What are your years? How old were they?
When reading the classics at school, we rarely think about how old this or that character was. Recently, a friend of our company from Los Angeles sent a funny letter, here is its content:
- “Marya Gavrilovna from Pushkin’s “The Snowstorm” was no longer young: “She was in her 20th year”;
- Juliet's mother was 28 years old at the time of the events described in the play;
- “Balzac age” - 30 years;
- Ivan Susanin was 32 years old at the time of the feat (he had a 16-year-old daughter of marriageable age);
- The old pawnbroker from Dostoevsky's novel Crime and Punishment was 42 years old;
- At the time of her death, Anna Karenina was 28 years old, Vronsky was 23 years old, Anna Karenina’s old husband was 48 years old (at the beginning of the events described in the novel, everyone was 2 years younger);
- The old man Cardinal Richelieu was 42 years old at the time of the siege of the La Rochelle fortress described in The Three Musketeers;
- From the notes of 16-year-old Pushkin: “An old man about 30 years old entered the room” (it was Karamzin);
- From Tynyanov: “Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin was older than all those gathered. He was thirty-four years old - the age of extinction”;
- Pushkin wrote the poem “Ruslan and Lyudmila” at the age of 19;
- The brilliant Evariste Galois made a great mathematical discovery at the age of 19 - the “Galois group” (at the age of 20 he was killed in a duel for political reasons). Galois was the youngest of the greats and the greatest of the young."
Of course, this letter made us smile, but it also made us think. Would anyone now agree that 34 years is the age of extinction, and the “old woman pawnbroker” and “old man Richelieu” at 42 sound somehow insulting?
Yes, “at 40, life is just beginning,” as we were told in the film “Moscow Doesn’t Believe in Tears.”
In fact, we want to stay young as long as possible, we even added a few years to “Balzac’s age” and believe that it is 40 years. But in fact, the expression, which became a classic, occurred after the publication of the novel “A Woman of Thirty” by the French writer Honore de Balzac.
What happened over time? Were our ancestors in a hurry to live, or are we stuck in our development, hoping that tomorrow will come someday and then we will “live for real”? Is it the wrong time? Or are we not the same? Something to think about, right?
In the meantime, we present our answer to the classics. For us, really, at 40, everything is just beginning!
In Exposure of the sensation. Age of literary heroes.
The following text has spread across the Internet (on VKontakte, on Odnoklassniki and on forums), I’ve seen it many times, and today it was remembered in a conversation.
The old pawnbroker from Dostoevsky's novel Crime and Punishment was 42 years old.
Juliet's mother was 28 years old at the time of the events described in the play.
Marya Gavrilovna from Pushkin’s “The Snowstorm” was no longer young. She was 20 years old.
Balzac's age is 30 years.
Ivan Susanin was 32 years old at the time of the feat (he had a 16-year-old daughter of marriageable age).
Anna Karenina was 28 years old at the time of her death, Vronsky was 23 years old. The old man - Anna Karenina's husband - is 48 years old.
The old man Cardinal Richelieu was 42 years old at the time of the siege of the La Rochelle fortress described in The Three Musketeers.
From the notes of 16-year-old Pushkin: “An old man of about 30 years old entered the room.” It was Karamzin.
At Tynyanov’s, Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin was older than everyone else gathered. He was 34 years old - the age of extinction.
So there you go!!!
This is all far-fetched and not true at all!
Let's sort it out in order.
- The old money-lender from Dostoevsky’s novel “Crime and Punishment” was 42 years old.
Original source:
"The old woman stood in front of him silently and looked at him questioningly. She was a tiny, dry old woman, about sixty years old, with sharp and angry eyes, with a small pointed nose and bare hair. Her blond, slightly gray hair was greased with oil. Around her thin and long neck, similar to a chicken leg, there was some kind of flannel rag wrapped around her, and on her shoulders, despite the heat, a frayed and yellowed fur coat was hanging. The old woman was constantly coughing and groaning."
- Juliet’s mother was 28 years old at the time of the events described in the play.
In fact, even less, but then early marriages were accepted.
Original source:
Mom says to Juliet:
Well, think about it. Among the Verona nobility
Early marriage is held in high esteem. Me too, by the way
I gave birth to you quite early -
I was younger than you are now.
And a little earlier it says that Juliet is not yet 14 years old:
She's a child. Light is new to her
And not yet fourteen years old.
- Marya Gavrilovna from Pushkin’s “The Snowstorm” was no longer young. She was 20 years old.
