[A Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections by Isabel Florence Hapgood]@TWC D-Link bookA Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections CHAPTER VIII 34/60
His father, also, who represented the modern spirit, was an inimitable narrator of comic stories, and the talents of father and grandfather rendered their house the popular center of a very extensive neighborhood. At school Gogol did not distinguish himself, but he wrote a good deal, all of an imitative character.
After leaving school, it was with difficulty that he secured a place as copying-clerk, at a wretched salary, in St.Petersburg.He promptly resigned this when fame came, and secured the appointment as professor of history.
But he was a hopelessly incompetent professor of history, despite his soaring ambitions, both on account of his lack of scholarship and the natural bent of his mind.
The literary men who had obtained the position for him had discerned his immense talent in a perfectly new style of writing; and after failure had convinced him that heavy, scientific work was not in his line, he recognized the fact himself, and decided to devote himself to the sort of work for which nature had intended him.
The first volume of his "Tales from a Farm-house Near Dikanka" appeared at the end of 1831, and had an immense success.
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