Sentimentalism. Karamzin "Poor Liza"

At the end of the 18th century, the leading literary movement in Russia was sentimentalism, as was classicism, which came to us from Europe. N. M. Karamzin can rightfully be considered the head and promoter of the sentimental trend in Russian literature. His “Letters of a Russian Traveler” and stories are an example of sentimentalism. Thus, the story “Poor Liza” (1792) is structured in accordance with the basic laws of this direction. However, the writer moved away from some of the canons of European sentimentalism.
In the works of classicism, kings, nobles, and generals, that is, people who performed an important state mission, were worthy of depiction. Sentimentalism preached the value of the individual, even if insignificant on a national scale. Therefore, Karamzin made the main character of the story the poor peasant woman Lisa, who was left early without a breadwinner father and lives with her mother in a hut. According to sentimentalists, both people of the upper class and low origin have the ability to deeply feel and perceive the world around them with kindness, “for even peasant women know how to love.”
The sentimentalist writer did not have the goal of accurately depicting reality. Lizin's income from the sale of flowers and knitting, on which peasant women live, could not provide for them. But Karamzin depicts life without trying to convey everything realistically. Its goal is to awaken compassion in the reader. For the first time in Russian literature, this story made the reader feel the tragedy of life in his heart.
Already contemporaries noted the novelty of the hero of “Poor Liza” - Erast. In the 1790s, the principle of a strict division of heroes into positive and negative was observed. Erast, who killed Lisa, contrary to this principle, was not perceived as a villain. A frivolous but dreamy young man does not deceive the girl. At first he has sincere tender feelings for the naive villager. Without thinking about the future, he believes that he will not harm Lisa, will always be by her side, like brother and sister, and they will be happy together.
The language in works of sentimentalism also changed. The speech of the heroes was “freed” from a large number of Old Slavonicisms and became simpler, closer to colloquial. At the same time, it became full of beautiful epithets, rhetorical turns, and exclamations. The speech of Lisa and her mother is florid, philosophical (“Ah, Lisa!” she said. “How good everything is with the Lord God!.. Ah, Lisa! Who would want to die if sometimes we didn’t have grief!”; ““Think about the pleasant moment in which we will see each other again." - “I will, I will think about her! Dear, dear Erast! Remember, remember your poor Liza, who loves you more than herself!” ).
The purpose of such language is to influence the reader’s soul, to awaken humane feelings in it. Thus, in the speech of the narrator of “Poor Lisa” we hear an abundance of interjections, diminutive forms, exclamations, and rhetorical appeals: “Ah! I love those objects that touch my heart and make me shed tears of tender sorrow!”; “Beautiful poor Liza with her old lady”; “But what did she feel then when Erast, hugging her for the last time, pressing her to his heart for the last time, said: “Forgive me, Lisa!” What a touching picture!”
Sentimentalists paid great attention to the depiction of nature. Events often unfolded against the backdrop of picturesque landscapes: in the forest, on the bank of a river, in a field. Sensitive natures, the heroes of sentimentalist works, keenly perceived the beauty of nature. In European sentimentalism, it was assumed that a “natural” person close to nature possesses only pure feelings; that nature is capable of elevating the human soul. But Karamzin tried to challenge the point of view of Western thinkers.
“Poor Liza” begins with a description of the Simonov Monastery and its surroundings. So the author connected the present and past of Moscow with the history of an ordinary person. Events unfold in Moscow and in nature. “Natura”, that is, nature, following the narrator, closely “observes” the love story of Lisa and Erast. But she remains deaf and blind to the heroine’s experiences.
Nature does not stop the passions of the young man and girl at the fateful moment: “not a single star shone in the sky - no ray could illuminate the delusions.” On the contrary, “the darkness of the evening fed desires.” Something incomprehensible is happening to Lisa’s soul: “It seemed to me that I was dying, that my soul... No, I don’t know how to say it!” Lisa's closeness to nature does not help her in saving her soul: it is as if she is giving her soul to Erast. The thunderstorm breaks out only after - “it seemed that all nature was lamenting about Liza’s lost innocence.” Lisa is afraid of thunder, “like a criminal.” She perceives thunder as punishment, but nature did not tell her anything earlier.
At the moment of Lisa’s farewell to Erast, nature is still beautiful, majestic, but indifferent to the heroes: “The morning dawn, like a scarlet sea, spread across the eastern sky. Erast stood under the branches of a tall oak tree... the whole nature was silent.” The “silence” of nature in the tragic moment of separation for Lisa is emphasized in the story. Here, too, nature doesn’t tell the girl anything, doesn’t save her from disappointment.
The heyday of Russian sentimentalism occurred in the 1790s. A recognized propagandist of this trend, Karamzin developed the main idea in his works: the soul must be enlightened, made heartfelt, responsive to other people's pain, other people's suffering and other people's concerns.

