the experience of prominent poets of the 20th century, Tvardovsky demonstrated the possibilities of realism in the poetry of our time. His influence on contemporary and subsequent poetic development is undeniable and fruitful.

Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky (1910-1971)
Biography

Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky was born in 1910 on the Zagorye farm near the village of Seltso in the Smolensk region in the family of a blacksmith. His father T.G. Tvardovsky owned a piece of land, but the family was constantly in need, “living meagerly and difficultly.” Tvardovsky began writing poetry as a child. In 1924, he began sending notes about the problems of the village to Smolensk newspapers, and soon the poet’s first published poem, “New Izba,” appeared in the Smolenskaya Derevnya newspaper. In 1928, having collected about a dozen of his poems, Tvardovsky went to Smolensk to see M.V. Isakovsky, who worked as editor of the newspaper “Rabochy Put”. Isakovsky opened the way to great poetry for the young talented author.

The most significant period in literary history, according to A.T. himself. Tvardovsky, occurred in the years 1930-1936. This was the time when a radical restructuring of the village took place on the basis of collectivization. The poet enters the Pedagogical Institute. Having successfully completed the second year, he proceeds to complete his studies at the Moscow Institute of History, Philosophy and Literature (MIFLI). During these years, Tvardovsky’s first poems “The Path to Socialism” (1931) and “The Country of Ant” (1934-1936) were written and published, where he depicted collectivization and utopian dreams of a “new” village. Tvardovsky considers “The Country of Ant” to be his formation as a writer.

In the fall of 1939, Tvardovsky was drafted into the Red Army and participated in the liberation campaign of our troops in Western Belarus. Then, as a special correspondent for a front-line newspaper, he participated in the Soviet-Finnish War.

Tvardovsky was at the front throughout the Great Patriotic War. In 1941-1942 he worked in the editorial office of the newspaper of the Southwestern Front “Red Army”, then in the newspaper of the 3rd Belorussian Front “Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda”. During the Second World War, the poet created his most famous poem “Vasily Terkin”. This is what Tvardovsky himself writes in his autobiography: “The book about a fighter” was true happiness for me during the war years: it gave me a feeling of the obvious usefulness of my work, a feeling of complete freedom to handle poetry and words in a naturally occurring, relaxed form of presentation. "Torkin" was for me in the relationship between the poet and his reader - the warring Soviet man - my lyrics, my journalism, song and teaching, anecdote and saying, heart-to-heart conversation and a remark to the occasion. Tvardovsky met the victory in Tapiau, East Prussia (now Gvardeysk, Kaliningrad region), and then, in one breath, he wrote the last chapter of his poem, which became an attribute of front-line life.

In 1946, the poem “House by the Road” was written, dedicated to the first tragic months of the Great Patriotic War. In 1950, Tvardovsky was appointed editor-in-chief of the New World magazine, which immediately became the focus of the most talented and progressive literature of the Soviet Union. In 1963, Tvardovsky published A. Solzhenitsyn’s story “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.” The publication cost the poet a lot of effort and work. From 1964 to 1969, the magazine went through difficult times, Tvardovsky was persecuted, persecuted, and blamed for publishing Solzhenitsyn’s sensational story. In 1969, the editorial board of Novy Mir was dispersed.

Soon after the destruction of the magazine, Tvardovsky was diagnosed with lung cancer. On December 18, 1971, the poet passed away.


Stay in East Prussia

2010 marked the 100th anniversary of the birth of Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky. The fate of the poet is closely connected with the history of our region. He went through the entire war as a special correspondent for the most popular front-line newspapers - “Red Army” and “Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda”. He finished the war with the rank of lieutenant colonel and was awarded the Order of the Patriotic War, I and II degrees, as well as the Order of the Red Star. The news of the Victory was received in Tapiau (now Gvardeysk, Kaliningrad region) of East Prussia, where the poet entered as part of the 3rd Belorussian Front. Impressed by this event, I literally wrote the last chapter of “Vasily Terkin” in one day.

