Александр Пушкин

Eugene Onegin / Евгений Онегин


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now philanthropy his soul,

      And now his youthful heart desires

      The path which leads to glory's goal.

      His harp beneath that sky had rung

      Where sometime Goethe, Schiller sung,

      And at the altar of their fame

      He kindled his poetic flame.

      But from the Muses' loftiest height

      The gifted songster never swerved,

      But proudly in his song preserved

      An ever transcendental flight;

      His transports were quite maidenly,

      Charming with grave simplicity.

X

      He sang of love – to love a slave.

      His ditties were as pure and bright

      As thoughts which gentle maidens have,

      As a babe's slumber, or the light

      Of the moon in the tranquil skies,

      Goddess of lovers' tender sighs.

      He sang of separation grim,

      Of what not, and of distant dim,

      Of roses to romancers dear;

      To foreign lands he would allude,

      Where long time he in solitude

      Had let fall many a bitter tear:

      He sang of life's fresh colours stained

      Before he eighteen years attained.

XI

      Since Eugene in that solitude

      Gifts such as these alone could prize,

      A scant attendance Lenski showed

      At neighbouring hospitalities.

      He shunned those parties boisterous;

      The conversation tedious

      About the crop of hay, the wine,

      The kennel or a kindred line,

      Was certainly not erudite

      Nor sparkled with poetic fire,

      Nor wit, nor did the same inspire

      A sense of social delight,

      But still more stupid did appear

      The gossip of their ladies fair.

XII

      Handsome and rich, the neighbourhood

      Lenski as a good match received, —

      Such is the country custom good;

      All mothers their sweet girls believed

      Suitable for this semi-Russian.

      He enters: rapidly discussion

      Shifts, tacks about, until they prate

      The sorrows of a single state.

      Perchance where Dunia pours out tea

      The young proprietor we find;

      To Dunia then they whisper: Mind!

      And a guitar produced we see,

      And Heavens! warbled forth we hear:

      Come to my golden palace, dear![26]

XIII

      But Lenski, having no desire

      Vows matrimonial to break,

      With our Onéguine doth aspire

      Acquaintance instantly to make.

      They met. Earth, water, prose and verse,

      Or ice and flame, are not diverse

      If they were similar in aught.

      At first such contradictions wrought

      Mutual repulsion and ennui,

      But grown familiar side by side

      On horseback every day they ride —

      Inseparable soon they be.

      Thus oft – this I myself confess —

      Men become friends from idleness.

XIV

      But even thus not now-a-days!

      In spite of common sense we're wont

      As cyphers others to appraise,

      Ourselves as unities to count;

      And like Napoleons each of us

      A million bipeds reckons thus

      One instrument for his own use —

      Feeling is silly, dangerous.

      Eugene, more tolerant than this

      (Though certainly mankind he knew

      And usually despised it too),

      Exceptionless as no rule is,

      A few of different temper deemed,

      Feeling in others much esteemed.

XV

      With smiling face he Lenski hears;

      The poet's fervid conversation

      And judgment which unsteady veers

      And eye which gleams with inspiration —

      All this was novel to Eugene.

      The cold reply with gloomy mien

      He oft upon his lips would curb,

      Thinking: 'tis foolish to disturb

      This evanescent boyish bliss.

      Time without me will lessons give,

      So meantime let him joyous live

      And deem the world perfection is!

      Forgive the fever youth inspires,

      And youthful madness, youthful fires.

XVI

      The gulf between them was so vast,

      Debate commanded ample food —

      The laws of generations past,

      The fruits of science, evil, good,

      The prejudices all men have,

      The fatal secrets of the grave,

      And life and fate in turn selected

      Were to analysis subjected.

      The fervid poet would recite,

      Carried away by ecstasy,

      Fragments of northern poetry,

      Whilst Eugene condescending quite,

      Though scarcely following what was said,

      Attentive listened to the lad.

XVII

      But more the passions occupy

      The converse of our hermits twain,

      And, heaving a regretful sigh,

      An exile from their troublous reign,

      Eugene would speak regarding these.

      Thrice happy who their agonies

      Hath suffered but indifferent grown,

      Still happier he who ne'er hath known!

      By absence who hath chilled his love,

      His hate by slander, and who spends

      Existence without wife or friends,

      Whom jealous transport cannot move,

      And who the rent-roll of his race

      Ne'er trusted to the treacherous ace.

XVIII

      When,