-I found her interesting because of her writing style and the way she always seemed to ask a question or make a statment that could make the person reading it ask themselves, "Why is this going on?" or "What am I doing to stop it."
-I find her bold and bright because during Russain Revolution when friends and people she knew were leaving Russia in fear she decided to stay. She voiced her opinion on them leaving by writing:
You are a traitor, and for a green island,
Have betrayed, yes, betrayed your native
Land,
Abandoned all our songs and sacred
Icons,
And the pine tree over a quiet lake
-She had strong views about abandoning her country even though she was living in it with no electricity and little nourishment.
I have a high respect that she wasn't afraid to admit her fear though about these events;
"She wrote of her own temptation to leave:"Have betrayed, yes, betrayed your native
Land,
Abandoned all our songs and sacred
Icons,
And the pine tree over a quiet lake
-She had strong views about abandoning her country even though she was living in it with no electricity and little nourishment.
I have a high respect that she wasn't afraid to admit her fear though about these events;
A voice came to me. It called out comfortingly.
It said, "Come here,
Leave your deaf and sinful land,
Leave Russia forever,
I will wash the blood from your hands,
Root out the black shame from your heart,
[...] calmly and indifferently,
I covered my ears with my hands,
So that my sorrowing spint
Would not be stained by those shameful words.
-Her husband was put into a camp for allegidly being involved in an anti-Bolshevik conspiracy, and her husband, Nikolay Gumilyov, died from disease. She still continued to write her thoughts regardless of what the govenrment might want to censor or not allow her to publish; she regarded the cause of her husbands death as being, "A ghost, a thief or a rat..."
-Her compasion strechted to her reading to soilders in military hospitals.
-In 1946 her writing was banned, yet when her son was put in a prision camp for 10 years she had the bravery to publish propoganda poetry. Luckly her son was eventually released...but not until four years after Stalin's death. (Stalin died in 1952, her son was released in 1956.)
I found her to be an inspirational women, and I really enjoy her poetry and writing style. :D Clearly others did to because she has her own memorial museum im St. Petersberg.
Also, I find her to be quite pretty. <3
(Heh, and yeah, she does look a little like Alida. Teehee.)
