Out of the darkest depths of life, where vice and crime and
misery abound, comes the Byron of the twentieth century, the poet
of the vagabond and the proletariat, Maxim Gorky. Not like the
beggar, humbly imploring for a crust in the name of the Lord, nor
like the jeweller displaying his p ...
Every day the factory whistle bellowed forth its shrill, roaring,
trembling noises into the smoke-begrimed and greasy atmosphere of
the workingmen's suburb; and obedient to the summons of the power of
steam, people poured out of little gray houses into the street.
With somber faces they h ...
Once in the autumn I happened to be in a very unpleasant and
inconvenient position. In the town where I had just arrived and where
I knew not a soul, I found myself without a farthing in my pocket and
without a night's lodging.
About the Author
Russian short story writer, novelist, autobiographer and essayist, whose
life was deeply interwoven with the tumultuous revolutionary period of
his own country. Gorky ended his long career as the preeminent spokesman
for culture under the Soviet regime of Joseph Stalin. Gorky formulated
the central principles of Socialist Realism, which became doctrine in
Soviet literature. The rough, socially conscious naturalism of Gorky was
described by Chekhov as "a destroyer bound to destroy everything that
deserved destruction."
"The long files of dock labourers carrying on their backs hundreds
of tons of grain to fill the iron bellies of the ships in order that
they themselves might earn a few pounds of this grain to fill their
own stomachs, looked so droll that they brought tears to one's eyes.
The contrast between these tattered, perspiring men, benumbed with
weariness, turmoil and heat, and the mighty machines glistening in
the sun, the machines which these men had made, and which, after all
is said and done, were set in motion not by steam, but by the blood
and sinew of those who had created them - this contrast constituted
an entire poem of cruel irony." (from 'Chelkash', 1895, trans. by
J. Fineberg)
Aleksei Peshkov (Maksim Gorky, also written Maksim Gor'kii) was born in
Nizhnii Novgorod as the son of a journeyman upholster. Later the ancient
city was named 'Gorky' in his honour. In Moscow after the death of the
author, one of the leading thoroughfares was named Gorky Street. Gorky
lost his parents at an early age - his father died of cholera and his
mother died of tuberculosis. The scene of his mother, wailing and
mourning over her dead husband, opens his book of memoir, My
Childhood: "All her clothes were torn. Her hair, which was usually
neatly combined into place like a large gray hat, was scattered over her
bare shoulders, and hung over her face, and some of it, in the form of a
large plait, dangled about, touching Father's sleeping face. For all the
time I'd been standing in that room, not once did she so much as look at
me, but just went on combing Father's hair, choking with tears and
howling continually."
Orphaned at the age of 11, he experienced the deprivations of a poverty.
The most important person in Gorky's life in those years was his
grandmother, whose fondness for literature and compassion for the
downtrodden influenced him deeply. Otherwise his relationships to his
family members were strained, even violent. Gorky stabbed his
stepfather, who regularly beat him. Gorky received little education but
he was endowed with an astonishing memory. He left home at the age of
12, and followed from one profession to another. On a Volga steamer, he
learned to read. In 1883 he was a worker in a biscuit factory, then a
porter, baker's boy, fruit seller, railway employee, clerk to an
advocate, and in 1891 an operative in a salt mill. Later Gorky used
later material from his wandering years in his books. In 1884 he failed
to enter Kazan University, and in the late 1880s he was arrested for
revolutionary activities. At the age of 19 he attempted suicide but
survived when the bullet missed his heart.
After travels through Ukraine, the Caucasus, and the Crimea Tiflis (late
Tbilisi), Gorky published his first literary work, 'Makar Chudra'
(1892), a short story. 'Chelkash', the story of a harbour thief, gained
an immediate success. He started to write for newspapers, and his first
book, the 3-volume Sketches and Stories (1898-1899), established his
reputation as a writer. Gorky wrote with sympathy and optimism about the
gypsies, hobos, and down-and-outs. He also started to analyze more
deeply the plight of these people in a broad, social context. In these
early stories Gorky skillfully mixed romantic exoticism and realism.
