When and why did the Sholokhov question arise? Veselovskaya Intersettlement Central Library

Perhaps today, attempts to challenge the authorship of The Quiet Flows the Don are taken a little seriously. Numerous textual examinations have repeatedly confirmed that it was Mikhail Sholokhov who wrote one of the most famous epics of the 20th century. But the question remains: how

Could a twenty-three-year-old boy who saw only Veshki and Moscow in his life write such deep, rich, juicy, psychologically correct prose?

And another question: what about “The Mole,” the famous story about how a red partisan killed a white officer, sat down to take off his good boots - and found himself marauding over the corpse of his own son - how could a young man who was barely twenty write? What did he know in his twenties about his father's feelings, about men's military work, about revolution and humanism, about life and death? What happened to him, that he was the only one in these years who managed to tell about the Civil

War not as a holy battle for the people's truth, but as a fratricidal massacre without purpose and meaning? The rest of the literature had to go through a path of sixty years in order to start writing about this war in this way ...

By 1926, when the piercing, terrible and truthful “Don Tales” were published, Sholokhov was twenty, and behind him was the experience of working as a food commissar, serving in the Revolutionary Military Commissariat and writing agitation plays, several meetings of the Young Guard literary association and a couple of feuilletons published in the central press. This is all. Where did “Quiet Flows the Don” come from, which from the moment it began to be published in “October” (Sholokhov was twenty-three years old) became a real popular reading: both old and young snatched from each other magazines of “October” with new chapters, venerable writers loudly praised the young talent, the People's Commissar Lunacharsky himself wrote an enthusiastic review of Sholokhov's novel, and the directors Pravovoy and Rozhdestvensky in 1930 (Sholokhov was twenty-five) made the first film based on the first books of The Quiet Flows the Don. This is the second case of such an early literary debut after Lermontov, but at least Lermontov still had youthful lyrics and romantic “Mtsyri”, and Sholokhov hit right away - with the prose of an old man wise with tragic life experience.

And it would be nice if “Quiet Flows the Don” only shocked with its epic coverage of events, colorful, richest language, accurate detailed wording and a huge number of talented characters. But that's not even the point. An amazingly true story about a man drawn against his will into a bloody whirlpool of cruel history, his real - without distortion, tendentiousness and literary officialdom - a difficult path, every movement of his extraordinary mind, every breath of his indefatigable soul - this is what one needed to know about life in order to so precisely, so sincerely, so recognizably and at the same time lay out new, as in the palm of your hand, in front of the reader?

Literary theory is unable to give an answer to Sholokhov's questions.

But the history of literature, which accepts everything as it is, testifies: Sholokhov did not measure years and experience when, in his desperate thirty, risking his head, he wrote fearless letters to Stalin about excesses in collectivization and the horrors of the famine in the Kuban (by the way, Stalin, in response to letters sent a train with grain to the starving region) when, at almost forty, he left as a military commissar to the front of the Great Patriotic War, when he was the first to publish a story about prisoners of war (“The Fate of a Man”), showing the simple heroism of those whom official propaganda called traitors ...

Essays on topics:

  1. The story "The Fate of a Man" Sholokhov dedicated to the editor of the publishing house "Moskovsky Rabochiy" Evgenia Levitskaya. They met in 1928, when Sholokhov brought...
  2. According to Sholokhov, he “began writing his novel in 1925. I was attracted by the task of showing the Cossacks in the revolution. Started by participating...

“My mother from childhood taught me to love the Ukrainian people, to Ukrainian art, to Ukrainian songs - one of the cutest in the world”

The only Russian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, who received it while being officially recognized in his homeland, the author of the novel The Quiet Flows the Flows Flows the Flows Flows, is in the Kommersant photo gallery.
In the eyes of the enlightened Russian reader, Sholokhov's recent speeches and his protective position have hopelessly compromised his name. And the obligatory study of Virgin Soil Upturned, imposed on many generations of schoolchildren, made his name odious. However, one should not forget that Sholokhov is the only Russian Nobel Prize winner in literature who received it while being officially recognized at home. The Nobel Committee was right - The Quiet Flows the Don is, of course, the brightest book in all of Soviet literature.

The exact date of birth of Mikhail Sholokhov is unknown. Official biographers report that the writer was born on May 11, 1905 on the farm Kruzhilin of the village of Veshenskaya. He studied four classes, then dropped out of school. In 1920 he was captured by Makhno. Two years later he was sentenced to death, then he worked as a stanitsa tax inspector, but the punishment was replaced by a year of corrective labor.


2.


Sholokhov made his debut with Don Stories when he was twenty, and even by the standards of the 1920s, when he commanded divisions at the age of 16, this was a record. Having gained some fame, Sholokhov suddenly leaves the capital and returns to his native village, from where he never leaves again.


3.

“Our soldier showed himself a hero during the Patriotic War. The whole world knows about the Russian soldier, about his valor, about his Suvorov qualities.

During the Great Patriotic War, Sholokhov lived with his family in the Stalingrad region across the Volga. He did not serve at the front line, he worked as a war correspondent for the Pravda newspaper.


4. Mikhail Sholokhov with Fidel Castro (left)

"We write according to our hearts, and our hearts belong to the party"

In 1928, at the age of 23, Sholokhov published the first, and a few years later the second volume of The Quiet Flows the Don, and already in 1934 translations of the novel appeared in the West. 29-year-old Sholokhov is gaining wide international fame.


5.