1. Literary movement “sentimentalism”.
2. Features of the plot of the work.
3. The image of the main character.
4. The image of the “villain” Erast.

In the literature of the second half of the 18th - early 19th centuries, the literary trend of “sentimentalism” was very popular. The name comes from the French word “sentiment”, which means “feeling, sensitivity”. Sentimentalism called for paying attention to a person’s feelings, experiences, emotions, that is, the inner world acquired particular importance. N. M. Karamzin’s story “Poor Liza” is a vivid example of a sentimental work. The plot of the story is very simple. By the will of fate, a spoiled nobleman and a young naive peasant girl meet. She falls in love with him and becomes a victim of her feelings.

The image of the main character Lisa is striking in its purity and sincerity. The peasant girl is more like a fairy-tale heroine. There is nothing ordinary, everyday, vulgar about her. Lisa’s nature is sublime and beautiful, despite the fact that the girl’s life cannot be called fabulous. Lisa lost her father early and lives with her old mother. The girl has to work a lot. But she does not complain about fate. Lisa is shown by the author as an ideal, devoid of any shortcomings. She is not characterized by a desire for profit; material values ​​do not have any meaning for her. Lisa is more like a sensitive young lady who grew up in an atmosphere of idleness, surrounded by care and attention from childhood. A similar tendency was typical for sentimental works. The main character cannot be perceived by the reader as rude, down-to-earth, or pragmatic. She must be divorced from the world of vulgarity, dirt, hypocrisy, and must be an example of sublimity, purity, and poetry.

In Karamzin's story, Lisa becomes a toy in the hands of her lover. Erast is a typical young rake, accustomed to getting what he sees fit. The young man is spoiled and selfish. The lack of a moral principle leads to the fact that he does not understand Lisa’s ardent and passionate nature. Erast's feelings are in doubt. He is used to living, thinking only about himself and his desires. Erast was not given the opportunity to see the beauty of the girl’s inner world, because Lisa is smart and kind. But the virtues of a peasant woman are worthless in the eyes of a jaded nobleman.

Erast, unlike Lisa, never knew hardship. He did not need to worry about his daily bread; his whole life was a continuous holiday. And he initially considers love a game that can brighten up several days of life. Erast cannot be faithful; his attachment to Lisa is just an illusion.

And Lisa deeply experiences the tragedy. It is significant that when the young nobleman seduced the girl, thunder struck and lightning flashed. A sign of nature portends trouble. And Lisa feels that she will have to pay the most terrible price for what she has done. The girl was not mistaken. Very little time passed, and Erast lost interest in Lisa. Now he has forgotten about her. This was a terrible blow for the girl.

Karamzin’s story “Poor Liza” was very loved by readers not only because of the entertaining plot, which told about a beautiful love story. Readers highly appreciated the skill of the writer, who was able to truthfully and vividly show the inner world of a girl in love. The feelings, experiences, and emotions of the main character cannot leave you indifferent.

Paradoxically, the young nobleman Erast is not fully perceived as a negative hero. After Lisa's suicide, Erast is crushed by grief, considers himself a murderer and yearns for her all his life. Erast did not become unhappy; he suffered severe punishment for his action. The writer treats his hero objectively. He recognizes that the young nobleman has a good heart and mind. But, alas, this does not give the right to consider Erast a good person. Karamzin says: “Now the reader should know that this young man, this Erast, was a rather rich nobleman, with a fair mind and a kind heart, kind by nature, but weak and flighty. He led an absent-minded life, thought only about his own pleasure, looked for it in secular amusements, but often did not find it: he was bored and complained about his fate.” It is not surprising that with such an attitude towards life, love did not become something worthy of attention for the young man. Erast is dreamy. “He read novels, idylls, had a fairly vivid imagination and often moved mentally to those times (former or not), in which, according to the poets, all people carelessly walked through the meadows, bathed in clean springs, kissed like turtledoves, rested They spent all their days under roses and myrtles and in happy idleness. It seemed to him that he had found in Lisa what his heart had been looking for for a long time.” What can be said about Erast if we analyze the characteristics of Karamzin? Erast is in the clouds. Fictional stories are more important to him than real life. Therefore, he quickly became bored with everything, even the love of such a beautiful girl. After all, real life always seems to the dreamer less bright and interesting than imagined life.

Erast decides to go on a military campaign. He believes that this event will give meaning to his life, that he will feel important. But, alas, the weak-willed nobleman only lost his entire fortune at cards during a military campaign. Dreams collided with cruel reality. The frivolous Erast is not capable of serious actions; entertainment is most important to him. He decides to marry profitably in order to regain the desired material well-being. At the same time, Erast does not think at all about Lisa’s feelings. Why does he need a poor peasant woman if he is faced with the question of material benefit?