Tvardovsky’s comrade at the front and cooperation in the newspaper, author of the novels “Height”, “Wanderlust”, “Land on Restante” Evgeniy Vorobyov recalls: “I had the opportunity to cross the border of East Prussia with him in the first hours in front of the city of Shirvindt (now village of Kutuzovo, Krasnoznamensky district). The Sheshupa River with still, ashy water. In the low, smoky sky above Shirvindt, a distant spire was dimly visible - either a church, or the city hall. The freshly hewn black and white pillar with the inscription “Germany” was covered with autographs in the very first hours. A coal, a dagger, a bayonet, and an ink pencil were used. Everyone was in a hurry to cross the border and see the fascist lair with their own eyes. But Tvardovsky wanted to stand longer at the border post, to see how the soldiers were crossing the border. We looked ahead warily - will we ever have a chance to return to our homeland?

List of used literature:

  1. Arkashev V.I. The roads of Vasily Terkin (pages from the front-line life of A.T. Tvardovsky). – Minsk: Belarus, 1985.
  2. Memories of Tvardovsky. – M.: Soviet writer, 1982.
  3. Kazachenok P.P. Voices of memory. – Kaliningrad: Kaliningradskaya Pravda, 2005.
  4. Karapetyan E., Kravchenko Y. Fireworks over Tapiau // Local history almanac “Fatherland”. 2006. No. 4. pp. 6 – 9.
  5. Kondratovich A. Alexander Tvardovsky: Poetry and personality. – M.: Fiction, 1985.
  6. Kravchenko Yu., Sukhinina V. He went on his attack (To the 100th anniversary of A.T. Tvardovsky) // Local history almanac “Fatherland”. 2010. No. 8. pp. 139-141.
  7. Who was who in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945: A Quick Reference Guide / Ed. O.A. Rzheshevsky. – M.: Republic, 1993.
  8. Trifonych (Editorial) // Parallels. 2010. No. 8. pp. 30-31.

Alexander was born on June 8 (21), 1910 in the Smolensk province of the Russian Empire. It is surprising that in Tvardovsky’s biography the first poem was written so early that the boy could not even write it down, because he was not taught to read and write. The love for literature appeared in childhood: Alexander's father loved to read aloud at home the works of famous writers Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol, Mikhail Lermontov, Nikolai Nekrasov, Leo Tolstoy and Ivan Nikitin.

Already at the age of 14, he wrote several poems and poems on topical topics. When collectivization and dispossession took place in the country, the poet supported the process (he expressed utopian ideas in the poems “The Country of Ant” (1934-36), “The Path to Socialism” (1931)). In 1939, when the war with Finland began, A.T. Tvardovsky, as a member of the Communist Party, participated in the unification of the USSR and Belarus. Then he settled in Voronezh, continued to write, and worked for the newspaper “Red Army”.

Writer's creativity

The most famous work of Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky was the poem “Vasily Terkin”. The poem brought great success to the author, since it was very relevant in wartime. The further creative period in Tvardovsky’s life was filled with philosophical thoughts, which can be traced in the lyrics of the 1960s. Tvardovsky began working for the magazine “New World” and completely revised his views on Stalin’s policies.

In 1961, impressed by Alexander Tvardovsky’s speech at the XXII Congress of the CPSU, Alexander Solzhenitsyn gave him his story “Shch-854” (later called “One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich”). Tvardovsky, being the editor of the magazine at that time, rated the story extremely highly, invited the author to Moscow and began to seek Khrushchev’s permission to publish this work.

At the end of the 60s, a significant event occurred in the biography of Alexander Tvardovsky - the Glavlit campaign against the magazine “New World” began. When the author was forced to leave the editorial office in 1970, part of the team left with him. The magazine was, in short, destroyed.

Death and legacy

Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky died of lung cancer on December 18, 1971, and was buried in Moscow at the Novodevichy Cemetery.

Streets in Moscow, Voronezh, Novosibirsk, and Smolensk are named after the famous writer. A school was named in his honor and a monument was erected in Moscow.

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After reading Tvardovsky’s short biography, be sure to try to answer the questions.

Who hides the past jealously
He is unlikely to be in harmony with the future...
A. T. Tvardovsky, “By right of memory”


Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky was born on June 21, 1910 in the Zagorye farmstead, located near the village of Seltso (now Smolensk region). The surrounding area, in the words of the poet himself, “was located away from the roads and was quite wild.” Tvardovsky's father, Trifon Gordeevich, was a complex man with a strong and strong-willed character. The son of a retired landless soldier, he worked as a blacksmith from a young age and had his own distinctive style and cut of products. His main dream was to get out of the peasant class and provide a comfortable existence for his family. He had plenty of energy for this - in addition to his main work, Trifon Gordeevich rented forges and took out contracts to supply the army with hay. Shortly before Alexander was born, in 1909, his dream came true - he became a “land owner”, purchasing an unsightly plot of thirteen hectares. Tvardovsky himself recalled on this occasion: “From a very early age, he instilled in us, little children, respect for this podzolic, sour, unkind and stingy, but our land, our, as he jokingly called, ‘estate’...”