“Evaluation of each work of art must, first of all, be approached from the point of view of its truthfulness and persuasiveness”

Immediately after the debut of Sholokhov, criticism was at a loss. It was known that the future academician of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR graduated from only four classes of the gymnasium, which, however, by the standards of Soviet belles-lettres, was quite a lot. But to write half a thousand pages of brilliant prose to a semi-literate village youth in less than two years - it did not fit in my head. Some believed that Sholokhov simply underestimated his age, and, by the way, the exact date of his birth is still in question. At the same time, in the late 1920s, another scandalous version of Sholokhov's child prodigy surfaced - The Quiet Flows the Don was actually written by the writer Fyodor Kryukov, who died in 1920. According to this version, Kryukov's notes ended up in the hands of Sholokhov, who had to carefully retype them and take them to the publisher. Exposing the slander, Sholokhov spoke in the press more than once, and later, when he was enrolled in the classics of socialist realism under Stalin, this question disappeared by itself.


6.

“It is a sacred duty to love the country that has fed and nurtured us like a mother”

In 1965, the Swedish Academy awarded the Nobel Prize to the Quiet Don. Thus, he became the only Russian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, who received it, while being officially recognized at home. However, receiving the award caused a new scandal: the problem of the authorship of the novel again became relevant.


7.


He was married to Maria Gromoslavskaya. they had two sons and two daughters.


8.


After a breakthrough in early youth, Sholokhov wrote slowly and published little. Started in 1928, "Virgin Soil Upturned" was completed only in 1960. The first volume of the unfinished novel "They Fought for the Motherland" was written over ten years. And that's all, except for the story "The Fate of a Man" and extensive, but second-rate, utterly ideological journalism.


9.

“Ask any elderly person, he noticed, how did he live his life? He didn't notice a damn thing."

During the last twenty-five years of his life, Sholokhov did not write a single line at all. On February 21, 1984, he died of throat cancer.


10.

Mikhail Sholokhov is the owner of many awards. Streets, monuments, a university and even an asteroid are named after him.


The bitter truth

A great event in Russian science and culture was the fact that the Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences managed to discover, and thanks to the support of V.V. Putin to buy in 1999 the manuscript of the first two books of The Quiet Flows the Don. This is a great work of Russian literature of the 20th century, which most fully and visibly expressed the feat and tragedy of the historical path of our people in the past century.


12.


In 2005, with the participation of the International Sholokhov Committee (chairman V.S. Chernomyrdin), the manuscripts of the first two books of the novel The Quiet Flows the Don were published in facsimile with my scientific commentary.

Graphological and textological examination established the fact that the manuscript belonged to M.A. Sholokhov. This is the same manuscript that in 1929 Sholokhov submitted to the writers' commission headed by Serafimovich, rejecting accusations of plagiarism. Sholokhov did not then take the manuscript with him to Vyoshenskaya, but, given that he was already under the “hood” of the repressive authorities, he left the manuscript in Moscow with his close friend, prose writer Vasily Kudashev. Kudashev did not return from the war. And the manuscript, hidden from the heirs of M.A. Sholokhov and writers, was kept by Kudashev's wife and daughter, until, after their death, her whereabouts were discovered by the staff of the IMLI RAS.

Textual analysis shows that this is not a manuscript "rewritten" from someone else's text, but a genuine draft of the novel The Quiet Flows the Don. On it is the stamp of the creative pangs of the birth of the novel from the very first, primordial time of its occurrence. The manuscript clearly shows the deep laboratory of Sholokhov's work on the word, helps to recreate the creative history of the novel in close connection with the biography of the author of The Quiet Flows the Don.

The authenticity of The Quiet Flows the Don is confirmed not only by the original manuscript of the first two books of the novel, but also by Sholokhov's life biography, the comprehension of which is far from complete.


"Additional information about the era of 1919"

“Additional information” concerning Sholokhov’s biography in connection with the Cossack uprising of 1919 was found in the archives of the Ryazan branch of the Memorial society, where official documents of Chekist S.A. Bolotov. (F. 8. Op. 4. File 14.)

The interest of the Ryazan "Memorial" is by no means accidental. The merchant families of the Sholokhovs and Mokhovs, which are discussed in the novel, came to the Don from the Ryazan region.

The Ryazan archive contains, in particular, the mandate of the Don Extraordinary Commission dated June 1, 1920, by which Bolotov S.A. “is sent to the 1st Don district (that is, to the Upper Don. - F.K.) to investigate the causes of the uprising and bring the perpetrators to justice.” (See afterword by F.F. Kuznetsov and A.F. Struchkov to the publication: Mikhail Sholokhov. Quiet Don. In 4 books. M., 2011. pp. 969–974.)

The results of "bringing the perpetrators to justice" can be judged by the fact that in his memoirs, stored in the same archive, Bolotov writes that he "personally shot hundreds of white officers."

In 1927, Bolotov again sent to the Don and received a new appointment to the post of head of the Don district department of the GPU, which he held in 1927-1928. What is the reason for this new responsible assignment and appointment?

Bolotov's papers contain the original telegram from M.A. Sholokhov dated May 24, 1927, addressed to the OGPU of the city of Millerovo: “On the 25th in the morning I will be at Millerovo. Sending hello. Sholokhov.

Why was Sholokhov summoned by telegram to the OGPU?

The answer to this question is in the investigation file of Ermakov Kharlampiy Vasilievich (archive number 53542), three volumes of which are stored in the archives of the KGB of the Rostov Region. On June 6, 1927, the Board of the OGPU, chaired by Yagoda, issued a decree on the execution of Yermakov, in the past - commander of the Vyoshenskaya insurgent division and first deputy Pavel Nazarovich Kudinov, commander-in-chief of the rebel troops of the Upper Don.

