The circumstances which gave rise to this correspondence are well-known to our readers. In 1847, N. Gogol, who was living abroad, published his
Admirers of Gogol, having accepted as truth the opinions which had shone through so brilliantly in his works, were insulted by his renunciation, his defense of the status quo, his
He published a strong article against Gogol's new book in
Hence the correspondence. In giving more publicity to these letters, we are far from any idea of condemnation and reprimand. It is time for us to look upon publicity with grown-up eyes. Publicity is a purgatory from which the memory of the departed passes on into history, the only life possible beyond the grave.
There is no need to hide anything; in publicity there is repentance, the last judgment and certain reconciliation, if there can be reconciliation. Moreover, nothing must be hidden; only that which is unimportant and empty is forgotten, lost without a trace.
The whole question is; do Gogol and Belinsky belong to us as public figures in the field of Russian thought? And if so—was there a correspondence between them?
As I have already said, Belinsky read me his letter and that of Gogol in Paris.
Notes
Source: "Primechanie k 'Perepiske N. Gogolia s Belinskim' v
♦ 7 *
Forward! Forward! [1856]
Keep moving now, do not stand in one place, it is difficult to say what will come and how, but there has been a real jolt and the ice has begun to break up. Move forward. You'll be amazed how easy it will be to go on after this.
This morning, Count Orlov threw the last clump of earth on the grave of Nicholas, having solemnly witnessed his death and along with it the beginning of a new era for Russia.
The war was costly for you and peace brought no glory, but the blood of the Sevastopol warriors did not flow in vain if you take advantage of that terrible lesson. Roads strewn with corpses, soldiers worn out before encountering the enemy, poor communications, confusion in the quartermaster service—all clearly demonstrated the incompatibility of a deadening autocracy not only with development and general welfare, but even with force and external order, with that mechanical supplying of the essentials that is despotism's ideal. To what purpose was the oppression of thought, the persecution of the word, eternal parades and instruction, to what purpose was police surveillance over the entire government, with hundreds of thousands of documents being received and issued?
The purpose was that
"Do you really believe in the tremendous power of the tsar of which you speak?" I said in 1853 at a Polish meeting in London, and I repeat my words, because events have so sharply confirmed them. "Russia