Alexander was born the second child in the family, the eldest son Kostya was born in 1908. Later, Trifon Gordeevich and Maria Mitrofanovna, the daughter of the impoverished nobleman Mitrofan Pleskachevsky, had three more sons and two daughters. In 1912, the parents of Tvardovsky Sr., Gordey Vasilyevich and his wife Zinaida Ilyinichna, moved to the farm. Despite their simple origins, both Trifon Gordeevich and his father Gordey Vasilyevich were literate people. Moreover, the father of the future poet knew Russian literature well, and, according to the memoirs of Alexander Tvardovsky, evenings on the farm were often devoted to reading books by Alexei Tolstoy, Pushkin, Nekrasov, Gogol, Lermontov... Trifon Gordeevich knew many poems by heart. It was he who in 1920 gave Sasha his first book, a volume of Nekrasov, which he exchanged at the market for potatoes. Tvardovsky kept this treasured book throughout his life.

Trifon Gordeevich passionately wanted to give his children a decent education and in 1918 he enrolled his eldest sons Alexander and Konstantin in the Smolensk gymnasium, which was soon transformed into the first Soviet school. However, the brothers studied there for only one year - during the Civil War, the school building was requisitioned for the needs of the army. Until 1924, Alexander Tvardovsky exchanged one rural school for another, and after finishing the sixth grade he returned to the farm - he returned, by the way, as a Komsomol member. By that time, he had already been writing poetry for four years - and the further he went, the more and more they “took” the teenager. Tvardovsky Sr. did not believe in his son’s literary future, laughed at his hobby and frightened him with poverty and hunger. However, it is known that he loved to boast about Alexander’s printed speeches after his son took the place of village correspondent for Smolensk newspapers. This happened in 1925 - at the same time Tvardovsky’s first poem “Izba” was published. In 1926, at the provincial congress of village correspondents, the young poet became friends with Mikhail Isakovsky, who at first became his “guide” to the world of literature. And in 1927, Alexander Trifonovich went to Moscow, so to speak, “for reconnaissance.” The capital stunned him, he wrote in his diary: “I walked along the sidewalks where Utkin and Zharov (popular poets of that time), great scientists and leaders walk...”

From now on, his native Zagorje seemed to the young man a dull backwater. He suffered, being cut off from the “big life,” passionately wanting to communicate with young writers like himself. And at the beginning of 1928, Alexander Trifonovich decided on a desperate act - he moved to live in Smolensk. The first months were very, very difficult for eighteen-year-old Tvardovsky in the big city. In his autobiography, the poet notes: “He lived in beds, corners, wandered around editorial offices.” Coming from a village, for a very long time he could not feel like a city resident. Here is another late confession of the poet: “In Moscow, in Smolensk, there was a painful feeling that you were not at home, that you didn’t know something and that at any moment you could turn out to be funny, get lost in an unfriendly and indifferent world...”. Despite this, Tvardovsky actively joined the literary life of the city - he became a member of the Smolensk branch of RAPP (Russian Association of Proletarian Writers), traveled alone and as part of brigades to collective farms and wrote a lot. His closest friend in those days was the critic and later geologist Adrian Makedonov, who was a year older than Tvardovsky.

In 1931, the poet had his own family - he married Maria Gorelova, a student at the Smolensk Pedagogical Institute. In the same year their daughter Valya was born. And the next year, Alexander Trifonovich himself entered the pedagogical institute. He studied there for a little over two years. The family needed to be fed, and as a student it was difficult to do this. However, his position in the city of Smolensk strengthened - in 1934 Tvardovsky was present as a delegate with an advisory voice at the first All-Union Congress of Soviet Writers.