Kharlampy Yermakov was arrested on February 3, 1927. During a search, they found a letter from M.A. Sholokhov for April 6, 1926, in which the writer asks Ermakov for another meeting with him, because, as he writes, "I need to get some additional information from you regarding the era of 1919."

Sholokhov's letter, together with Yermakov's track record, stored in a separate envelope, was immediately sent to Moscow personally to Yagoda, the second person in the OGPU. The letter delivered to Yagoda explains the reason for calling Sholokhov to the Donetsk OGPU.


Judging by the text of Sholokhov's telegram (“I send greetings”), he already knew Bolotov earlier. And talking with him, answering his questions about his letter to Ermakov, Sholokhov could not even imagine that his addressee was languishing in the basement of the OGPU, who would be shot three weeks later.

On behalf of the leadership of the OGPU, Bolotov spent two years (in 1927-1928) "developing an object", for which he was sent to the Upper Don.

On the back of a joint photograph of Sholokhov and Bolotov preserved in the archive, it is written: “North Caucasian region, Millerovo. Sholokhov is 27 years old. Wrote "Quiet Flows the Don" 1 book. We took pictures in the courtyard of the OGPU in Millerovo.

This brief inscription contains important evidence: according to the OGPU, Sholokhov wrote The Quiet Flows the Don in 1927.

Sholokhov studies suggested that Sholokhov's age was underestimated. Roy Medvedev wrote about this, in particular, in the article "Mysteries of Sholokhov's creative biography" (Questions of Literature. 1989. No. 8). This is indirectly mentioned in the "Memoirs" of Maria Petrovna Sholokhova. She recalls the wedding with her husband: “Already later, when the documents were needed, I found out that he was from 1905. "What did you cheat?" I say. “I was in a hurry, otherwise you would suddenly change your mind about marrying me.” (“Maria Petrovna Sholokhova remembers ...”. Don, 1999, No. 2.)

Sholokhov himself describes how, during the Civil War, “White Cossacks broke into their village. They were looking for me. As a Bolshevik… I don’t know where he is,” my mother kept repeating.” (Sholokhov Encyclopedia. M., 2012. p. 1029.)

But the White Cossacks ruled the Don until the uprising, in 1918. It turns out that Sholokhov was only 13 years old at that moment! Could he be a Bolshevik?!

The controversial question of the actual age of Sholokhov requires study, not because, according to the opponents of the genius, he “could not” write the first book of The Quiet Flows the Don at the age of 23.


The history of Russian and world literature testifies that brilliant writers sometimes began their career in their youth. The dispute about Sholokhov's age is important for another reason: the difference in age also determines the difference in his perception of the dramatic events of the Vyoshensky uprising of 1919.

“Ermakov is the main character of the novel - Grigory Melekhov ...”

The significance of the Vyoshensky uprising in the life of Sholokhov is revealed by the main document stored in the Ryazan archive - a memorandum dated September 4, 1928 from the head of the Don district department of the OGPU Bolotov to the plenipotentiary representative of the OGPU of the SKK and the DSSR (North Caucasus Territory and Dagestan USSR) E.G. Evdokimov. The note, in particular, says (we save the author's punctuation): “In the course of a conversation with him<Шолоховым>I was able to get some biographical information from him. So, he says that he himself is a nonresident by origin, but his mother is a Cossack Hut. Kruzhilinsky, is silent about his father, but talks about his raznochinets stepfather, who adopted him. The stepfather was engaged at one time in trade, he was also something like a Manager.

Sholokhov's childhood proceeded in the conditions of Cossack life, and this provided rich material for his novel. The Civil War found him in Veshki. Under Soviet rule, he worked in the Food Committee for the collection of Prodrazverstka and tax in kind. He is well acquainted with the local leaders of the performance in the Upper Don, as well as with Yermakov, a personality, in his opinion, a large and colorful one, he knows Fomin and the history of his gang. Ermakov, according to him, was first a Cossack officer who received an officer rank for military military merit, and then served in the 1st Army of Budyonny, commanded him successively a squadron, regiment, brigade and was subsequently the Head of the Divisional School, fell twice into Donchek, as a former a white officer, but by means of springs of internal pressure - was released, and in 1927, by order of the Special Conference, he was shot in an operation after the murder of Voikov<…>».

“There is a deep impression that this Ermakov is the hero of the novel, Grigory MELIKHOV,” Bolotov writes further in his report, highlighting the name of the hero of the novel, written through “and”. And he continues: “Sholokhov has a house in Vyoshenskaya, which he recently bought, in order to be able to work calmly on the novel precisely in Veshki, from where he draws rich raw material for his works ...

The Quiet Flows the Don novel will consist of 8 parts in three volumes, 3 parts have already been published as a separate book, the next ones will be released in the shortest possible time, since he has already finished 6 parts and picked up material for part 7.

He asked me very much to give him material about the history of the uprising on the Don, which may be in the archives of our Department. I promised him to find everything that we have about individual White Guard figures, but it immediately became clear that he was interested in more extensive materials, and I advised him to apply to you personally with a request for archive files on the uprising. (See Mikhail Sholokhov. "Quiet Don" in 4 books, afterword by F.F. Kuznetsov, A.F. Struchkov. - M., 2005, pp. 969–973.)

The request to the leadership of the OGPU to allow him to archive files on the Vyoshensky uprising was unfeasible. Moreover. As soon as the topic of the uprising arose in the published April issue of the magazine October 1929, the third book of The Quiet Don, the publication of the novel was stopped for more than a year and a half.


