[Taras Bulba and Other Tales by Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol]@TWC D-Link book
Taras Bulba and Other Tales

INTRODUCTION
16/19

726.
An understanding of Gogol's point of view gives the key to "Taras Bulba." For in this panoramic canvas of the Setch, the military brotherhood of the Cossacks, living under open skies, picturesquely and heroically, he has drawn a picture of his romantic ideal, which if far from perfect at any rate seemed to him preferable to the grey tedium of a city peopled with government officials.

Gogol has written in "Taras Bulba" his own reproach to the nineteenth century.

It is sad and joyous like one of those Ukrainian songs which have helped to inspire him to write it.

And then, as he cut himself off more and more from the world of the past, life became a sadder and still sadder thing to him; modern life, with all its gigantic pettiness, closed in around him, he began to write of petty officials and of petty scoundrels, "commonplace heroes" he called them.

But nothing is ever lost in this world.


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