Lisa throws herself into the pond, suicide becomes the only possible way out for her. The suffering of love has exhausted the girl so much that she does not want to live anymore.

For us, modern readers, Karamzin’s story “Poor Liza” seems like a fairy tale. After all, there is nothing in it similar to real life, except, perhaps, the feelings of the main character. But sentimentalism as a literary movement turned out to be very important for Russian literature. After all, writers working in line with sentimentalism showed the subtlest shades of human experiences. And this trend further developed. Based on sentimental works, others appeared, more realistic and believable.

SENTIMENTALISM OF N. M. KARAMZIN’S STORY “POOR LISA”

1. Introduction.

“Poor Liza” is a work of sentimentalism.

2. Main part.

2.1 Lisa is the main character of the story.

2.2 The class inequality of the heroes is the main cause of the tragedy.

2.3 “And peasant women know how to love!”

3. Conclusion.

Little man theme.

Under him [Karamzin] and as a result of his influence, heavy pedantry and scholasticism were replaced by sentimentality and secular lightness.

V. Belinsky

Nikolai Mikhailovich Karamzin’s story “Poor Liza” is the first work of Russian literature that most clearly embodies the main features of such a literary movement as sentimentalism.

The plot of the story is very simple: it is the love story of a poor peasant woman, Lisa, for a young nobleman who leaves her for an arranged marriage. As a result, the girl throws herself into the pond, seeing no point in living without her beloved.

The innovation introduced by Karamzin is the appearance in the story of a narrator who, in numerous lyrical digressions, expresses his sadness and makes us empathize. Karamzin is not ashamed of his tears and encourages readers to do the same. But it is not only the author’s heartache and tears that make us imbued with this simple story.

Even the smallest details in the description of nature evoke a response in the souls of readers. After all, it is known that Karamzin himself loved to walk in the vicinity of the old monastery above the Moskva River, and after the publication of the work, the name “Lizin Pond” was assigned to the monastery pond with its old willow trees.

There are no strictly positive or negative heroes in the works of sentimentalism. So Karamzin’s heroes are living people with their own virtues and vices. Without denying

Lisa is not at all like a typical “Pushkin” or “Turgenev” girl. She does not embody the author's feminine ideal. For Karamzin, she is a symbol of a person’s sincerity, his naturalness and sincerity.

The writer emphasizes that the girl had not read about love even in novels, which is why the feeling took over her heart so much, which is why the betrayal of her beloved led her to such despair. The love of Lisa, a poor uneducated girl for a noble young man “with a fair mind”, is a struggle between real feelings and social prejudices.

From the very beginning, this story was doomed to a tragic ending, because the class inequality of the main characters was too significant. But the author, describing the fate of young people, places emphasis in such a way that his personal attitude to what is happening becomes clear.

Karamzin not only values ​​spiritual aspirations, experiences and the ability to love more than material wealth and position in society. It is in the inability to love, to experience truly deep

feeling he sees the cause of this tragedy. “And peasant women know how to love!” - with this phrase Karamzin drew the readers’ attention to the joys and problems of the common man. No social superiority can justify the hero and relieve him of responsibility for his actions.

Considering it impossible for some people to control the lives of others, the writer rejected serfdom and considered his primary task to be the ability to draw attention to people who are weak and voiceless.

Humanism, empathy, concern for social problems - these are the feelings that the author tries to awaken in his readers. Literature of the late 18th century gradually moved away from civil themes and focused its attention on the theme of personality, the fate of an individual person with his inner world, passionate desires and simple joys.

The story “Poor Liza,” written in 1792, became the first sentimental story in Russian literature. The love story of a peasant woman and a nobleman did not leave readers of that time indifferent. So what is the sentimentalism of “Poor Liza”?

Sentimentalism in the story

Sentimentalism is a trend in literature where the feelings of the characters come first, despite their low or high position.

The plot of the story unfolds before the reader the love story of a poor peasant girl and a nobleman. From an educational standpoint, the author defends the non-classical value of a person and rejects prejudices. “And peasant women know how to love,” writes Karamzin, and this statement was new for Russian literature.

Examples of sentimentalism in the story “Poor Liza” include the constant experiences and suffering of the characters and the expression of their feelings. This genre also includes such features as the author’s lyrical digressions and descriptions of nature.

Landscape sketches in the story create a certain mood and echo the experiences of the characters. Thus, the thunderstorm scene emphasizes the fear and confusion in Lisa’s soul, telling the reader that a tragic turn of events lies ahead.