And although in the first chapters of the novel, written back in 1925 (they were preserved in the manuscript), the main character of the novel was Ermakov, though not Kharlampy, but Abram, in the final version of the novel it was Grigory Melekhov, and Kharlampy Ermakov acted in the text as commander of the Vyoshenskaya division.

Bolotov's memorandum, as well as Ermakov's investigative case, prove that it was Kharlampy Yermakov who became the prototype of Grigory Melekhov. The track record of Kharlampy Ermakov confirms this. According to him, the life and military path of this commander of the Vyoshenskaya rebel division and Grigory Melekhov almost completely coincide. So Bolotov had every right to conclude that Kharlampy Yermakov was the main character of The Quiet Flows the Don.

The Main Archive of the FSB contains the investigation file (No. N 1798) of P.N. Kudinov, commander of the rebel forces of the Upper Don, a close friend and fellow soldier of Ermakov, also a holder of four St. George's crosses, who went through the imperialist and Civil wars side by side with Kharlampy. In 1918 they both went over to the side of the Bolsheviks, but when Trotsky announced the policy of decossackization of the Don, Kudinov, together with Yermakov, led the uprising of 1919. After the defeat of the uprising, Yermakov ended up in the Red Army, and Kudinov went into exile. In 1944, he was arrested in Bulgaria by Smersh authorities and taken to Moscow, where he received 10 years in camps in Siberia.

In 1952, Pavel Kudinov was brought from a Siberian camp to Rostov-on-Don to testify in the case of the Vyoshensky uprising.

Kudinov's answers during interrogations, as well as the memoirs of the Upper Don (Vyoshensky) uprising, published in Prague in the journal Free Cossacks (1931, No. 82), undeniably indicate that the events described by Sholokhov in The Quiet Don are fully true .

"You can't steal a book like this"

Sources associated with the special services were tightly closed to Soviet researchers. Information about most of the prototypes was also classified, since the investigation into the Vyoshensky uprising continued until Stalin's death.

Naturally, M.A. Sholokhov for a long time avoided revealing the names of the prototypes of his heroes, protecting them from possible troubles. Literary critics believed that these were mostly purely literary characters. Only in 1974, Sholokhov decided to reveal the truth about the origins and sources of his novel, to talk about prototypes, and first of all, about the prototype of the main character of the novel, Grigory Melekhov.

Sholokhov did this in connection with the publication in Paris in 1974 of the book by I.N. Medvedeva-Tomashevskaya "The stirrup of the Quiet Flows the Don (Riddles of the novel)" with a preface by A.I. Solzhenitsyn's "The Untorn Mystery", where doubts were expressed about the authorship of The Quiet Flows the Don.


Sholokhov decided to give his answer to the book The Stirrup of the Quiet Flows the Don. On November 28–29, 1974, he invited the Rostov sholokhovologist K. Priima and the correspondent of Komsomolskaya Pravda I. Zhukov to his place in Vyoshenskaya. For two days he told in detail how he worked on the novel. At this meeting, for the first time, a photocopy of the same letter from Sholokhov to Kharlampy Yermakov dated April 6, 1926, the original of which was kept in the Rostov KGB, was presented for the first time. Sholokhov spoke about Kharlampy Ermakov as the main prototype of Grigory Melekhov. During the conversation, K. Priyma asked when the writer met Ermakov. Sholokhov replied that a long time ago: “He was still friends with my parents. And in Karginskaya, when we lived there,<бывал>monthly on the day when the big market was. Since the spring of 1923, after demobilization, Yermakov often visited my parents. Later he came to me in Veshki. In his youth, when he had a riding horse, Yermakov never rode into the yard, but always rode through the gate. He had such a disposition-character ... "

Ermakov had a riding horse "in his youth" only when he was a commander in the rebel army. And there is no doubt that such unusual visits to Sholokhov's parents took place at the time of the uprising. Their meetings continued during those months when Yermakov, in 1923, having been demobilized from the Red Army, lived on the neighboring farm of Bazka.

When asked why Ermakov became the main prototype of Melekhov, Sholokhov replied: “Ermakov is more suited to my plan, what Grigory should be. His ancestors - a Turkish grandmother - four St. George's crosses for bravery, service in the Red Guard, participation in the uprising, then surrender to the Reds and a trip to the Polish front - all this fascinated me in the fate of Yermakov. It was difficult for him to choose a path in life, very difficult. Ermakov revealed to me a lot about the battles with the Germans, which I didn’t know from the literature ... So, Grigory’s experiences after the murder of the first Austrian by him came from the stories of Ermakov<…>

Semyon Mikhailovich Budyonny told me that he saw Kharlampy Yermakov in horse attacks on the Wrangel front and that it was no coincidence that Yermakov was appointed head of the military school in Maykop ... "

K. Priyma wrote that "on November 29, 1974, Sholokhov for the first time reveals to us that the events of the Vyoshensky uprising of 1919 are put at the center of the epic." Unfortunately, this conversation was never published in 1974 either in Komsomolskaya Pravda or in Literaturnaya Gazeta.


