Keywords
20th-Century Russian Literature
Boris Pasternak (1890—1960)
Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893—1930)
Pompeii
Apocalyptic Imagery
“Great Retreat” of 1915
Russian Revolution
Close Reading
History of Literature
How to Cite
Abstract
The article offers a close reading and contextual analysis of Boris Pasternak’s poem “The Last Day of Pompeii” (1915). Its title borrowed from Karl Briullov’s famous painting is misleading as it has nothing to do either with the Roman city destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius or with the painting but alludes to the defeats of Russian troops at the Western front and a political crisis in the country as clear signs of the imminent demise (“the last day”) of the Russian empire. Pasternak’s apocalyptic imagery parallels a prophesy in Mayakovsky’s contemporaneous A Cloud in Trousers (also 1915) where the poet predicted that 1916 would be the year of revolutions in Russia.

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