The literature of sentimentalism opened up the world of human feelings and experiences for readers of the 18th century and made it possible to feel the merging of the human soul with nature.

External and internal conflict

“Poor Liza” is a story about tragic love. A simple peasant girl, Liza, living in the outskirts of Moscow, goes to the city to sell flowers. There she meets a young man named Erast. They fall in love with each other.

The plot of the story is based on a system of internal and external conflicts. The external conflict represents a social contradiction: he is a nobleman, she is a peasant woman. The characters suffer because of social prejudices, but then begin to believe that the power of love will overcome them. And at a certain moment it seems to the reader that the love story will have a happy ending. But there are other conflicts in the story that develop the action in a tragic way. This is an internal conflict in Erast’s soul that arose due to current life circumstances. The hero leaves for the active army, and Lisa remains to wait for him, believing the promises and confessions of her lover. Having lost money and property at cards, Erast finds himself unable to pay the debts he has incurred. And then he finds the only way out: to marry a rich bride. Lisa accidentally finds out about the betrayal and decides to drown herself. The motive for suicide was also new to Russian literature. Having learned about the death of his beloved, Erasmus painfully experiences his betrayal. We learn about this from the ending of the story.

This story evokes sympathy in the hearts of readers for the characters in the story. The author also sympathizes with his heroes. The author's position is visible in the title of the story. We also cannot call Erast a negative hero; this image evokes sympathy for the sincere repentance that he experiences, realizing the horror of his act, the depth of the betrayal that led to Lisa’s death. The author’s position is also expressed through direct statements belonging to the narrator in the story: “Reckless young man!

Sentimentalism in the story by Karamzin N.M. "Poor Lisa."
The touching love of a simple peasant girl Lisa and a Moscow nobleman Erast deeply shocked the souls of the writer’s contemporaries. Everything in this story: from the plot and recognizable landscape sketches of the Moscow region to the sincere feelings of the characters - was unusual for readers of the late 18th century.
The story was first published in 1792 in the Moscow Journal, the editor of which was Karamzin himself. The plot is quite simple: after the death of her father, young Lisa is forced to work tirelessly to feed herself and her mother. In the spring she sells lilies of the valley in Moscow and there she meets the young nobleman Erast. The young man falls in love with her and is even ready to leave the world for the sake of his love. The lovers spend evenings together, until one day Erast announces that he must go on a campaign with the regiment and they will have to part. A few days later, Erast leaves. Several months pass. One day Lisa accidentally sees Erast in a magnificent carriage and finds out that he is engaged. Erast lost his estate at cards and, in order to improve his shaky financial situation, marries a rich widow for convenience. In despair, Lisa throws herself into the pond.

Artistic originality.

Karamzin borrowed the plot of the story from European romance literature. All events were transferred to “Russian” soil. The author emphasizes that the action takes place in Moscow and its environs, describes the Simonov and Danilov monasteries, Sparrow Hills, creating the illusion of authenticity. For Russian literature and readers of that time, this was an innovation. Having become accustomed to happy endings in old novels, they met the truth of life in Karamzin’s work. The writer’s main goal - to achieve compassion - was achieved. The Russian public read, sympathized, sympathized. The first readers of the story perceived Lisa's story as a real contemporary tragedy. The pond under the walls of the Simonov Monastery was named Lizina Pond.
Disadvantages of sentimentalism.
The plausibility in the story is only apparent. The world of heroes that the author depicts is idyllic and invented. The peasant woman Lisa and her mother have refined feelings, their speech is literate, literary and no different from the speech of Erast, who was a nobleman. The life of poor villagers resembles a pastoral: “Meanwhile, a young shepherd was driving his flock along the river bank, playing the pipe. Lisa fixed her gaze on him and thought: “If the one who now occupies my thoughts was born a simple peasant, a shepherd, - and if he were now driving his flock past me: ah! I would bow to him with a smile and say affably: “Hello, dear shepherd!” Where are you driving your flock? And here green grass grows for your sheep, and here flowers grow red, from which you can weave a wreath for your hat.” He would look at me with an affectionate look - maybe he would take my hand... A dream! A shepherd, playing the flute, passed by and disappeared with his motley flock behind a nearby hill.” Such descriptions and reasoning are far from realism.
The story became an example of Russian sentimental literature. In contrast to classicism with its cult of reason, Karamzin argued for the cult of feelings, sensitivity, and compassion: heroes are important for their ability to love, feel, and experience. In addition, unlike the works of classicism, “Poor Liza” is devoid of morality, didacticism, and edification: the author does not teach, but tries to evoke empathy for the characters in the reader.
The story is also distinguished by “smooth” language: Karamzin abandoned pomp, which made the work easy to read.