What a mood July parsnips evoke. Analysis of the poem “Poet” by Pushkin. Being famous is not nice

Essay topics 17.3

What is unique about the sound of the poet’s theme and poetry in B.L.’s lyrics? Pasternak?

What is unique about the composition of I.A.’s story? Bunin's "Mr. from San Francisco"?

DEFINITION OF POETRY

This is a cool whistle,

This is the clicking of crushed ice floes,

This is the night that chills the leaf,

This is a duel between two nightingales.

These are sweet rotten peas,

These are the tears of the universe in the shoulder blades,

This is from consoles and flutes – Figaro

Falls like hail onto the garden bed.

Everything that is so important to find at night

On deep bathed bottoms,

And bring the star to the cage

On trembling wet palms.

It’s stuffier than boards in the water.

The firmament was filled with alder.

It suits these stars to laugh,

But the universe is a deaf place.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1917)

What type of trope, based on the resemblance of inanimate objects to living beings, is used in the line “It suits the stars to laugh”?

Name the method of correlating various phenomena used by the poet in the phrases “buried by alder” and “overthrown by hail.”

In what size is B.L.’s poem written? Pasternak "Definition of Poetry"?

What is it called stylistic figure, used by Pasternak in the first seven lines of the poem and based on their repetition initial words?

What stylistic device does Pasternak use to enhance the expressiveness of the image in the words “Figaro // Falls like hail onto the garden bed”?

8. Why in the poem about the poetry of B.L. Pasternak talks about music and nature?

9. What is the poem by B.L. Pasternak about essence poetic creativity close to Russian lyric poetry of the 19th – 20th centuries?

LENINGRAD

I returned to my city, familiar to tears,

To the veins, to the swollen glands of children.

You're back here, so swallow it quickly

Fish oil of Leningrad river lanterns,

Recognize the December day soon,

Where the yolk is mixed with the ominous tar.

Petersburg! I don't want to die yet!

You have my phone numbers.

Petersburg! I still have addresses

I live on the black stairs, and to the temple

A bell torn out with meat hits me,

And all night long I wait for my dear guests,

Moving the shackles of the door chains.

(O.E. Mandelstam, 1930)

Which artistic technique, based on the transfer of the properties of one phenomenon to another based on their similarity, is used by the author of the poem (“shackles of door chains”)?

Indicate the size in which the poem “Leningrad” is written (without indicating the number of feet).

What is the repetition of identical words at the beginning of adjacent stanzas called (“Petersburg! I don’t want to die yet...” - “Petersburg! I still have addresses...”)?

What is the name of the appeal that does not imply a response and was used by O.E. Mandelstam to create the effect of a dialogue with your favorite city: “Petersburg! Do I still have addresses?

8. Why in the poem called “Leningrad” does the lyrical hero address Petersburg?

9. Which of the Russian poets addressed the image of the city on the Neva and how the content of their works relates to the poem by O.E. Mandelstam's "Leningrad"?

The hum died down. I went on stage.
Leaning against the door frame,
I catch in a distant echo,
What will happen in my lifetime.

The darkness of the night is pointed at me
A thousand binoculars on the axis.
If possible, Abba Father,
Carry this cup past.

I love your stubborn plan
And I agree to play this role.
But now there is another drama,
And this time fire me.


And the end of the road is inevitable.
I am alone, everything is drowning in pharisaism.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1946)

Poem "Hamlet" by B.L. Pasternak “attributed” his hero famous novel. Indicate the title of this work.

What is the term for one of the tropes? figurative expression, exaggerating any action or phenomenon (“The darkness of the night is pointed at me // A thousand binoculars on the axis”)?

Philosophical poem by B.L. Pasternak ends with a line that is an aphoristic folk saying. What is this saying called?

What is the name of a stylistic device based on the use of identical vowel sounds and giving the verse a special sound expressiveness (“I catch in a distant echo, // What will happen in my lifetime.”)?

In what size is B.L.’s poem written? Pasternak's "Hamlet" (give the answer in the nominative case without indicating the number of feet)?

8. Why are the thoughts of B.L. Are Pasternak's ideas about personality and fate accompanied by numerous images and details related to the world of theater?

9. Which Russian poet is close to B.L. Pasternak in the depiction of drama
lone hero?

A ghost is wandering around the house.

Steps overhead all day.

Shadows flicker in the attic.

A brownie is wandering around the house.

Hanging out inappropriately everywhere,

Gets in the way of everything,

In a robe he creeps towards the bed,

He tears the tablecloth off the table.

Don’t wipe your feet at the threshold,

Runs in a whirlwind draft

And with a curtain, like with a dancer,

Soars to the ceiling.

Who is this spoiled ignorant

And this ghost and double?

Yes, this is our visiting tenant,

Our summer summer vacationer.