After his departure from the family nest, the poet visited Zagorye extremely rarely - approximately once a year. And after March 1931, he actually had no one to visit on the farm. Back in 1930, Trifon Gordeevich was subject to a high tax. In order to save the situation, Tvardovsky Sr. joined an agricultural artel, but soon, unable to control himself, he took his horse from the artel. Fleeing from prison, Tvardovsky Sr. fled to Donbass. In the spring of 1931, his family, who remained on the farm, was “dispossessed” and sent to the Northern Urals. After some time, the head of the family came to them, and in 1933 he led everyone along forest paths to today’s Kirov region - to the village of Russian Turek. Here he settled under the name Demyan Tarasov; the rest of the family also bore this surname. This “detective” ended in 1936, after Alexander Trifonovich published the poem “The Country of Ant,” which served as his “pass” to the forefront of Soviet writers and to the world of great literature.

Tvardovsky began working on this work in 1934, being impressed by one of the performances of Alexander Fadeev. By the autumn of 1935 the poem was completed. In December, it was discussed in the capital's House of Writers, and it turned out triumphant for Tvardovsky. The only fly in the ointment was Maxim Gorky’s negative review, but Alexander Trifonovich did not lose heart, writing in his diary: “Grandfather! You have only sharpened my pen. I will prove that you made a mistake.” In 1936, “The Country of Ant” was published in the literary magazine “Krasnaya Nov”. She was openly admired by Mikhail Svetlov, Korney Chukovsky, Boris Pasternak and other recognized writers and poets. However, the most important connoisseur of the poem was in the Kremlin. He was Joseph Stalin.

After the resounding success of “The Country of Ant,” Tvardovsky came to the village of Russky Turek and took his relatives to Smolensk. He placed them in his own room. Moreover, he no longer needed her - the poet decided to move to Moscow. Soon after moving, he entered the third year of the famous IFLI (Moscow Institute of History, Literature and Philosophy), through which many famous writers passed in the late thirties. The level of teaching in the educational institution was, by the standards of that time, unusually high - the greatest scientists, the entire flower of the humanities of those years, worked at IFLI. The students were also equal to the teachers - it is worth mentioning at least the poets who later became famous: Semyon Gudzenko, Yuri Levitansky, Sergei Narovchatov, David Samoilov. Unfortunately, many graduates of the institute died on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War. Tvardovsky, who came to IFLI, did not get lost against the general, brilliant background. On the contrary, according to Narovchatov’s notes, “in the Iflian horizon he stood out for his large figure, character, and personality.” Writer Konstantin Simonov - at that time a graduate student at IFLI - confirms these words, recalling that “IFLI was proud of Tvardovsky.” This was due to the fact that while the poet “humbly” studied, critics praised his “Country of Ant” in every possible way. No one else dared to call Tvardovsky a “kulak echoer,” which had often happened before. Alexander Trifonovich graduated from IFLI with honors in 1939.

For the sake of fairness, it is worth noting that during these prosperous years, misfortunes did not bypass the writer. In the fall of 1938, he buried his one and a half year old son who died of diphtheria. And in 1937, his best friend Adrian Makedonov was arrested and sentenced to eight years of hard labor. At the beginning of 1939, a decree was issued on awarding a number of Soviet writers, and Tvardovsky among them. In February he was awarded the Order of Lenin. By the way, among those awarded, Alexander Trifonovich was perhaps the youngest. And already in September of the same year, the poet was drafted into the army. He was sent to the west, where, working in the editorial office of the newspaper “Chasovaya Rodina,” he took part in the annexation of Western Belarus and Western Ukraine to the USSR. Tvardovsky encountered real war at the end of 1939, when he was sent to the Soviet-Finnish front. The death of the soldiers horrified him. After the first battle, which Alexander Trifonovich observed from the regimental command post, the poet wrote: “I returned in a serious state of bewilderment and depression... It was very difficult to internally cope with this myself...”. In 1943, when the Great Patriotic War was already thundering around, in the work “Two Lines” Tvardovsky remembered a fighter boy who died on the Karelian Isthmus: “As if I were dead, alone, / As if I was lying there. / Frozen, small, killed / In that unfamous war, / Forgotten, small, I lie.” By the way, it was during the Soviet-Finnish war that a character under the name Vasya Terkin first appeared in a number of feuilletons, the introduction to which was invented by Tvardovsky. Tvardovsky himself later said: “Terkin was conceived and invented not by me alone, but by many people - both writers and my correspondents. They actively participated in its creation.”

In March 1940, the war with the Finns ended. The writer Alexander Bek, who often communicated with Alexander Trifonovich at that time, said that the poet was a person “alienated from everyone by some kind of seriousness, as if he was on a different level.” In April of the same year, “for valor and courage,” Tvardovsky was awarded the Order of the Red Star. In the spring of 1941, another high award followed - for the poem “The Country of Ant” Alexander Trifonovich was awarded the Stalin Prize.