Who gave this definition: “middle-aged”? In the entire story neither the word “young” nor “mature” appears.
The primary source only says the following about age:
“At the end of 1811, in an era memorable to us, the kind Gavrila Gavrilovich R** lived on his Nenaradov estate. He was famous throughout the entire district for his hospitality and cordiality; neighbors constantly went to him to eat, drink, and play Boston for five kopecks with his wife , and some in order to look at their daughter, Marya Gavrilovna, slender, pale and seventeen year old girl."
- Balzac's age is 30 years.
This is what the all-knowing Wikipedia tells us:
Balzac age is an expression that became commonly used after the appearance of the novel “A Woman of Thirty” by the French writer Honore de Balzac. The heroine of this novel, Viscountess d'Aiglemont, was distinguished by her independence, independence of judgment and freedom in expressing her feelings. In the first years after the novel's publication, this expression was used ironically in relation to women who were like or aspired to be like the heroine of Balzac's novel. Later this meaning of the term was forgotten.
Balzac age - a woman aged 30 to 40 years (jokingly ironic, allegorically). The modern understanding of the term, originating from the novel by Honoré de Balzac.
- Ivan Susanin was 32 years old at the time of the feat (he had a 16-year-old daughter of marriageable age).
Again from Wikipedia:
Almost nothing is known exactly about the life of Ivan Susanin. ...Since his wife is not mentioned in any way in documents or legends, and his daughter Antonida was married and had children, we can assume that he was a widower in adulthood.
- Anna Karenina was 28 years old at the time of her death, Vronsky was 23 years old. The old man - Anna Karenina's husband - is 48 years old.
I couldn’t find it, it’s a long novel, and I was going to re-read it.
Actually, there is no mention of Anna’s age, it only says that she was 20 years younger than her husband.
Nobody knows, huh???
- The old man Cardinal Richelieu was 42 years old at the time of the siege of the La Rochelle fortress described in The Three Musketeers.
The word “old man” is never used in the novel, and the term “old man” is not used in relation to Richelieu.
Original source: “Standing by the fireplace was a man of average height, proud, arrogant, with a wide forehead and piercing gaze. His thin face was further lengthened by a pointed beard, over which a mustache curled. This man was hardly more than thirty-six to thirty-seven years old, but There was already a hint of gray in his hair and beard. Although he did not have a sword, he still looked like a military man, and the light dust on his boots indicated that he had ridden a horse that day.
This man was Armand-Jean du Plessis, Cardinal de Richelieu, not the way we usually portray him, that is, not a bent old man suffering from a serious illness, relaxed, with a faded voice, immersed in a deep armchair, as if in an untimely grave, living only by the power of his mind and supporting the fight against Europe with the mere tension of thought, but as he really was in those years: a clever and amiable gentleman, even then weak in body, but supported by the indomitable power of spirit..."
And yes, he really was 42. But they don’t call him an old man.
- From the notes of 16-year-old Pushkin: “An old man of about 30 years old entered the room.” It was Karamzin.
I couldn't find the text of the notes. But Karamzin was born in 1766, and Pushkin in 1799. That is, when Karamzin was 30 years old, Pushkin was not yet, as they say now, in the project. At the time when Pushkin was 16, Karamzin was (we think) about 49.
Perhaps, at the age of 16, Pushkin remembers how Karamzin came to them. Karamzin was 34 at the time of the visit, according to Tynyanov, and Pushkin was 1 year old. It's unlikely he remembered.
- At Tynyanov’s, Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin was older than everyone else gathered. He was 34 years old - the age of extinction.
Well, yes, the quote is accurate. But... incomplete.
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Biography, life story of Anna Karenina
Anna Arkadyevna Karenina is the heroine of the novel Anna Karenina.
Life story
Anna Karenina is a noble lady from St. Petersburg, the wife of Minister Alexei Alexandrovich Karenin. introduces us to Anna at the moment when she comes to her brother Stepan Oblonsky (Steve) in order to reconcile him with his wife. Stiva meets his sister at the station. At the same time, a young officer Alexei Kirillovich Vronsky arrives at the station (he was meeting his mother). Anna and Alexey pay attention to each other. However, the author does not allow the first emotions to completely overwhelm the characters. At the moment of the first meeting of Karenina and Vronsky, a misfortune happens - a train carriage accidentally drives back and kills the watchman. Anna Karenina, a married lady and a caring mother of her eight-year-old son Seryozha, considered this turn of events a bad sign.