For all his short rest

We rent out the whole house to him.

July with thunderstorm, July air

He rented rooms from us.

July, dragging around in clothes

Dandelion fluff, burdock,

July, coming home through the windows,

All loudly speaking out loud.

Steppe unkempt disheveled man,

Smelling of linden and grass,

Tops and the smell of dill,

The July air is meadow.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1956)

Determine the meter in which B.L.’s poem is written. Pasternak “July” (without indicating the number of stops).

What is the consonance of the ends of poetic lines called (ghost - shadows; head - brownie, etc.)?

From the list below, select three names of artistic means and techniques used by the poet in the penultimate stanza of this poem.

1) anaphora

2) hyperbole

3) neologism

4) sound recording

5) vernacular

What artistic device, associated with the transfer of the properties of living beings to inanimate objects, is the main one when describing July in the first three stanzas of the poem?

What stylistic figure, associated with the violation of the usual word order in a phrase, is used in the lines: “Shadows flicker in the attic. // There’s a brownie wandering around the house.”?

8. What mood is imbued with the image of the July season in the poem by B.L. Pasternak?

9. Which Russian poets does Pasternak continue by depicting natural phenomena humanized? Justify your answer by indicating the authors and titles of the poems.

In the grass, among the wild balsams,

Daisies and forest baths,

We lie with our arms thrown back

And raised my head to the sky.

Grass on a pine clearing

Impenetrable and dense.

We'll look at each other again

We change poses and places.

And so, immortal for a while,

We are numbered among the pine trees

And from diseases, epidemics

And death is freed.

With deliberate monotony,

Like an ointment, thick blue

Lies bunnies on the ground

And gets our sleeves dirty.

We share the rest of the red forest,

Under the creeping goosebumps

Pine sleeping pills mixture

Lemon with incense breathing.

And so frantic on blue

Running fire trunks,

And we won’t take our hands off for so long

From under broken heads,

And so much breadth in the gaze,

And everyone is so submissive from the outside,

That somewhere behind the trunks there is a sea

I see it all the time.

There are waves above these branches

And, falling off the boulder,

Shrimp rain down

From the troubled bottom.

And in the evenings behind a tug

Dawn stretches across traffic jams

And leaks fish oil

And the hazy haze of amber.

It gets dark, and gradually

The moon buries all traces

Under the white magic of foam

AND black magic water.

And the waves are getting louder and higher,

And the audience is on the float

Crowds around a post with a poster,

Indistinguishable from a distance.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1941)

The poem clearly identifies two structural parts: in reality - pine trees, in the imagination - the sea. What is the name of the relationship and relative position of the parts of a work, its images?

- “Hail of shrimp”, “white magic of foam”, etc. What remedy artistic expression, based on the figurative meaning of words, was used by the poet when creating images?

What type of sound writing, based on the repetition of consonant sounds, is used in the following lines: “There are waves above these branches // And, falling from the boulder...”?

From the list below, select three names of artistic means and techniques used by the poet in the ninth stanza of this poem.

1) anaphora

3) inversion

5) hyperbole

Name a figurative and expressive means based on the comparison of objects and phenomena: “Like ointment, thick blue // Lays like bunnies on the ground...”

8. How is the author’s thought about the unity of man and nature reflected in the poem “Pines”?

9. Which of the Russian poets, like B.L. Pasternak, reflected the experiences of the human soul in pictures of nature? Justify your answer by indicating the authors and titles of the poems.

Loving others is a heavy cross,

And you are beautiful without gyrations,

And your beauty is a secret

It is tantamount to the solution to life.

In spring the rustling of dreams is heard

And the rustle of news and truths.

You come from a family of such fundamentals.

Your meaning, like air, is selfless.

It's easy to wake up and see clearly,

Shake out the verbal trash from the heart

And live without getting clogged in the future,

All this is not a big trick.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1931)

What is the consonance of the ends of poetic lines called (dreams - foundations; truths - selfless, etc.)?

What type of literature does this work belong to?

Indicate the size in which B.L.’s poem is written. Pasternak “Loving others is a heavy cross...” (without indicating the number of feet).

What type of sound writing does Pasternak use in the poems: “In the spring you can hear the rustle of dreams / And the rustle of news and truths”?

From the list below, select three names of artistic means and techniques used by the poet in the second stanza of the poem.

1) inversion

2) metaphor

3) anaphora

4) comparison

5) grotesque

8. What spiritual discoveries did love bring to the hero of this poem?

9. Which of the Russian poets turned to reflections on the essence of love and in what ways their works are close or contrast to the poem by B.L. Pasternak?

February. Get some ink and cry
Write about February sobbingly,
While the rumbling slush
In the spring it burns black.