M.A. Suslov did not want to allow discussions in the Soviet press on the topic of the Vyoshensky uprising. The conversation saw the light only many years later, in 1981, in the collection of articles by K. Priyma "On a par with the century." In a conversation with the Norwegian scientist G. Khetso, head of the project for mathematical research of the language of the Quiet Don, Sholokhov deepened his view of Ermakov: “Ermakov was attractive and, as we say here, thought deeply with his thoughts ... In addition, he knew how to do everything spiritually tell, convey in faces, in a vivid dialogue. Believe me, he knew more about the events of the Vyoshensky uprising than our historians at that time, more than I could read in the books and materials that I used. (Recording of G. Khietso's conversation with M.A. Sholokhov, K. Pryima. See: K. Pryima. Meetings in Vyoshenskaya. Don, 1981, No. 5, pp. 136–138.)

"Great creation of the Russian spirit"

The worldview of people like Kharlampy Ermakov, their popular view of the revolution formed the basis of the novel. "Quiet Flows the Don" is a unique authentic folk epic that combines both the heroic and tragic beginnings of the life of the country and the people at the most abrupt turning point in our history. Compare the first and fourth books of the novel. You will not find such a level of tragedy in Russian literature.

The fourth volume of the epic is a completely ruined life of people, the same life that in the first volume seethed with a full bowl.

“It's amazing how life has changed in the Melekhov family! .. There was a strong, close-knit family, but since spring everything has changed ... The family was breaking up before the eyes of Panteley Prokofievich. They were alone with the old woman. Family ties were suddenly and quickly broken, the warmth of relationships was lost, notes of destructiveness and alienation still slipped through the conversation. They sat at the common table not as before, as a united and friendly family, but as randomly gathered people.

The war was the cause of all this ... ”(Sholokhov M.A., collected works in 8 volumes, GIHL, vol. 5, p. 123.)

The war broke human ties, took away so many people. These deaths - of Natalya, Darya, Panteley Prokofievich, Ilyinichna - written with soul-rending imperious force, are a prelude to the finale of that powerful and all-encompassing social tragedy, in the center of which, of course, the fate of Grigory Melekhov. This tragedy, which made The Quiet Flows the Don one of the greatest works of world literature, became the focus of the fourth book...

And another death - Aksinya: “He buried his Aksinya in bright morning light. Already in the grave, he folded her deathly whitened swarthy hands on her chest, covered her face with a head scarf so that the earth would not fall asleep her half-open, motionlessly directed to the sky and already beginning to fade eyes. He said goodbye to her, firmly believing that they were not parting for long ...

With his palms, he diligently flattened the damp yellow clay on the grave mound and knelt near the grave for a long time, bowing his head, gently swaying. There was no need for him to rush now. Everything was over.

In the smoky haze of the dry wind, the sun was rising over the fierce. Its rays silvered the thick gray hair on Gregory's uncovered head, gliding over his pale face, terrible in its immobility. As if waking up from a heavy sleep, he raised his head and saw above him a black sky and a dazzlingly shining black disk of the sun. (Sholokhov M.A., decree ed., vol. 5, p. 490.)

Aksinya's death is not the last in The Quiet Don. Ultimately, The Quiet Flows the Don is a novel about the death of Grigory Melekhov. And this is the main point of the novel.

A great artist who swung at the tragic truth about tectonic time, Sholokhov considered himself obliged to tell readers what the real end of Grigory Melekhov's life was. But he knew it was impossible.


It is for this reason that the fourth book of the novel has waited so long - almost ten years - for its completion.

Sholokhov painfully searched for the truthful end of the novel, which, it would seem, is practically impossible in the conditions of the 1930s. And yet, without contradicting his understanding of historical truth, Sholokhov completed the epic with dignity.

The writer perceived the tragic finale of Grigory Melekhov as a personal drama deeply experienced by him. I will quote a letter from Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences V.V. Novikov, which I received while working on the book Quiet Flows the Don: The Fate and Truth of a Great Novel. He wrote that at one time Yu.B. Lukin, the editor of The Quiet Don, with whom they worked in Pravda, according to Maria Petrovna Sholokhova, told him about the circumstances of the end of M.A. Sholokhov novel.

Here is what M.P. Lukin told. Sholokhov: “It was in 1939. I woke up at dawn and heard that something was not right in Mikhail Alexandrovich's office. The light is on, but it's already light... I went into the office and see: he is standing at the window, crying a lot, shuddering... I went up to him, hugged him, and said: "Misha, what are you?.. Calm down..." And he turned away from the window, pointed to the desk and, through tears, said: "I'm done ..."

I went to the table. Mikhail Alexandrovich worked all night, and I re-read the last page about the fate of Grigory Melekhov:

“Grigory approached the descent,” panting, hoarsely called out to his son:

- Mishenka! .. Sonny! ..

It was all that remained in his life, which still made him related to the earth and to all this huge world shining under the cold sun.

The greatest secret of the novel Quiet Don, as well as its highest achievement, is that, having expressed the all-destroying scope of the revolution, the whole depth and ruthlessness of the historical and human tragedy experienced by the Russian people in the 20th century, Quiet Don does not immerse readers in an abyss of darkness, leaving hope and light. And another aspect of the same problem: with all the power of awareness of the tragedy of the revolution, the novel does not cause a feeling of its historical hopelessness, randomness, meaninglessness. And in this "Quiet Flows the Don", which revealed to the world, it would seem, the most "cruel, truly monstrous face of the revolution" (Vadim Kozhinov), is fundamentally different from the books that set as their goal and task the exposure of the revolution.

V. Kozhinov in the article "Quiet Flows the Don" by M.A. Sholokhov" (Rodnaya Kuban, 2001, No. 1) explains this paradoxical feature of the novel by the fact that "the protagonists of The Quiet Don, who commit terrible deeds, ultimately remain people in the full sense of the word, people capable of committing selfless, lofty, noble deeds: the devilish still does not overcome the divine in them.