The next meeting between Anna and Alexei takes place at the ball. There, some inexplicable chemistry flares up between them again. When Karenina returns to her native Petersburg, Vronsky, unconscious from the passion that has captured his mind, goes after her. There, Alexey Kirillovich becomes the shadow of Anna Karenina - he follows her every step, tries to constantly be next to her. At the same time, the officer is not at all embarrassed by the fact that Anna is married, and her husband is a man of high social status. On the contrary, Vronsky’s love grew stronger from the fact that his chosen one turned out to be a woman from high society.
Anna Karenina, who has never had anything but deep respect for her husband, falls in love with Alexei Vronsky. Falls in love and is ashamed of his vicious feelings. At first, Anna tries to escape from herself, return to her usual life and find peace of mind, but all her attempts at resistance ended in failure. A year after they met, Karenina becomes Vronsky’s mistress. Over time, the connection between Karenina and Vronsky becomes known throughout St. Petersburg. Alexey Karenin, having learned about his wife’s infidelity, punishes her in the most cruel way - he forces her to continue to play the role of his loving wife.
CONTINUED BELOW
Anna soon finds out that she is pregnant from Vronsky. The officer invites her to leave her husband, but Karenina does not agree. Immediately after the birth of her daughter, she almost dies. The tragedy forces Alexei Alexandrovich to forgive his wife and her lover. He allows Anna to continue to live in his house and bear his last name. And Anna herself, in her dying state, begins to treat her husband warmer. But after recovery, everything returns to normal. Anna, whose conscience could not stand Karenin’s generosity, leaves with Vronsky for Europe. The lovers take the newborn girl with them. Anna's son remains with his father.
After a short absence, Vronsky and Karenina return to St. Petersburg. There Anna Karenina sadly realizes that she is now a real outcast for secular society. But Vronsky, on the contrary, is happy to see in any company. Separation from her son caused Anna additional suffering. But on Seryozha’s birthday, Anna secretly sneaks into the boy’s bedroom. The meeting was very touching - mother and son cried with happiness. They wanted to say so much to each other, but they were unable to talk - a servant came into Seryozha’s room and said that Alexey Karenin would come in any minute. When the official entered the nursery, Anna ran away, leaving Seryozha sobbing.
Relations between Karenina and Vronsky gradually began to deteriorate. The attitude of society towards Anna also contributed to the fading of their warm feelings. High society pointed fingers at Anna, and some society ladies did not hesitate to publicly insult her. Tired of the constant pressure, Anna, Alexey and their little daughter Anya move to Vronsky’s estate. Far from the bustle of the city, Anna hoped to improve relations with her lover, however, Alexey himself tried to create all the conditions for his beloved. However, it was difficult for them to get along with each other. The officer regularly went to business meetings and social events in St. Petersburg, but Anna, like a leper, had to sit at home. Due to Vronsky's constant absences, Karenina begins to suspect him of treason. Scenes of jealousy became a mandatory addition to dinner in their home. At the same time, life is darkened by a protracted divorce process. In order to solve this problem, Anna and Alexey move to Moscow for a while. Earlier, Karenin promised that he would give Seryozha to Anna, but at the last moment he changed his mind. He did this solely to hurt the woman who betrayed him. Having learned that the court left Seryozha with her ex-husband, Anna almost went crazy with grief...
Lost, unhappy Anna Karenina argues more and more with Vronsky. One day Anna Karenina suspected him of intending to marry someone else. Tired of constant hysterics, Alexey goes to his mother. As soon as Vronsky left, Anna clearly felt a burning need for reconciliation with her beloved. She rushes after Vronsky to the station.
Arriving at the place, Anna Karenina remembers her first meeting with Vronsky, their timid glances at each other, that incomprehensible feeling that swallowed her up. Anna also remembered the watchman who died under the carriage. At that very second Anna understands - this is the solution to all problems! This is how she can wash away the shame and get rid of the constantly oppressive feeling of shame for her actions! This is how she, who has exhausted herself and those around her, will be able to throw off the burden that has already become unbearable! A second of delay - and Anna throws herself under an oncoming train.
After Anna’s death, Vronsky repented - late, senselessly, but he repented. Deciding to follow Karenina's example, Alexey began to look at death as a deliverance. He volunteers to go to war, hoping that he will never come back.