Get the fly. For six hryvnia,
Through Blagovest, through the click of wheels,
Move to where there is rain
More noisy ink and tears.

Where, like charred pears,
From the trees of a thousand rooks
They will fall into puddles and collapse
Dry sadness to the bottom of the eyes.

Underneath the thawed patches turn black,
And the wind is torn with screams,
And the more randomly, the more surely
Poems are composed to the point of sobs.

B.L. Pasternak, 1912

What is the name of the stylistic device used by B.L. Pasternak to enhance the sound expressiveness of the verse, for example, in the phrase (“click of wheels”)?

What term is used in literary criticism to describe the artistic technique of exaggeration used by B.L. Pasternak in this poem

“From the trees of a thousand rooks
Will they fall apart..."?

Indicate the name of the poetic meter in which B.L.’s poem was written. Pasternak “February. Get some ink and cry..."

8. What artistic images of B.L.’s poems? Do parsnips seem unusual to you?

9. Which Russian poets of the twentieth century sought to update poetic forms?

The hum died down. I went on stage*.
Leaning against the door frame,
I catch in a distant echo,
What will happen in my lifetime.

The darkness of the night is directed towards me
A thousand binoculars on the axis.
If possible, Abba Father**,
Carry this cup past.

I love your stubborn plan
And I agree to play this role.
But now there is another drama,
And this time fire me.

But the order of actions has been thought out,
And the end of the road is inevitable.
I am alone, everything is drowning in pharisaism***.
Living life is not a field to cross.

(B.L. Pasternak)

*stage – here: stage, theater platform

**Abba Father - an appeal to God (cf. Lord!)

***pharisaism – here: deceit and pretense

What is the name in literary criticism for a means of allegorical expressiveness, formed on the principle of similarity and which allowed the author to create “Hamlet” in the poem? hidden comparison“life is theater”?

Copy from the third stanza of the poem by B.L. Pasternak's "Hamlet" is a figurative definition expressing the subjective attitude of the lyrical hero to higher powers who controls his fate.

What is the name of the selected B.L. Pasternak stylistic device, based on the repetition of homogeneous consonant sounds:

“But the schedule of actions has been thought out,

And the end of the road is inevitable..."?

Indicate the term that is used to describe a short saying containing a complete thought of the lyrical hero of B.L.’s poem. Pasternak "Hamlet":

Living life is not a field to cross.

What artistic technique allowed B.L. Pasternak to create an artistic image of a crowded auditorium in a poem:

"The darkness of the night is directed at me

A thousand binoculars on the axis"?

Determine the meter in which B.L.’s poem is written. Pasternak "Hamlet".

8. Why is the poem by B.L. Is Pasternak called “Hamlet”?

9. Which Russian writers in their works turned to the “eternal images” of world literature?

ABOUT THESE POEMS

There's a crowd on the sidewalks

With glass and sun in half,

Recites the attic

With bow to frames and winter,

Leapfrog will sneak to the cornices

Oddities, disasters and notices.

It won't take a month for a snowstorm to take revenge,

The ends and beginnings will be swept away.

Suddenly I remember: there is the sun;

I will see: the light has not been the same for a long time.

Christmas will look like a little jackdaw,

And a wild day

Will reveal a lot of things

Which I don’t even know, dear one.

In a muffler, shielding myself with my palm,

I’ll shout to the kids through the window:

What, dear ones, we have

Millennium in the yard?

Who blazed the path to the door,

To the hole covered with cereals,

While I was smoking with Byron,

While I was drinking with Edgar Poe?

While I enter Daryal as a friend,

Like hell, the workshop and the arsenal,

I am life, like Lermontov's trembling,

Like dipping my lips in vermouth.

(B.L. Pasternak, 1917)

Indicate the term denoting unity of beginning, repetition of a word or group of words at the beginning of several poetic lines:

While I was smoking with Byron,

While I was drinking with Edgar Poe?

Name a technique of artistic depiction that consists of transferring human properties onto inanimate objects, natural phenomena (“the attic recites”).

Determine the meter in which B.L.’s poem is written. Pasternak “About these poems” (without indicating the number of feet).

What is the name of the violation of the usual word order, which the author resorts to for a specific semantic purpose (“leapfrog will sneak to the eaves,” “who blazed the path to the door,” etc.)?

8. What is the meaning of the seclusion of the lyrical hero of the poem by B.L. Pasternak?

9. Which of the Russian poets addressed the topic of creativity and in what ways are their works close to the poem by B. L. Pasternak?

C3. Traditions of what popular in the 18th century literary genre continues G.R. Derzhavin, creating this poem? (Justify your position.)

C4. Which of the Russian poets developed the theme of “poetic immortality” in their work and what motives bring their works closer to the poem by G.R. Derzhavin "Monument"?