This is true. But I don't think it's the whole truth.

Sholokhov, like no one, felt the historical "dictation of fate" in relation to Russia. According to him, “the people want the fulfillment of the ideals for which they went into the revolution, they bore on their shoulders the incredible burden of the Civil and the most difficult, Patriotic War,” but “one must remember the purity” of these ideals. "We must remember about selfless and faithful service to the idea." (“Pravda”, July 31, 1974, conversation with M. Sholokhov.)

That split of the world, which in its reckless striving for the future, the revolution brought into the lives of people, and today is bearing fruit. In overcoming this split, in a passionate and convinced call for the unity of people - the ultimate meaning and pathos of the novel by M.A. Sholokhov "Quiet Don".


In the light of the foregoing, let us turn to the question asked by A.I. Solzhenitsyn in his preface to the book The Stirrup of the Quiet Flows the Don. Denoting his doubts: the extreme youth of the author, the low level of education, the lack of drafts of the novel and the “stunning course” of writing his first three books, as well as his artistic power, achieved “only after many attempts by an experienced master,” Solzhenitsyn posed the question to the reader: "Then - an incomparable genius? .."

The answer was given by Pavel Kudinov, commander-in-chief of the rebel forces of the Upper Don, to a greater extent than anyone else who has the right to judge the authenticity and significance of the Quiet Don. In his letter from emigration to Moscow, published in K. Priyma’s book “On a par with the century” (spec. ed., pp. 157–158), Kudinov said: “M. Sholokhov’s novel “The Quiet Don” is a great creation of a truly Russian spirit and heart<…>I read The Quiet Don avidly, sobbed and grieved over it and rejoiced - how beautifully and lovingly everything is described, and suffered and was executed - how wormwood is bitter the truth about our uprising. And if you knew, you would have seen how in a foreign land the Cossacks - day laborers - gathered in the evenings in my barn and read The Quiet Don to tears and sang old Don songs, cursing Denikin, Baron Wrangel, Churchill and the entire Entente. And many ordinary officers asked me: “Well, to what extent did Sholokhov write everything about the uprising, tell me, Pavel Nazarovich, don’t remember who he served in your headquarters, entot Sholokhov, that he surpassed and portrayed everything so thoroughly with thought. And I, knowing that the author of The Quiet Flows the Don was still a teenager at that time, answered the soldiers:

“That’s all, my friends, talent, such a vision of human hearts was given to him from God! ..”

By materials"Literary newspaper"

Felix Kuznetsov, corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences
especially for "Century", May 22, 2015

He was hiding from the NKVD and came drunk to Stalin, received the Nobel Prize and dreamed of the glory of Leo Tolstoy. Such is the fate of Mikhail Sholokhov.

ALREADY during his lifetime, he was recognized as great and became the only one of the five Russian writers who received the Nobel Prize, being a citizen of the country. (Ivan Bunin, Joseph Brodsky and Alexander Solzhenitsyn received the award while in exile, while Boris Pasternak was forced to refuse the award.)

He won the award "for his uncompromising depiction of a man of the 20th century." However, for all Sholokhov, first of all, the author of The Quiet Flows the Don.

The first two books were published in 1928-1929. The 24-year-old writer was noticed. World fame came to Sholokhov a few years later, after the 3rd and 4th books were printed.

He was late for a meeting with the leader

BTW, the third book of The Quiet Flows the Don, which deals with the Civil War, was initially not wanted to be published. The fate of both the novel and the writer himself was decided by Stalin, a meeting with whom Sholokhov was organized by Gorky, who treated him well.

The meeting between the leader and the young writer took place at Gorky's dacha. Sholokhov arrived first and, seeing that the main guest was not yet there, he went fishing. On the river, as usual, time flew by unnoticed. Stalin met the late Sholokhov unfriendly. The conversation got pretty tough.

"Why do you write with sympathy for the white movement? You have the Kornilovs there, the Lisnitskys ..." Stalin began with a question. It turned out that before the meeting he had read the entire novel. Sholokhov was not at a loss: “But the whites were actually significant people. The same General Kornilov managed to break through to the very top, having been born into a poor family. He ate at the same table with the privates. And when he escaped from Austrian captivity, he carried the wounded for several kilometers soldier." Stalin did not like the answer: "A Soviet writer must have a selection - what to write and what not." “So I didn’t put it in the novel,” Sholokhov retorted. "Very well, we will print," the leader finally agreed.

By the way, he insisted that Grigory Melekhov (originally the hero's name was Abram Ermakov) in the finale of the novel become a Soviet man, almost a communist. Sholokhov tried, but in the end he could not step on the throat of his own song. He worked on the end of the novel in Moscow, visiting his friend Vasily Kudashev. He recalled that Mikhail woke him up one late at night: "No, Vasya, I can't. That's what the final will be." And he read what soon became known to the whole world.

The name of Vasily Kudashev is connected with the story of the missing manuscript of the Quiet Flows the Don. Sholokhov met Vasily when he came to Moscow to enter Moscow State University. But, as the son of wealthy parents and, moreover, non-partisan, he did not pass the selection.

Not entering the university, Mikhail Alexandrovich returned to his place in Veshenskaya. But when he came to the capital, he always visited Kudashev. And on one of his visits, he left the manuscript of the first two books of The Quiet Flows the Don in his apartment in Kamergersky Lane.