Prototype
Anna Karenina is an image created on the basis of three prototypes. The first is Maria Hartung, daughter
Tatyana Drubich, who played Anna Karenina in Solovyov’s film adaptation of Lev Tolstoy’s novel, speaks about the age of her heroine somehow uncertainly, I would say, evasively. Literally: “Tolstoy does not have a single mention of Anna’s age. Karenin was 44, but with Anna there is complete uncertainty. It is only known that she married late. Karenin married her by some coincidence. It is clear that this the story of mature people..." (From an interview with Komsomolskaya Pravda).
It may seem that Drubich, willingly or unwillingly, is trying to justify the choice of director Sergei Solovyov, who saw his Anna in her, the 45-year-old actress. Well, a film adaptation is always an interpretation: each of us has our own Anna, and our Vronsky. In the end, Oleg Yankovsky, who brilliantly and very convincingly played Karenin, looked older than his 44-year-old book character.
And yet, determining the age of Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina (Drubich argues precisely with this fact) is not so difficult. Indeed, there are no direct references to him in the novel. But there are more than obvious clues. Let's go back to the source. In the fourth part of the novel, Stiva talks with Anna:
“You can’t see your situation like I do. Let me tell you my opinion frankly.” Again he smiled cautiously with his almond smile. “I’ll start from the beginning: you married a man who is twenty years older than you. You married without love or not knowing love. It was a mistake, let's say.
- A terrible mistake! - said Anna."
(L.N. Tolstoy. Anna Karenina. Part four)
So, Karenin is forty-four, and Anna is twenty years (plus or minus a year or two - it doesn’t matter) younger than her husband. Thus, she is 25-26 years old. No more! Not 30, not 35, and certainly not 40. What kind of “complete uncertainty” can we talk about? Clarity! Absolute. Another thing is that for the 70s of the 19th century, 26-year-old Anna was considered a completely mature woman, and her husband (remember, he was only 44 years old) was “almost an old man.”
Key words: novel, Tolstoy, Sergei Solovyov, Anna Karenina
Publications in the Literature section
What are your years?
What kind of literary heroes do you imagine? Adults who have experienced a lot, they resolve complex moral issues, change their own and others’ destinies. Have you ever tried to find out how old these people are? It turns out that many of them are quite young by modern standards.
"Anna Karenina". Anna - 25–26 years old
The exact age of Anna Karenina is not mentioned in the novel, but some conclusions can be drawn from quotes from the characters themselves. So, at the time of the beginning of her affair with Vronsky, Anna had been married for eight years:
“Alexey Alexandrovich smiled coldly with his lips alone, wanting to show her and himself the firmness of his conviction; but this ardent defense, although it did not shake him, poisoned his wound. He spoke with great animation.
- It is very difficult to make mistakes when the wife herself announces this to her husband. Announces that eight years of life and a son are all a mistake and that she wants to live again,” he said angrily, sniffling.
“Anna and vice - I can’t connect, I can’t believe it.”Leo Tolstoy. "Anna Karenina"
We meet the second remark, which brings us closer to the clue to Karenina’s age, in the heroine’s conversation with her brother Stiva:
“You cannot see your situation like I do. Let me tell you my opinion frankly. - Again he smiled cautiously with his almond smile. - I'll start from the beginning: you married a man who is twenty years older than you. You married without love or without knowing love. It was a mistake, let's say.
- Terrible mistake! - said Anna.”Leo Tolstoy. "Anna Karenina"
"The Captain's Daughter". Petr Grinev - 17 years old
The terrible events of the Pugachev uprising, a duel with the scoundrel Shvabrin and a love that will last a lifetime - all this the hero of the story “The Captain's Daughter” experienced at a tender age by modern standards. However, even Pushkin’s contemporaries were not at all surprised by the youth of Petrusha Grinev, and the events of the story, we recall, take place half a century before the author’s birth.
“I lived as a teenager, chasing pigeons and playing leapfrog with the yard boys. Meanwhile, I was sixteen years old. Then my fate changed.
One autumn, my mother was making honey jam in the living room, and I, licking my lips, looked at the seething foam. Father at the window was reading the Court Calendar, which he receives every year. This book always had a strong influence on him: he never re-read it without special participation, and reading this always produced in him an amazing excitement of bile. Mother, who knew by heart all his habits and customs, always tried to shove the unfortunate book as far away as possible, and thus the Court Calendar did not catch his eye sometimes for entire months. But when he found it by chance, he would not let it out of his hands for hours at a time. So, the priest read the Court Calendar, occasionally shrugging his shoulders and repeating in a low voice: “Lieutenant General!.. He was a sergeant in my company!.. He was a holder of both Russian orders!.. How long ago have we...” Finally, the priest threw the calendar on the sofa and plunged into reverie, which did not bode well.