Pushkin (1799-1837)

C3. How do different poetic devices help express the idea of ​​this poem?

C4. What is the peculiarity of Pushkin’s freedom-loving lyrics and which of the Russian poets reveals the theme of freedom in their lyrics?

C3. How does the mood of the lyrical hero change throughout the poem?

C4. What are the similarities and differences between A.S.’s landscape lyrics? Pushkin and poems about nature created by subsequent poets?

C3. What does the lyrical hero of the poem mean when he calls on the poet “not to value the people’s love”?

C4. Which of the Russian lyricists addressed the topic of the high purpose of the poet and in what ways are their works consonant with Pushkin’s poem “The Poet”?

C3. How does A. S. Pushkin’s poem convey the idea of ​​the “pricelessness” of true friendship?

C4. Which of the Russian writers addressed the theme of friendship in their work and what brings their works closer to the poem by A. S. Pushkin?

Tyutchev (1803-1873)

C3. How do various poetic techniques help the author “convey the feelings that gripped the lyrical hero?

C4. What is special about the depiction of human feelings in the lyrics of F.I. Tyutchev and which Russian poets can be called his followers?

C3. For what purpose are ancient Greek mythological characters mentioned in the last stanza of the poem?

C4. What are the main themes of F.I.’s poetry? Tyutchev and the traditions of which of the Russian poets does he continue, revealing these themes?

C3. Can the above poem be classified as philosophical poetry? Justify your point of view.

C4. What are the features of the depiction of nature in the lyrics of F.I. Tyutchev and the lyrics of which of the previous and subsequent poets are close to Tyutchev?

C4. In the poems of which Russian poets can one find a continuation of the tradition of lyric poetry by F.I. Tyutchev and how do they relate to the poem “There are in the brightness of autumn evenings...”?

C3. What do you think the lyrical hero of F. I. Tyutchev’s poem is thinking about?

C4. In the works of which Russian poets does the theme of sympathy, humanism arise, and what motives bring them closer to the poem “We are not given to predict...”?

Lermontov (1814-1841)

C3. Like the composition of a poem and visual arts help the author express the main poetic idea?

C4. What is unique about Lermontov’s lyrical hero and which Russian poet can be called his creative successor?

C3. What problems are reflected in the poem?

C4. What are the main motives of M.Yu.’s lyrics? Lermontov and which Russian poets can be called successors of his traditions?

Prayer

C3. What is the main idea of ​​the poem by M.Yu. Lermontov’s “Prayer” (justify your answer)?

C4. Compare the poem by M.Yu. Lermontov “Prayer” with other poems of the poet known to you. What do you think are their similarities and differences?

C3. What feelings are filled with Lermontov’s poem “Prayer” (justify your answer)?

C4. In which works of Russian classical literature did turning to God contribute to the “rebirth” of the heroes, and how do their experiences relate to the feelings of the lyrical hero of the poem by M.Yu. Lermontov "Prayer"?

C3. What is the thematic affiliation of Lermontov’s poem “Prayer” (justify your answer)?

C4. In which works of Russian classical literature do the heroes, wanting to find peace of mind, resort to prayer, and how do their feelings relate to the experiences of the lyrical hero of the poem by M.Yu. Lermontov "Prayer"?

C3. What do you think of the lyrical heroine in Lermontov’s poem “From Under the Mysterious Cold Half-Mask...” (justify your answer)?

C4. In which works of Russian lyric poetry does the author paint the image of an ideal lover, and how do these images relate to the image of the heroine of the poem by M.Yu. Lermontov “From under the mysterious cold half mask...”?

C3. Describe the lyrical hero of this poem.

C4. What is the meaning of the image of the road, the path in this poem and in which works literature of the 19th century century does the road motif play a leading role?

C3. What causes the sad tone of Lermontov's "Monologue"?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the theme of personality and era, and in what ways are their works comparable to the above poem by M. Yu. Lermontov?

Fet (1820-1892)

The night was shining. The garden was full of moonlight

C4. What are the features of Fet’s poetic solution to the theme of love and in what poems of Russian poets are the same features found?

C3. How do various poetic techniques help the author convey the leading mood of the poem?

C4. What are the features of Fet’s poetic solution to the theme of love and in what poems of Russian poets are the same features found?

C3. What feelings and emotions does the lyrical hero of A. A. Fet’s poem “This morning, this joy...” experience?

C4. What do you think are the features syntactic construction A. A. Fet's poem "This morning, this joy..." and in which works of Russian poetry is poetic syntax an important artistic device?

C3. What thematic type of lyricism can the above poem by A. A. Fet be classified as and why?

C4. Which of the Russian poets addressed similar motifs in their lyrics and in what ways were their works consonant with the poem by A. A. Fet?