After the writer's death, it became known that Kudashev's daughter owns them. When the woman died and her daughter also died, the rights to the relic passed to a distant relative of the Kudashevs. She was inundated with offers to sell the manuscript, including through the Sotheby's auction. They offered big money. But she did not succumb to persuasion and decided not to send the manuscript abroad. V. Putin, who was then Prime Minister, ordered to find the necessary amount for the purchase of the manuscript by the state. After 885 pages (605 of them were written by the writer himself, the rest were copied by his wife) of the handwritten text were at the disposal of specialists, it became completely clear that the author of the novel was Mikhail Sholokhov.

TALKS that the first book of The Quiet Flows the Don was not written by Sholokhov appeared as early as 1929. A special commission was created, which made a decision on the authorship of Sholokhov. The second wave of accusations (it was said that Mikhail Alexandrovich borrowed the novel from the Cossack writer Kryukov) appeared in the 70s.

“Why?” Alexander Ushakov, head of the Department of Modern Russian Literature at the Gorky Institute of World Literature, argues. “Yes, Sholokhov had too many envious people. Solzhenitsyn wrote the preface to the book The Stirrup of the Quiet Flows the Don, published abroad. Returning from exile in the 1950s, Alexander Isaevich first of all sent a letter to Sholokhov, in which he called him a great writer. But when Sholokhov spoke out against awarding the Lenin Prize to Solzhenitsyn's story "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich", he apparently harbored a grudge against him. Having left to live in the West, Solzhenitsyn - I know this for sure - began to look for a person who would write an anti-Sholokhov book. And, of course, I found it. By the way, when we had at our disposal the manuscript of The Quiet Flows the Don, unconditionally confirming the authorship of Sholokhov, we suggested that Alexander Isaevich take a look at it. He refused, citing multiple cases."

Sholokhov's relationship with his colleagues is a separate issue. Alexei Tolstoy treated him rather reservedly. When in 1940 there was talk of awarding the "Quiet Don" the Stalin Prize, Tolstoy spoke out against it. Together with Fadeev, they insisted that the novel needs to be improved, it lacks a more Soviet ending. True, when it came to voting, all cultural figures - members of the award committee unanimously voted for "Quiet Flows the Don".

However, the "culprit" of the positive decision was Stalin himself, on the eve of the vote he dropped in a conversation: "It is up to the writers to decide, of course. But as a reader, I like the novel." The fact that the reader Stalin likes the writer Sholokhov decided the outcome of the case. As a few years earlier, he decided the very fate of the writer.

They tried to make the writer the head of the conspiracy

The fact is that in the mid-30s an assassination attempt was being prepared on Sholokhov. The NKVD of the Rostov region, where he lived, fabricated a case in which Sholokhov appeared as the head of a local counter-revolutionary conspiracy. But one of the Chekists managed to warn the writer. And he by roundabout ways, deliberately confusing his tracks, left for Moscow. When he got there, he immediately called Stalin's secretary Poskrebyshev. "Don't be afraid, you will be called," he said.

Sholokhov began to wait for a call from the Kremlin in the company of Alexander Fadeev. The friends were drinking heavily. And suddenly a call - to the Kremlin! Poskrebyshev, seeing the state of Sholokhov, tried to give him tea to drink. But Stalin smelled: "Comrade Sholokhov, they say you drink too much!" To which the writer replied: "With such a life you will get drunk, Comrade Stalin!" And he told the leader in detail what brought him to Moscow. After this conversation, Stalin called a meeting of the Politburo, summoned the entire leadership of the NKVD. And after some time there began serious personnel changes.

Sholokhov understood perfectly well what was happening in the country. He was not a naive person. On the contrary, he was quite practical and always distanced himself from authority. “I remember that in 1954, together with the then head of our institute, Anisimov, we went to the opening of the Second Congress of the Writers’ Union,” recalls Professor Alexander Ushakov, “and on the street we met Sholokhov, staggering. “Misha, are you drunk?” asked ours. director: "My friend from the camps has returned," said Sholokhov. - Served 17 years. Not a single finger is missing."

With the new leadership of the country - Khrushchev and Brezhnev - Sholokhov failed to find a common language. Having finished "They fought for the Motherland", he sent the manuscript to Brezhnev. Tom didn’t like the novel so much that he didn’t even answer. And then Sholokhov, according to relatives, burned the manuscript. Although, according to experts, this novel could be compared with the "Quiet Don" in its power. What was finally published is far from the original version created by the writer.

But he still went down in history as the author of the great novel Quiet Flows the Don. The campaign to award Sholokhov the Nobel Prize was led by the English writer Lord Snow, a great admirer of Sholokhov's talent. It so happened that a year before, in 1964, the Nobel Prize was awarded to Jean Paul Sartre, who refused to accept it with the words: "I will not receive the Nobel Prize until Mikhail Sholokhov becomes its laureate."

For Sholokhov himself, the Nobel Prize was a complete surprise. Although he always knew the value of himself, as a great writer. Not without reason, on the margins of the manuscript of The Quiet Flows the Don, next to the autograph "M. Sholokhov," he diligently wrote: "L. Tolstoy."

“In my opinion, Sholokhov is the greatest writer of the 20th century,” Alexander Ushakov believes. “No one touched on the topics he touched on. wars will cut to pieces. In terms of the level of understanding of the century and the place of man in it, Sholokhov has no equal. Sholokhov's talent is the talent of a prophet."

Quiz
"Rereading Sholokhov"

I round. Through the pages of life and creativity

Question: Where was M. A. Sholokhov born?
Answer options:

a) x. Kruzhilin;
b) x. Kargin;
c) x. Gremyachy Log.