Occasionally he glorified the rebels among his outcasts of Russian
society. In his early writing career Gorky became friends with Anton
Chekhov , Leo Tolstoy , and Vladimir Lenin.
Encouraged by Chekhov, he composed his most famous play, The Lower
Depths (1902), which took much of the material from his short stories.
It was performed at the Moscow Art Theater under the direction of
Konstantin Stanislavsky. The Lower Depths enjoyed a huge success, and
was soon played in Western Europe and the United States.
Gorky was literary editor of Zhizn from 1899 and editor of Znanie
publishing house in St. Petersburg from 1900. Foma Gordeyev (1899),
his first novel, dealt with the new merchat class in Russia. The short
story Dvadsat' shest' i odna(1899, Twenty-Six Men and a Girl) was
about lost ideals. "There were twenty-six of us - twenty-six living
machines locked in a damp basement where, from dawn to dusk, we kneaded
dough for making into biscuits and pretzels. The window of our basement
looked out onto a ditch dug in front of them and lined with brick that
was green from damp; the windows were covered outside in fine wire
netting and sunlight could not reach us through the flour-covered panes.
Our boss had put the wire netting there so we could not give hand-outs
of his bread to beggars or those comrades of ours who were without work
and starving." (from 'Twenty-Six Men and a Girl', 1899) The joy in the
lives of the bakers is the 16-year old Tania, who works in the same
building. A handsome ex-soldier, one of the master bakers, boasts of his
success with women. He is challenged to seduce Tania. When Tania
succumbs, she is mocked by the men, who have lost the only bright spot
in the darkness. Tania curses them and walks away, and is never again
seen in the basement.
Gorky became involved in a secret printing press and was temporarily
exiled to Arzamas, central Russia in 1902. In the same year he was
elected to the Russian Academy, but election was declared invalid by the
government and several members of the Academy resigned in protest.
Because of his political activism, Gorky was constantly in trouble with
the tsarists authorities. He joined the Social Democratic party's left
wing, headed by Lenin. To raise money to Russian revolutionaries, Gorky
went to the United States in 1906. However, he was compelled to leave
his hotel, not because of his political opinions, but because he
traveled with Mlle. Andreieva, with whom he was not legally married. At
that time, he had not obtained divorce from his first wife, Ekaterina
Pavlovna, with whom he had two children. The American author Mark Twain
expressed his support to Gorky at a dinner party, saying, "My sympathies
are with the Russian revolution, of course."
In 1906 Gorky settled in Capri. Lenin visited his villa in 1908, he
fished there and played chess, becoming childishly angry when he lost a
game. Gorky was disgusted by Lenin's smug Marxism and after reading only
a few pages from his book Materialism and Empirio-Criticism he threw
it on the wall.
During his ill-fated mission to America to raise funds for the Bolshevik
cause, Gorky wrote in the Adirondack Mountains greater part of his
classic novel, The Mother, which appeared in 1906-1907. Its heroine,
Pelageia Nilovna, adopts the cause of socialism in a religious spirit
after her son's arrest as a political activist. Pelageia's husband is a
drunkard and her only consolation is her religious faith. Pelageia's
husband dies, and her son Pavel changes from a thug to socialist role
model and starts to bring his revolutionary friends to the house. Pavel
is arrested on May day for carrying a forbidden banner. While continuing
to believe in Christ's words, she joins revolutionaries, and is betrayed
by a police spy. Gorky based her character on a real person, Anna
Zalomova, who had travelled the country distributing revolutionary
pamphlets after her son had been arrested during a demonstration. The
novel, considered the pioneer of socialist realism, was later dramatized
by Bertolt Brecht.