Nekrasov (1821-1877)

Yesterday, around six o'clock

C3. What images of N. Nekrasov’s creativity became the embodiment of the author’s ideal?

C4. Following A.S. Pushkin and N.V. Gogol N.A. Nekrasov in his works addresses the theme of St. Petersburg. As depicted by N.A. Petersburg Nekrasov?

C3. What features of the epic are inherent in the poem “Who Lives Well in Rus'”? (Describe in 2-3 words.)

C4. N.A. Nekrasov in his works addresses the theme of St. Petersburg. As depicted by N.A. Petersburg Nekrasov? Which other Russian poets and writers turned to St. Petersburg in their work?

C3. What, in your opinion, is the dramatic nature of the love theme in this poem?

C4. Which Russian poet is close to Nekrasov in depicting complex relationships between a man and a woman?

Bunin (1870-1953)

C3. Describe the lyrical hero of the poem.

C4. What is unique about Bunin’s landscape and the traditions of which of the previous poets does he embody in his lyrics?

Blok (1880-1921)

Russia

C3. What gives the central image of the poem artistic brightness and depth?

C4. In which works of Russian poets the image of Russia is recreated and what are their similarities and differences with the poem by A.A. Blok?

C3. What is the contradictory nature of the poet’s attitude towards Russia?

C4. What works of Russian poets are close to Blok’s feeling of Russia? (Give reasons for your answer)

C3. What is the meaning of identifying Rus' with the image of a woman (“Oh my Rus'! My wife!”) in the lyrics of A.A. Blok?

C4. Tell us about the main and favorite techniques that A. Blok used in his works. Which other poets used the same techniques in their works?

C3. What is the meaning of identifying Rus' with the image of a woman (“Oh my Rus'! My wife!”) in the lyrics of A.A. Blok?

C4. Theme of the Motherland. Its evolution in the work of A. Blok. What other poets of the Silver Age glorified their Motherland in the same way?

C3. What artistic images embody the poet’s ideas about love?

C4. What feelings are the poem “In the Restaurant” filled with and how is it consonant with love lyrics other Russian poets?

C3. What images help the reader understand the experiences of the lyrical hero of the poem “The wind brought from afar...”?

C4. How do the poems of A. A. Blok echo the poet’s state of mind and the state of the world around him, and what brings his poem closer to the works of other Russian poets?

C3. How did the ring composition of the poem help the poet show the drama of love?

C4. What works of Russian poets depict the drama of unrequited love and in what ways can these works be compared with the poem by A. A. Blok?

C3. What gives grounds to classify the poem in question by A. A. Blok as philosophical poetry?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the topic of Russian history and in what ways are their works comparable to the above poem by A. A. Blok?

A.K. Tolstoy (1882-1945)

C3. Why does the poet use the epistle form to express his idea?

C4. The work of which Russian poets of the 19th century is close to the poetry of A.K. Tolstoy and how exactly is their commonality manifested?

Akhmatova (1889-1966)

C3. Why is a poem that talks about love, A.A. Akhmatova calls “Poems about Petersburg”?

C4. In the works of which Russian poets does love appear not as a momentary feeling, but rises above time and space, and in what ways can their works be compared with Akhmatova’s poem?

Creation

C3. Describe the change in the state of the lyrical hero of the poem.

C4. The traditions of which of the previous poets were embodied in the lyrics of A. Akhmatova, dedicated to the theme of the poet and poetry?

C3. What is the inner appearance of the lyrical heroine in A. A. Akhmatova’s poem “...There was a voice for me. He called comfortingly...”?

C4. Which of the Russian poets turned to a patriotic theme in their work and what brings their works closer to the poem by A. A. Akhmatova?

Pasternak (1890-1960)

C3. What mood is imbued with the image of the July season in the poem by B.L. Pasternak?

C4. Which Russian poets does Pasternak continue, depicting natural phenomena as humanized? Justify your answer by indicating the authors and titles of the poems.

C3. What does B.L. see? Pasternak the tragedy of the lyrical hero of the poem “Hamlet”?

C4. In the works of which Russian poets does the theme of confrontation between the poet and society receive an interpretation similar to that of B.L. Pasternak, given in this poem?

C3. What meaning did the poet put into the final lines of the poem?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the topic of creativity and in what ways are their works consonant with the poem by B. L. Pasternak?

C3. What feelings does the lyrical hero of B. Pasternak’s poem “It’s snowing...” experience?

C4. In the poems of which poets does the image of fleeting time appear and what brings their works closer to the poem by B. Pasternak?

Tsvetaeva (1892-1941)

C3. How do you understand the meaning of the final stanza of the poem?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the theme of the homeland and in what ways are their works consonant with the poem by M. I. Tsvetaeva?