Question: Where did M.A. Sholokhov spend his childhood and youth?
Answer options:

a) x. Kargin
b) the city of Boguchar
c) art. Veshenskaya

Question: From what year did M.A. Sholokhov begin to write?
Answer options:

a) since 1923

b) since 1924
c) since 1925

Question: In what literary genre were the first published works of M. A. Sholokhov written?
Answer options:

a) essay;

b) story;
c) feuilleton.

Question: What was the name of the feuilleton - the first published work of M. A. Sholokhov?
Answer options:

a) "Test";
b) "Three";
c) Auditor.

Question: In which Moscow newspaper did MA Sholokhov make his literary debut?
Answer options:

a) "Komsomolskaya Pravda";
b) "Youthful Truth";
c) Pioneer Truth.

Question: Under what pseudonym did the first feuilletons of the beginning writer appear in print?
Answer options:

a) M. Kazak;
b) M. Kruzhilin;
c) M. Sholokh.

Question: What was the name of Sholokhov's first published story?
Answer options:

a) "Nahalenko"
b) "Mole"
c) "Shepherd"

Question: What was the name of M.A. Sholokhov's first book?
Answer options:

a) "Don stories";
b) "Azure steppe";
c) early stories.

Question: What work of M. A. Sholokhov was written not during the Great Patriotic War?
Answer options:

a) "The fate of man";
b) "The Science of Hate";
c) "They fought for their homeland."

Question: In what year was M. A. Sholokhov awarded the Nobel Prize?
Answer options:

a) 1933
b) 1960
c) 1965

Question: Which of the writers owns the lines dedicated to M. A. Sholokhov: “This is power! Now that's realism! Imagine, a young Cossack from Veshenskaya created such an epic of folk life, reached such depth in the depiction of characters, showed such a profound tragedy that, by God, he was ahead of us all! .. "
Answer options:

a) A. Serafimovich;
b) A. Fadeev;
c) A. M. Gorky.

II round. Find out the hero by description

Question: “Near the table, twisting the wick of the lamp, standing facing Davydov was a tall, straight-shouldered man ... He was broad in the chest and, like a cavalry pincer. Above his yellowish eyes, with exorbitantly large pupils filled like tar, drooping black eyebrows grew together. He would have been handsome with that discreet, but memorable masculine beauty, if not for the too predatory cut of the nostrils of a small hawk nose, not for the cloudy pillowcase in his eyes. Who is this?
Answer options:

a) Andrey Razmetnov;
b) Kondrat Maidannikov;
c) Makar Nagulnov.

Question: “She looked no more than twenty-five years old. Small freckles thickly covered her oblong cheeks, her mottled face resembled a magpie's egg. But some alluring and impure beauty was in her tar-black eyes, in her whole lean, stately figure. Her round, affectionate eyebrows were always slightly raised, it seemed that she was constantly waiting for something joyful; bright lips at the corners at the ready held a smile, not covering the densely fused horseshoe of bulging teeth. She walked around, moving her sloping shoulders like that, as if she was waiting for someone to press her from behind, hug her girlish narrow shoulder.
Answer options:

a) Lushka Nagulnova;
b) Varvara Kharlamova;
c) Aksinya Astakhova.

Question: He had, “the same as Bati’s, a drooping vulture nose, bluish tonsils of hot eyes in slightly oblique slits, sharp cheekbones covered with brown, ruddy skin. He stooped just like his father, even in the smile they both have in common, bestial.
Answer options:

a) Dmitry Korshunov;
b) Grigory Melekhov;
c) Semyon Davydov.

III round. Which of the heroes M.A. Sholokhov these lines belong

Question: “Vustritsa, I speak Russian to you! Frog-scum, and noble blood in the oyster! My dear godfather, under the old pressure of General Filimonov himself, served as batmen and said that the general even swallowed hundreds of them on an empty stomach! Ate right on the root! Wustritsa isho will not hatch from a shell, and he already calls her ottel with a fork. It will pierce through and - yours are gone! She writes plaintively, and he, you know, pushes her down the neck. And how do you know, maybe she, this damn thing, is an oyster breed? The generals approved, and I, perhaps on purpose, for the benefit of you fools, put it down. For the bite…”
Answer options:

a) Lopakhin;
b) Grandfather Shchukar;
c) Polovtsev.

Question: “I also found a groom! Why the hell do I need you, such a drooling coward? So I married you, keep your pocket wider! You are embarrassed to walk along the farm with me, but there, “let's get married!” He is afraid of everything, looks at everyone, and then shied away from the children, like a madman. Well, go with your authority to the pasture ..., wallow there on the grass alone, unfortunate katsap! I thought that you are a person as a person, and you are like my Makarka: he has one world revolution in his mind, and you have authority. Yes, with you, any woman will die of longing!
Answer options:

a) Aksinya Astakhova;
b) Lukerya Nagulnova;
c) Dunyasha Melekhova.

Question: “... I miss him, my dear grandmother. I dry on my eyes. I don’t have time to sew in a skirt: every day it becomes wider ... The base will pass by, and my heart boils ... I would fall to the ground, I would kiss his traces ... Maybe I’ll dry it with something? .. Help, granny! .. Help, dear! What is worth - I will give. Fuck the last shirt of the sim, just help!”
Answer options:

a) Natalya Korshunova;
b) Daria Melekhova;
c) Aksinya Astakhova.

Both teams and individual participants can take part in the competition. The results of the competition are summed up according to the results of all rounds.

Comp.:

Degtyareva O.V.,
Head of MBO MBUK VR
"Intersettlement Central Library"


Top