From the first days of the Great Patriotic War, Tvardovsky was at the front. At the end of June 1941 he arrived in Kyiv to work in the editorial office of the newspaper “Red Army”. And at the end of September, the poet, in his own words, “barely got out of the encirclement.” Further milestones of the bitter path: Mirgorod, then Kharkov, Valuiki and Voronezh. At the same time, there was an addition to his family - Maria Illarionovna gave birth to a daughter, Olya, and soon the entire family of the writer was evacuated to the city of Chistopol. Tvardovsky often wrote to his wife, informing her about the daily routine of the editorial office: “I work quite a lot. Slogans, poems, humor, essays... If you leave out the days when I travel, then there is material for every day.” However, over time, editorial turnover began to worry the poet; he was attracted to the “great style” and serious literature. Already in the spring of 1942, Tvardovsky made the decision: “I won’t write any more bad poetry... The war is going on in earnest, and poetry must be taken seriously...”

At the beginning of the summer of 1942, Alexander Trifonovich received a new appointment - to the newspaper “Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda” on the Western Front. The editorial office was located a hundred kilometers from Moscow, in present-day Obninsk. From here his journey to the west began. And it was here that Tvardovsky had a great idea - to return to the poem “Vasily Terkin”, conceived at the end of the Soviet-Finnish war. Of course, now the topic was the Patriotic War. The image of the main character also underwent significant changes - a clearly folklore character who took the enemy to the bayonet, “like sheaves on a pitchfork,” turned into an ordinary guy. The genre designation “poem” was also very conventional. The poet himself said that his story about a Russian soldier does not fit any genre definition, and therefore he decided to simply call it “A Book about a Soldier.” At the same time, it is noted that in structural terms “Terkin” goes back to the works of Pushkin, idolized by Tvardovsky, namely “Eugene Onegin”, representing a set of private episodes that, like a mosaic, form an epic panorama of the great war. The poem is written in the rhythm of a ditty, and in this meaning it seems to naturally grow out of the thickness of the folk language, turning from a “work of art” composed by a specific author into a “self-revelation of life.” This is exactly how this work was perceived by the mass of soldiers, where the very first published chapters of “Vasily Terkin” (in August 1942) gained enormous popularity. After its publication and reading on the radio, Tvardovsky received countless letters from front-line soldiers who recognized themselves in the hero. In addition, the messages contained requests, even demands that the poem be continued. Alexander Trifonovich fulfilled these requests. Once again Tvardovsky considered his work completed in 1943, but again numerous demands for a continuation of “The Book about a Fighter” forced him to change his mind. As a result, the work consisted of thirty chapters, and the hero in it reached Germany. He composed the last line of “Vasily Terkin” on the victorious night of May 10, 1945. However, even after the war, the flow of letters did not dry up for a long time.

The story of the portrait of Vasily Terkin, reproduced in millions of copies of the poem and made by the artist Orest Vereisky, who worked during the war years together with Tvardovsky in the newspaper “Krasnoarmeyskaya Pravda”, is interesting. Not everyone knows that this portrait was made from life, and, therefore, Vasily Terkin had a real prototype. Here is what Vereisky himself said about this: “I wanted to open the book with the poem with a frontispiece with a portrait of Terkin. And that was the hardest part. What is Terkin like? Most of the soldiers whose portraits I sketched from life seemed to me somewhat similar to Vasily - some with squinting eyes, some with a smile, some with a face dotted with freckles. However, not one of them was Terkin... Each time, of course, I shared the results of the search with Tvardovsky. And every time I heard the answer: “No, not him.” I myself understood - not him. And then one day a young poet came to our editorial office, who had come from an army newspaper... His name was Vasily Glotov, and we all immediately liked him. He had a cheerful disposition, a kind smile... A couple of days later, a joyful feeling suddenly pierced me - I recognized Vasily Terkin in Glotov. With my discovery, I ran to Alexander Trifonovich. At first he raised his eyebrows in surprise... The idea of ​​“trying out” for the image of Vasily Terkin seemed funny to Glotov. When I drew him, he broke into a smile and squinted slyly, which made him even more like the hero of the poem, as I imagined him to be. Having drawn him in front and in profile with his head down, I showed the work to Alexander Trifonovich. Tvardovsky said: “Yes.” That was all, from then on he never made any attempts to portray Vasily Terkin as someone else.”