Mayakovsky (1893-1930)

C3. As the title of the poem by V.V. Mayakovsky's "The Satisfied Ones" correlate with his problems?

C4. In what works of Russian literature are the life and customs of the bureaucracy depicted and in what ways can these works be compared with the poem by V.V. Mayakovsky's "The Sitting Ones"?

Lilichka! Instead of a letter

C3. How do various poetic techniques help create the image of the lyrical hero of this poem?

C4. What was the innovation of V. Mayakovsky’s lyrics and the traditions of which of the previous poets were reflected in his work?

C3. Describe the lyrical hero of this poem and Mayakovsky’s lyrics in general.

C4. What is the main innovation of V. Mayakovsky’s lyrics and the traditions of which of the previous poets were reflected in his work?

Listen!

C3. How do various poetic techniques help the author convey the main idea of ​​the poem “Listen!”?

C4. In which works of Russian lyricism does the “star” theme sound and in what ways is it close to the theme of V.V.’s poem? Mayakovsky "Listen!"?

C3. Read V. Mayakovsky's poem "Listen." Give your interpretation and assessment of the work.

C4. How do you understand the words of V. Mayakovsky, who considered himself an artist, “mobilized and called upon by the revolution”? Which other poet of the early twentieth century felt the same way?

Option 1

Option 2

C3. What images of N. Nekrasov’s creativity became the embodiment of the author’s ideal?

C4. Following A.S. Pushkin and N.V. Gogol N.A. Nekrasov in his works addresses the theme of St. Petersburg. As depicted by N.A. Petersburg Nekrasov?

C3. What features of the epic are inherent in the poem “Who Lives Well in Rus'”? (Describe in 2-3 words.)

C4. N.A. Nekrasov in his works addresses the theme of St. Petersburg. As depicted by N.A. Petersburg Nekrasov? Which other Russian poets and writers turned to St. Petersburg in their work?

I don't like your irony

C3. What, in your opinion, is the dramatic nature of the love theme in this poem?

C4. Which Russian poet is close to Nekrasov in depicting complex relationships between a man and a woman?

Bunin (1870-1953)

Like in April at night in the alley

C3. Describe the lyrical hero of the poem.

C4. What is unique about Bunin’s landscape and the traditions of which of the previous poets does he embody in his lyrics?

Blok (1880-1921)

Russia

Option 1

Option 2

C3. What gives the central image of the poem artistic brightness and depth?

C4. In which works of Russian poets the image of Russia is recreated and what are their similarities and differences with the poem by A.A. Blok?

C3. What is the contradictory nature of the poet’s attitude towards Russia?

C4. What works of Russian poets are close to Blok’s feeling of Russia? (Give reasons for your answer)

I enter dark temples

C3. What is the meaning of identifying Rus' with the image of a woman (“Oh my Rus'! My wife!”) in the lyrics of A.A. Blok?

C4. Tell us about the main and favorite techniques that A. Blok used in his works. Which other poets used the same techniques in their works?

Stranger

C3. What is the meaning of identifying Rus' with the image of a woman (“Oh my Rus'! My wife!”) in the lyrics of A.A. Blok?

C4. Theme of the Motherland. Its evolution in the work of A. Blok. What other poets of the Silver Age glorified their Motherland in the same way?

At the restaurant

C3. What artistic images embody the poet’s ideas about love?

C4. What feelings are filled with the poem “In the Restaurant” and in what ways is it consonant with the love lyrics of other Russian poets?

The wind brought from afar

C3. What images help the reader understand the experiences of the lyrical hero of the poem “The wind brought from afar...”?

C4. How do the poems of A. A. Blok echo the poet’s state of mind and the state of the world around him, and what brings his poem closer to the works of other Russian poets?



About valor, about exploits, about glory

C3. How did the ring composition of the poem help the poet show the drama of love?

C4. What works of Russian poets depict the drama of unrequited love and in what ways can these works be compared with the poem by A. A. Blok?

On the Kulikovo field

C3. What gives grounds to classify the poem in question by A. A. Blok as philosophical poetry?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the topic of Russian history and in what ways are their works comparable to the above poem by A. A. Blok?

A.K. Tolstoy (1882-1945)

You're driving the click by mentioning it

C3. Why does the poet use the epistle form to express his idea?

C4. The work of which Russian poets of the 19th century is close to the poetry of A.K. Tolstoy and how exactly is their commonality manifested?

Akhmatova (1889-1966)

The heart beats evenly and rhythmically

C3. Why is a poem that talks about love, A.A. Akhmatova calls “Poems about Petersburg”?

C4. In the works of which Russian poets does love appear not as a momentary feeling, but rises above time and space, and in what ways can their works be compared with Akhmatova’s poem?

Creation

Option 1

Option 2

C3. Describe the change in the state of the lyrical hero of the poem.

