Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Lev Kobylinsky

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Name
  
Lev Kobylinsky


Role
  
Poet

Lev Kobylinsky wwwnashagazetachsitesdefaultfilesarticles0r

Died
  
November 17, 1947, Locarno, Switzerland

Дмитрий Хворостовский Ивари Илья "Менуэт"/Dmitri Hvorostovsky Ivari Ilja "Minuet"


Lev Lvovich Kobylinsky (Russian: Лев Львович Кобылинский; born on 2 August 1879, Moscow, Russian Empire - 17 November 1947, Locarno, Switzerland) was a poet, translator, theorist of symbolism, the Christian philosopher and historian of literature. His pseudonym was Ellis.

Contents

Biography

Lev Kobylinksy was born in Moscow. He was an illegitimate son of the director of private gymnasium Lev Polivanoff. In 1902 he graduated from the law faculty of Moscow University. Together with Andrei Bely organized poetic circle of " Argonauts ". In the years 1904-1909 an active member of the magazine " Libra ". In the years 1910-1917, along with Andrew White and Emily Medtner founded the publishing house "Musaget". He emigrated to Switzerland in 1911. Like his friend Andrei Bely, became interested in anthroposophy of Rudolf Steiner, but later he accepted Catholicism and joined the Society of Jesus. Ellis wrote literary and philosophical works in German. He died in Locarno, Switzerland.

Alignment

Christian worldview Ellis Kobylinsky was not orthodox.

Ellis defended the idea of reincarnation in his view the multiplicity of personalities - the result of the sinfulness of human nature. He considered the highest form of art symbolism and was a supporter of the aristocratic individualism and fan of Friedrich Nietzsche. His intuition considered as the essence of the symbolic contemplation, contemplation logically distinguishing purely intellectual, artistic and mystical.

Creativity

Ellis's poems "written under the influence of Soloviev, Bryusov, Bely and Balmont, according to the religious understanding of the world and the quest that come from the children's proximity to supermaterial world, that of religion permeated the life of the Middle Ages".

Criticism
  • "Immorteli." In 2 vols., 1904
  • "Russian Symbolists', 1910
  • «Vigilemus», 1914
  • Collections of poetry
  • «Stigmata», 1911
  • "Argo: Two books of poetry and the poem", 1914
  • Philosophical writings
  • Platon und Solowjew, Mainz, 1926
  • Christliche Weisheit, Basel, 1929 ("Christian wisdom")
  • WA Joukowski, Paderborn, 1933
  • Alexander Puschkin, der religiose Genius Russlands, Ölten, 1948
  • "The Kingdom of Saint Peter"
  • Publications

  • Ellis. Poems. Tomsk: Aquarius, 1996.
  • Ellis. Russian Symbolists. Tomsk: Aquarius, 1996. - 288.
  • Ellis. Unpublished and Uncollected. Tomsk: Aquarius, 2000. - 460.
  • Baudelaire "Flowers of Evil" and the prose poem in translation Ellis. Tomsk: Aquarius, 1993. - 400 s.
  • References

    Lev Kobylinsky Wikipedia