In 1913 Gorky returned to Russia, and helped to found the first Workers'
and Peasants' University, the Petrograd Theater, and the World
Literature Publishing House. The first part of his acclaimed
autobiographical trilogy, My Childhood, appeared in 1913-14. It was
followed by In the World (1916), and My Universities (1922), which
was written in a different style. In these works the author looked
through the observant eyes of Alyosha Peshkov his development and life
in a Volga River town. When the war broke out, Gorky ridiculed the
enthusiastic atmosphere and broke off all relations with his adopted
son, Zinovy Peshkov, who joined the army. First the author also rejected
Lenin's hard-line policy. "Lenin's power arrests and imprisons everyone
who does not share his ideas, as the Romanovs' power used to do," he
wrote in November of 1917. After Russian revolution Gorky enjoyed
protected status, although in 1918 his protests against Bolsheviks
dictatorial methods were silenced by Lenin's order. Gorky's memoir of
Lev Tolstoy (1919) painted nearly a merciless portrait of the great writer.
Dissatisfaction with the communist regime and its treatment of
intellectuals lead to his voluntary exile during the 1920s. "To an old
man any place that's warm is homeland," Gorky once wrote. He spent three
years at various German and Czech spas, and was editor of Dialogue in
Berlin (1923-25). On Capri in the 1920s Gorky wrote his best novel, The
Artamov Business (1925), dealing with three generations of a
pre-revolutionary merchant family. Gorky's essay 'V.I.Lenin' was written
immediately after Lenin's death. The author expressed his great
admiration for the Revolution leader and gave a lively account of their
discussions in Paris and Capri. "You're an enigma," he once said to me
with a chuckle. "You seem to be a good realist in literature, but a
romantic where people are concerned. You think everybody is a victim of
history, don't you? We know history and we say to the sacrificial
victims; 'overthrow the altars, shatter the temples, and drive the gods
out!' Yet you would like to convince me that a militant party of the
working class is obliged to make the intellectuals comfortable, first
and foremost."
In 1924-25 Gorky lived in Sorrento, but persuaded by Stalin, he returned
in 1931 to Russia. He founded a number of journals and became head of
the Writers' Union. Gorky's speech at The First Congress of Soviet
Writers in 1935. His photograph in the congress hall was nearly as large
as Stalin's. He criticized the bureaucracy of the Writers' Union, but
nothing changed. All the proposals of the congress were very soon buried
when the Great Terror started. Writers were shot and Stalin showed
personal interest in the activities of writers. Gorky's actions and
statements before and after his return to Russia are controversial. When
the poet Anna Akhmatova and many writers asked Gorky to help Nikolai
Gumilev, a celebrated poet and Akhmatova's first husband, Gorky
apparently did nothing to save him from execution.
Gorky died suddenly of pneumonia in his country home, dacha, near
Moscow on June 18, 1936. In some source the cause of death was said to
be heart desease. The author was buried in the Red Square and Stalin
started earnest his Show Trials. Rumors have lived ever since that he
may have been assassinated on Joseph Stalin orders. Genrikh Yagoda,
Stalin's secret police chief during the great purges of 1936-38, made a
"confession" at his own trial in 1938, that he had ordered Gorky's
death. According to another rumor, Gorky had been administered 'heart
stimulants in large quantities', and the ultimate culprits were
'Rightists and Trotskyites'. The murder of Gorky's son in 1934 was seen
as an attempt to break the father. However, when the KGB literary
archives were opened in the 1990s, not much evidence was found to
support the wildest theories. Stalin visited the writer twice during his
last illness. The most probable conclusion is that Gorky's death was
natural.
As an essayist Gorky dealt with wide range of subjects. His underlying
theme is a passionate humanistic message and political commitment to
bolshevism. In Notes on the Bourgeois Mentality he accuses the
bourgeoisie of self-absorption and concern only with its own comfort.
On the Russian Peasantry sees peasants as resistant to the new social
order. City of the Yellow Devil, written in New York, condemns
American capitalism. On the other hand, Gorky early opposed Bolsheviks,
criticizing their use of violence against their fellow men. Among
Gorky's important essays are biographical sketches of such writers as
Tolstoy, Leonid Andreev and Anton Chechov.
Author biographies courtesy of Author's Calendar. Used with permission.