C4. The traditions of which of the previous poets were embodied in the lyrics of A. Akhmatova, dedicated to the theme of the poet and poetry?

C3. What is the inner appearance of the lyrical heroine in A. A. Akhmatova’s poem “...There was a voice for me. He called comfortingly...”?

C4. Which of the Russian poets turned to a patriotic theme in their work and what brings their works closer to the poem by A. A. Akhmatova?

Pasternak (1890-1960)

July

C3. What mood is imbued with the image of the July season in the poem by B.L. Pasternak?



C4. Which Russian poets does Pasternak continue, depicting natural phenomena as humanized? Justify your answer by indicating the authors and titles of the poems.

Hamlet

C3. What does B.L. see? Pasternak the tragedy of the lyrical hero of the poem “Hamlet”?

C4. In the works of which Russian poets does the theme of confrontation between the poet and society receive an interpretation similar to that of B.L. Pasternak, given in this poem?

Being famous is not nice

C3. What meaning did the poet put into the final lines of the poem?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the topic of creativity and in what ways are their works consonant with the poem by B. L. Pasternak?

It's snowing

C3. What feelings does the lyrical hero of B. Pasternak’s poem “It’s snowing...” experience?

C4. In the poems of which poets does the image of fleeting time appear and what brings their works closer to the poem by B. Pasternak?

Tsvetaeva (1892-1941)

Motherland

C3. How do you understand the meaning of the final stanza of the poem?

C4. Which Russian poets addressed the theme of the homeland and in what ways are their works consonant with the poem by M. I. Tsvetaeva?

Mayakovsky (1893-1930)

Those who sat down for a meeting

C3. As the title of the poem by V.V. Mayakovsky's "The Satisfied Ones" correlate with his problems?

C4. In what works of Russian literature are the life and customs of the bureaucracy depicted and in what ways can these works be compared with the poem by V.V. Mayakovsky's "The Sitting Ones"?

Lilichka! Instead of a letter

Option 1

Option 2

C3. How do various poetic techniques help create the image of the lyrical hero of this poem?

C4. What was the innovation of V. Mayakovsky’s lyrics and the traditions of which of the previous poets were reflected in his work?

C3. Describe the lyrical hero of this poem and Mayakovsky’s lyrics in general.

C4. What is the main innovation of V. Mayakovsky’s lyrics and the traditions of which of the previous poets were reflected in his work?

Listen!

Option 1

Option 2

Option 3

C3. Read V. Mayakovsky's poem "Listen." Give your interpretation and assessment of the work.

C4. How do you understand the words of V. Mayakovsky, who considered himself an artist, “mobilized and called upon by the revolution”? Which other poet of the early twentieth century felt the same way?

C3. How do various poetic techniques help the author convey the main idea of ​​the poem “Listen!”?

C4. In which works of Russian lyricism does the “star” theme sound and in what ways is it close to the theme of V.V.’s poem? Mayakovsky "Listen!"?

C3. How do you see the image of the lyrical hero of V.V. Mayakovsky’s poem “Listen”?

C4. In what works of Russian literature do the characters reflect on the connection between man and the world, and in what ways are these works consonant with V. V. Mayakovsky’s poem “Listen!”?

Yesenin (1895-1925)

Song of the Dog

C3. How do different poetic techniques help the author express the pathos of a poem?

C4. How does S. Yesenin’s poem reveal the problem of the relationship between man and nature, and in what works of Russian poets do similar motifs sound?

“Whole expressions” - Fizminutka. May every day and every hour bring you something new. Everyone chooses a task card independently. Variables. Sum of monomials. Multiplication. Numbers. Polynomial. Convert an entire expression to a polynomial. Additions. Compiled. How many integer expressions? Subtractions. S. Marshak. Whole expressions.

“House of Creativity” - A system of pedagogical influence on the student. The results of our work. Target. Church. Bezhanitsky District Administration building. Hospital. Library. What are Bezhanitsy famous for? Tasks. Refugees, Refugees The distance is foggy. House of children's creativity. Methodological support of the educational process. Chapel.

“House of Arts Tomsk” - Second floor. Pl. Pushkin - White Lake. Guest room. Our discoveries. On the ground floor there is a cloakroom and the office of the secretary of the board of the Writers' Union. First floor of the House of Arts. Oktyabrskaya - st. We established new creative contacts. Literary Museum. Russian writer. Our way. Unlike house No. 10, the first and second floors of house No. 14 are made of wood.

"Rasputin's House" - House "Izba". In the same year, the story “Money for Maria” was published. The motif of the house in V. Rasputin’s story “The Deadline”. Home is mother. Home is a small homeland. Valentin Rasputin (1937). The motif of the house in V. Rasputin’s story “Women’s Conversation.” Home is a spiritual refuge. Home is family. Motif in literature. A house is a dwelling.