Before the victorious night, Alexander Trifonovich had to endure all the difficulties of military roads. He literally lived on wheels, taking short sabbaticals to work in Moscow and also to visit his family in the city of Chistopol. In the summer of 1943, Tvardovsky, together with other soldiers, liberated the Smolensk region. For two years he did not receive any news from his relatives and was terribly worried about them. However, nothing bad, thank God, happened - at the end of September the poet met with them near Smolensk. He then visited his native village of Zagorye, which had literally turned into ashes. Then there were Belarus and Lithuania, Estonia and East Prussia. Tvardovsky met his victory in Tapiau. Orest Vereisky recalled this evening: “Fireworks of different types thundered. Everyone was shooting. Alexander Trifonovich also shot. He fired a revolver into the sky, bright from the colored lines, standing on the porch of a Prussian house - our last military refuge...”

After the end of the war, bonuses rained down on Tvardovsky. In 1946, he was awarded the Stalin Prize for the poem “Vasily Terkin”. In 1947 - another for the work “House by the Road”, on which Alexander Trifonovich worked simultaneously with “Terkin” since 1942. However, this poem, according to the author’s description, “is dedicated to the life of a Russian woman who survived the occupation, German slavery and liberation by Red Army soldiers ”, was overshadowed by the resounding success of “The Book about a Fighter”, although in terms of amazing authenticity and artistic merit it was hardly inferior to “Terkin”. Actually, these two poems complemented each other perfectly - one showed the war, and the second - its “wrong side”.

Tvardovsky lived a very active life in the second half of the forties. He performed many duties in the Writers' Union - he was its secretary, headed the poetry section, and was a member of various commissions. During these years, the poet visited Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Poland, Albania, East Germany, Norway, traveled to Belarus and Ukraine, visited the Far East for the first time, and visited his native Smolensk region. These trips could not be called “tourism” - he worked everywhere, spoke, talked with writers, and published. The latter is surprising - it’s hard to imagine when Tvardovsky had time to write. In 1947, the elderly writer Nikolai Teleshov conveyed greetings to the poet, as Tvardovsky himself used to say, “from the other world.” This was a review of Bunin's Vasily Terkin. Ivan Alekseevich, who spoke very critically of Soviet literature, agreed to look at the poem, handed to him by Leonid Zurov almost by force. After this, Bunin could not calm down for several days, and soon he wrote to a friend of his youth, Teleshov: “I read Tvardovsky’s book - if you know and meet him, please tell me on occasion that I (as you know, a demanding and picky reader) admired his talent . This is truly a rare book - what freedom, what accuracy, what wonderful prowess, accuracy in everything and an unusually soldierly, popular language - not a single false, literary vulgar word!..”

However, not everything went smoothly in Tvardovsky’s life; there were both disappointments and tragedies. In August 1949, Trifon Gordeevich died - the poet was very worried about the death of his father. Alexander Trifonovich did not avoid the elaborations for which the second half of the forties turned out to be generous. At the end of 1947 - beginning of 1948, his book “Motherland and Foreign Land” was subjected to devastating criticism. The author was accused of “narrowness and pettiness of views on reality,” “Russian national narrow-mindedness,” and lack of a “state view.” Publication of the work was prohibited, but Tvardovsky did not lose heart. By that time, he had a new, significant business that completely captured him.

In February 1950, changes took place among the heads of the largest literary organs. In particular, the editor-in-chief of the New World magazine, Konstantin Simonov, moved to Literaturnaya Gazeta, and Tvardovsky was offered to fill the vacated position. Alexander Trifonovich agreed because he had long dreamed of such “public” work, expressed not in the number of speeches and meetings given, but in the real “product”. In fact, it was the fulfillment of his dream. During four years of editing, Tvardovsky, who worked under truly nervous conditions, managed to accomplish a lot. He managed to organize a magazine with a “uncommon expression” and create a close-knit team of like-minded people. His deputies were his longtime comrade Anatoly Tarasenkov and Sergei Smirnov, who “discovered” the defense of the Brest Fortress for the general reader. Alexander Trifonovich’s magazine did not immediately become famous for its publications; the editor-in-chief took a closer look at the situation, gained experience, and looked for people with similar attitudes. Tvardovsky himself wrote - in January 1954 he drew up a plan for the poem “Terkin in the Next World”, and three months later he finished it. However, the lines of fate turned out to be whimsical - in August 1954, Alexander Trifonovich was removed from the post of editor-in-chief with a scandal.