Suddenly he turned to his mother: “Avdotya Vasilyevna, how old is Petrusha?”
“Yes, now I’m seventeen years old,” answered my mother. - Petrusha was born in the same year that Aunt Nastasya Garasimovna frowned, and when else...
“Okay,” interrupted the priest, “it’s time for him to go into service.” It’s enough for him to run around the maidens and climb dovecotes.”Alexander Pushkin. "The Captain's Daughter"
"Eugene Onegin". Onegin and the general, Tatiana's husband
Thanks to time indications generously scattered throughout the novel “Eugene Onegin,” literary critic Yuri Lotman calculated the exact year of birth of the title character. He also drew attention to another interesting fact: Tatiana’s husband, an “important general” whose name we don’t even know, turns out to be not an old man at all.
“Contrary to popular belief, still N.O. Lerner (essay “Tatyana’s Husband” in the book: “Stories about Pushkin”, L., 1929, pp. 213–216) showed that Tatiana’s husband could well have been an old man. Griboyedov wrote to Begichev in 1816: “...Nowadays, most of the generals are those whose chins are not pubescent” (A.S. Griboyedov. Complete collection of works, vol. III. Pg., 1917, p. 122). Onegin, who was born in or around 1795, could have been less than thirty years old in the spring of 1825. Prince N is his relative and friend! - with whom Onegin is on first name terms, he could be five years older.”
"Woe from Wit". Sofia - 17 years old
In the play "Woe from Wit" Sophia appears as an adult girl, seventeen years old is the age of marriage, but we know that they met Chatsky earlier, moreover, they were in love with each other. And again, Yuri Lotman suggests that at the beginning of the story left behind the scenes, Sophia could not have been more than fourteen.
“...Chatsky was absent for three years, therefore, fell in love with her [Sophia] when she was 14 years old, and perhaps earlier, since the text shows that before his resignation and departure abroad, he served in the army for some time and for a certain period lived in St. Petersburg (“Tatyana Yuryevna told something, / Returning from St. Petersburg, / With the ministers about your connection...” - III, 3). Consequently, Sophia was 12–14 years old when the time came for her and Chatsky
Those feelings, in both of us the movements of those hearts,
Which have never cooled in me,
No entertainment, no change of place.
I breathed and lived by them, I was constantly busy!”Yuri Lotman. "Roman A.S. Pushkin "Eugene Onegin". Comment"
"Poor Lisa". Lisa - 17 years old
Another quite “adult” heroine, about whose youth the author nevertheless tells the reader. Lisa fell in love with Erast at the age of seventeen, but already at fifteen the poor thing was left an orphan with a sick mother in her arms and was forced to forget childhood fun.
“Only Lisa, who remained after her father for fifteen years, - only Lisa, not sparing her tender youth, not sparing her rare beauty, worked day and night - weaving canvases, knitting stockings, picking flowers in the spring, and taking berries in the summer - and selling them in Moscow. The sensitive, kind old woman, seeing her daughter’s tirelessness, often pressed her to her weakly beating heart, called her divine mercy, nurse, the joy of her old age, and prayed to God to reward her for all that she does for her mother.”
Nikolai Karamzin. "Poor Lisa"
"War and Peace". Natasha Rostova - 13 years old at the beginning of the novel; at the time of the death of Prince Andrei - 20 years
The novel begins in 1805; it is reported that Natasha was only thirteen years old at that time, but she had already managed to force Boris to swear eternal love for her, and he subsequently did not hesitate to give up this oath.
The years passed, and by the time the Napoleonic army appeared in Moscow, the heroine was already twenty. She managed to survive a number of disappointments and betrayals, and also suffered the death of Prince Andrei.
“The guest’s daughter was already straightening her dress, looking questioningly at her mother, when suddenly from the next room several men’s and women’s feet were heard running to the door, the crash of a chair being snagged and knocked over, and a thirteen-year-old girl ran into the room, wrapping her short muslin skirt around something, and stopped. in the middle of the room. It was obvious that she accidentally, with an uncalculated run, ran so far. At the same moment a student with a crimson collar, a guards officer, a fifteen-year-old girl and a fat, ruddy boy in a child’s jacket appeared at the door.
The count jumped up and, swaying, spread his arms wide around the running girl.