Maksym Rylsky

Maksym Tadeyovych Rylsky (Ukrainian: Максим Тадейович Рильський; Russian: Максим Фадеевич Рыльский; 19 March [O.S. 7 March] 1895 in Kiev 24 July 1964 id.) was a Ukrainian poet, translator, academician, Doctor of Philological Sciences.

Maksym Rylsky
Максим Тадейович Рильський
1915, Gymnasium graduate[1]
BornMaksym Tadeyovych Rylsky
(1895-03-19)March 19, 1895
Kiev
Died24 July 1964(1964-07-24) (aged 69)
Kiev
Resting placeBaikove Cemetery
OccupationPoet
LanguageUkrainian language
NationalityUkrainian
CitizenshipSoviet Union
Alma materKiev University
GenreNeoclassicism, Social realism
Notable works"Troyandy j vynohrad" (Roses and vine)
Notable awards
Years active1907–1964
SpouseKateryna Mykolaivna Rylska[2]
ChildrenBohdan Rylsky[2]

Signature

Biography

Rylsky was born in Kiev in 1895 in a family of public activist, ethnographer, publicist, member of the "Kiev Stara Hromada" (Old Community), Tadei Rozeslavovych Rylsky. His early education, young Rylsky received at home. In 1908 he entered the 3rd grade of the Kiev Private Gymnasium of Volodymyr Naumenko. During his gymnasium period Rylsky befriended with families of Mykola Lysenko and Oleksandr Rusov. In 1915-17 he studied at medical faculty of Kiev University, with creation of Ukrainian People's University in October 1917, Rylsky transferred to its history and philology faculty.

Due to Russian invasion in late of 1917, Rylsky left Kiev and with his brother Ivan worked at food administration in the city of Skvyra, later worked as a rural teacher in villages nearby. In 1918 Bolshevik sympathizers in Romanivka drove Rylsky from his family house, robbed it, destroyed invaluable archive and library of his father.[1]

Rylsky returned to Kiev only in 1923 where at first he was earning money as a teacher.

Works

He began writing poems early. His first poem was published in 1907 in a newspaper "Rada", his first collection "At white isles" (Ukrainian: На білих островах) saw the world in 1910. Already in 1918 his poems "Tsarevna", "On the edge of the forest", collection "Beneath autumn stars" showed that period of internship and "voice sampling" has passed, and his 1922 collection "Blue distance" confirmed it for sure.

The 1920s were marked by the poet's creative flourishing: his collections "Through storm and snow" (1925), "The 13th spring" (1926), "Where roads meet", "Hum and rumbling" (both 1929). In the last of those collections Rylsky arose also as a gifted translator of world poetry i.e. works of Paul Verlaine, Valery Bryusov, Stéphane Mallarmé, Maurice Maeterlinck, and others. The event of cultural and artistic life became a translation of "Pan Tadeusz" of Adam Mickiewicz.

As a representative of the "pure art" doctrine, during the years when the Stalinists adopted the official doctrine of "socialist realism". In 1937 he was involved in rewriting the libretto of Mykola Lysenko's opera Taras Bulba, returning later to neo-classical forms. Maksym Rylsky is one of the most outstanding Ukrainian poets of the 20th century and master of the genres of the modern sonnet and the long narrative poem. He was closely associated with the Neoclassicist group of Ukrainian poets, who employed traditional poetic forms with rhyme and meter, wrote in a clear and accessible contemporary idiom, and often referenced Ancient Greek and Roman mythology as well as numerous other authors from world literature in their poetry.

During the wartime period he wrote two masterful long poems that deviated from socialist realism—"Thirst" (1942) and "Journey to Youth" (1941-4), for which he was again publicly chastised. In 1942 he became Director of the Institute of Fine Arts, Folklore and Ethnography in Kyiv, a post that he held until his death in 1964. The Institute now bears his name. He published some 30 collections of original poetry during his lifetime as well as numerous translations and scholarly works. By 1974 almost five million copies of his works in the original or in translation had appeared in the USSR.

Rylsky joined Communist party in 1943 and was a member of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR in 1946.

Awards

Prizes

  • Lenin Prize, 1960 – for his collections of poems "Daleki neboskhyly" (1959) and "Troyandy j vynohrad" (1957)
  • Stalin Prize, 1943 – for his collections of poems "Slovo pro ridnu matir", "Svitova zorya", "Svitla zbroya", "Mandrivka v molodist"
  • Stalin Prize, 1950 – translation into Ukrainian a poem "Pan Tadeusz" by Adam Mickiewicz

See also

References

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