One of the reasons for his dismissal was precisely the work “Terkin in the Next World” prepared for publication, which was called in a memo by the Central Committee “a libel on Soviet reality.” In some ways, the officials were right; they correctly saw in the description of the “other world” a satirical depiction of the working methods of party bodies. Khrushchev, who replaced Stalin as party leader, described the poem as “politically harmful and ideologically vicious.” This became a death sentence. The New World was bombarded with articles criticizing the works that appeared on the pages of the magazine. An internal letter from the CPSU Central Committee summed up the result: “The editorial staff of the magazine “New World” has entrenched politically compromised writers... who had a harmful influence on Tvardovsky.” Alexander Trifonovich behaved courageously in this situation. Having never - until the very last days of his life - shown any doubts about the truth of Marxism-Leninism, he admitted his own mistakes, and, taking all the blame upon himself, said that he personally “oversaw” the articles that were criticized, and in some cases even published them contrary to opinion editorial board. Thus, Tvardovsky did not surrender his people.

In subsequent years, Alexander Trifonovich traveled a lot around the country and wrote a new poem, “Beyond the Distance, the Distance.” In July 1957, the head of the culture department of the CPSU Central Committee, Dmitry Polikarpov, arranged a meeting for Alexander Trifonovich with Khrushchev. The writer, in his own words, “suffered... the same thing that he usually said about literature, about its troubles and needs, about its bureaucratization.” Nikita Sergeevich wished to meet again, which happened a few days later. The two-part conversation lasted a total of four hours. The result was that in the spring of 1958 Tvardovsky was again offered to head the New World. After thinking about it, he agreed.

However, the poet agreed to take the place of editor-in-chief of the magazine under certain conditions. In his workbook it was written: “First - a new editorial board; second - six months, or even better, a year - not to carry out executions indoors...” By the latter, Tvardovsky, first of all, meant curators from the Central Committee and censorship. If the first condition was fulfilled with some difficulty, then the second was not. Censorship pressure began as soon as the new editorial board of Novy Mir prepared the first issues. All high-profile publications of the magazine were carried out with difficulty, often with censorship seizures, with reproaches for “political myopia,” and with discussion in the culture department. Despite the difficulties, Alexander Trifonovich diligently collected literary forces. During the years of his editorship, the term “Novomirsky author” began to be perceived as a kind of sign of quality, as a kind of honorary title. This concerned not only the prose that made Tvardovsky’s magazine famous - essays, literary and critical articles, and economic studies also caused considerable public resonance. Among the writers who became famous thanks to the “New World”, it is worth noting Yuri Bondarev, Konstantin Vorobyov, Vasil Bykov, Fyodor Abramov, Fazil Iskander, Boris Mozhaev, Vladimir Voinovich, Chingiz Aitmatov and Sergei Zalygin. In addition, on the pages of the magazine, the old poet talked about meetings with popular Western artists and writers, rediscovered forgotten names (Tsvetaeva, Balmont, Voloshin, Mandelstam), and popularized avant-garde art.

Separately, it is necessary to say about Tvardovsky and Solzhenitsyn. It is known that Alexander Trifonovich greatly respected Alexander Isaevich - both as a writer and as a person. Solzhenitsyn’s attitude towards the poet was more complicated. From the very first meeting at the end of 1961, they found themselves in an unequal position: Tvardovsky, who dreamed of a fair social construction of society on communist principles, saw his ally in Solzhenitsyn, not suspecting that the writer “discovered” by him had long ago set out on a “crusade” "against communism. While collaborating with the New World magazine, Solzhenitsyn “tactically” used the editor-in-chief, which he did not even know about.