“House in Literature” - The image of home in the works of Russian writers. I see a cute cat’s paw, as if waving at me. Option final words. The final part of the lesson. Differences: In the Prostakov family there is no concept of honor. I believe that a real family should be based on Christian love... A challenging situation. - What do you associate the word “home” with?

“Multiplying integers” - Then what is the task of our lesson today, what would you like to learn? (-5)*3 ? 15 or (-15) Explain how you reasoned? What numbers are called negative? Rule of multiplication signs. Determine the sign of the product and calculate. Do you know how to multiply numbers? Where will the tourist be in t hours?

The topic of the relationship between the poet and the world around him was always important for Pushkin, since poetry was his life. Brief Analysis“The Poet,” as planned, will tell 8th grade students about another important work in which the poet considered this idea. With its help, in a literature lesson, you can show the transformation of Alexander Sergeevich’s views, his rethinking of many of his postulates.

Brief Analysis

History of creation- written in 1827, the work was immediately published - in the same year it was published by the Moskovsky Vestnik magazine.

Theme of the poem- the role of the poet in public life.

Composition– two-part: the first part tells about the poet’s life without inspiration and creativity, and in the second he awakens thanks to the sounds of the blessed lyre.

Genre- philosophical lyrics.

Poetic size- iambic tetrameter.

Epithets“sacred sacrifice”, “vain light”, “holy lyre”, “divine verb”, “human rumor”, “people’s idol”, “proud head”“.

Metaphors“Apollo does not require the poet to make a sacred sacrifice”, “the lyre is silent”, “the soul tastes a cold sleep”, “the soul will awaken”, “the fun of the world”, “the shores of desert waves”.

Comparison“like an awakened eagle.”

History of creation

Pushkin spent the first half of 1827 in Moscow, where social life prevented him from concentrating on creativity. And only in the second half of the year, when he retired to his estate in Mikhailovskoye, did inspiration come to him. It was these two events that he symbolically captured in the poem “Poet,” which he sent directly from Mikhailovsky to Moskovsky Vestnik, where the work was published that same year.

It is obvious that Alexander Sergeevich not only sought to rid poetry of old forms - he also intended to give it new content. He spent his life in search of an answer to the question of what the essence of the poetic gift is. AND this poem is one of the moments when he rethought his own purpose and the purpose of poetry in general.

Subject

The poem is dedicated to the “eternal” theme of the poet’s mission in society, but this time it was examined from an unexpected angle. Pushkin expresses the idea that the poetic gift is the soul of a creative person. Without his call, in the eternal bustle of days, he not only becomes an ordinary person, in fact he turns into an empty vessel.

Composition

The poem is divided into two parts, that is, it has a two-part composition. In the first, Alexander Sergeevich paints the image of a poet who is so busy with the bustle of society that he does not fulfill his main purpose - he does not write poetry. Most likely, this is a poetic summary of the time he spent in Moscow.

He says that without inspiration, the poet will face a dull existence filled with empty entertainment that only burns out his soul and does not benefit his heart. The first part is clearly negative.

But in the second, the situation changes radically, because the poet hears the divine call - he is freed from the rules of secular society and can again soar, supported by inspiration. Thus, Pushkin concludes that without his creativity, without the opportunity to write creative person insignificant. It, on the contrary, gives him wings and frees him. That is, creativity is not just the meaning of life, but, one might say, the very essence of a poet. His purpose is to write poems.

Genre

This work is one of the examples of Pushkin's philosophical lyrics. In it, Alexander Sergeevich again examines the topic of his purpose as a poet, but discovers for himself and the reader its new, unexpected facets. He succinctly and succinctly says that he sees the meaning of his life in awakening a bright beginning in readers, giving them pleasant emotions.

For this work, Pushkin used his favorite poetic meter- iambic tetrameter. At the same time, it uses different rhymes, both paired and circular. At the same time, one cannot help but replace that where ring rhyme is used, the author is talking about creativity, and for the part concerning relationships with society, he uses cross rhymes.

Means of expression

In this poem, the poet used a variety of paths to embody his idea. These are means of expression such as:

  • Epithets- “sacred sacrifice”, “vain light”, “holy lyre”, “divine verb”, “human rumor”, “people’s idol”, “proud head”.
  • Metaphors- “Apollo does not require the poet to make a sacred sacrifice”, “the lyre is silent”, “the soul tastes a cold sleep”, “the soul will awaken”, “the fun of the world”, “the shores of desert waves”.
  • Comparison- “like an awakened eagle.”

With their help, Pushkin creates a vivid contrast between the poet’s two mental states, giving the first part a negative, and the second a light and vibrant emotional coloring.

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