The history of the relationship between Alexander Tvardovsky and Nikita Khrushchev is also interesting. The all-powerful First Secretary always treated the poet with great sympathy. Thanks to this, “problematic” essays were often saved. When Tvardovsky realized that he would not be able to break through the wall of party-censorship unanimity on his own, he turned directly to Khrushchev. And he, after listening to Tvardovsky’s arguments, almost always helped. Moreover, he “exalted” the poet in every possible way - at the XXII Congress of the CPSU, which adopted a program for the rapid construction of communism in the country, Tvardovsky was elected as a candidate member of the Central Committee of the party. However, one should not assume that Alexander Trifonovich became an “untouchable” person under Khrushchev - on the contrary, the editor-in-chief was often subjected to devastating criticism, but in hopeless situations he had the opportunity to appeal to the very top, over the heads of those who “held and did not let go.” This, for example, happened in the summer of 1963, when the leadership of the Writers' Union and foreign guests who had gathered for a session of the European Writers' Community, held in Leningrad, flew at the invitation of the Soviet leader, who was on vacation, to his Pitsunda dacha. Tvardovsky took with him the previously banned “Terkin in the Next World.” Nikita Sergeevich asked him to read the poem and reacted very lively, “either laughing loudly or frowning.” Four days later, Izvestia published this essay, which had been hidden for a whole decade.

It should be noted that Tvardovsky was always considered a “travelling” - such a privilege was given to few in the USSR. Moreover, he was such an active traveler that he sometimes refused to travel abroad. An interesting story happened in 1960, when Alexander Trifonovich did not want to go to the United States, citing the fact that he needed to finish work on the poem “Beyond the Distance - Distance.” USSR Minister of Culture Ekaterina Furtseva understood him and allowed him to stay at home with the words: “Your work, of course, should come first.”

In the fall of 1964, Nikita Sergeevich was sent into retirement. From that time on, “organizational” and ideological pressure on Tvardovsky’s journal began to steadily increase. Issues of Novy Mir began to be delayed by censorship and published late in a reduced volume. “Things are bad, the magazine seems to be under siege,” wrote Tvardovsky. In the early autumn of 1965, he visited the city of Novosibirsk - people flocked to his performances, and the high authorities shied away from the poet as if he were plagued. When Alexander Trifonovich returned to the capital, the Party Central Committee already had a note in which Tvardovsky’s “anti-Soviet” conversations were detailed. In February 1966, the premiere of a “tortured” performance based on the poem “Terkin in the Next World” took place, staged at the Satire Theater by Valentin Pluchek. Vasily Tyorkin was played by the famous Soviet actor Anatoly Papanov. Alexander Trifonovich liked Pluchek’s work. The shows continued to be sold out, but already in June - after the twenty-first performance - the performance was banned. And at the XXIII Party Congress, held in the spring of 1966, Tvardovsky (a candidate member of the Central Committee) was not even elected as a delegate. At the end of the summer of 1969, a new development campaign broke out regarding the New World magazine. As a result, in February 1970, the secretariat of the Writers' Union decided to dismiss half of the members of the editorial board. Alexander Trifonovich tried to appeal to Brezhnev, but he did not want to meet with him. And then the editor-in-chief voluntarily resigned.

The poet said goodbye to life a long time ago - this can be clearly seen from his poems. Back in 1967, he wrote amazing lines: “At the bottom of my life, at the very bottom / I want to sit in the sun, / On the warm foam... / I can overhear my thoughts without interference, / I’ll draw a line with an old man’s stick: / No, that’s all- no, nothing, just for the occasion / I visited here and checked the box.” In September 1970, a few months after the defeat of the New World, Alexander Trifonovich was struck down by a stroke. He was hospitalized, but at the hospital he was diagnosed with advanced lung cancer. Tvardovsky lived the last year of his life semi-paralyzed in the holiday village of Krasnaya Pakhra (Moscow region). On December 18, 1971, the poet passed away; he was buried at the Novodevichy cemetery.

The memory of Alexander Tvardovsky lives on to this day. Although rarely, his books are republished. In Moscow there is a school named after him and a cultural center, and in Smolensk the regional library bears the name of the poet. The monument to Tvardovsky and Vasily Terkin has stood since May 1995 in the center of Smolensk; in addition, the monument to the famous writer was unveiled in June 2013 in the capital of Russia on Strastnoy Boulevard not far from the house in which the editorial office of Novy Mir was located in the late sixties. In Zagorye, the poet’s homeland, the Tvardovsky estate was restored literally out of the blue. The poet’s brothers, Konstantin and Ivan, provided enormous assistance in recreating the family farm. Ivan Trifonovich Tvardovsky, an experienced cabinetmaker, made most of the furnishings with his own hands. Now there is a museum in this place.

Based on materials from the book “Alexander Tvardovsky” by A. M. Turkov and the weekly publication “Our History. 100 great names."



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