Ivan Bunin (1870-1953) - born October 10 (Oct. 22, New
Style), 1870
Russian poet, short story writer, novelist who wrote of the decay of the Russian
nobility and of peasant life. Bunin was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature
in 1933. He is considered one of the most important figures in Russian
literature before the Revolution of 1917. Bunin gained fame chiefly for his
prose works, although he wrote poetry throughout his creative life. His calm 'classical'
style had a closer kinship with the prose of the 19th-century - Turgenev,
Tolstoy, Garšin, Chekhov - than with the modernist experiments of his own time.
"I have a genuinely savage hatred and genuinely savage contempt for revolutions."
Ivan Bunin was born on his parents' estate near the village of Voronezh, central
Russia. His father came from a long line of landed gentry - serf owners until
emancipation. Bunin's grandfather was a prosperous landowner, who started to
spent his property after the death of his young wife. What little was left,
Bunin's father drank and played at card tables. By the turn of the century the
family's fortune was nearly exhausted. In early childhood Bunin witnessed the
increasing impoverishment of his family, who were ultimately completely ruined
financially. Much of his childhood Bunin spent in the family estate in Oryol
province, and became familiar with the life of the peasanrs. In 1881 he entered
the public school in Yelets, but after five years he was forced to return home.
His elder brother, who had studied at an university and had also sat in prison
for political reasons, encouraged him to write and read Russian classics,
Pushkin, Gogol, Lermontov, and others.
At the age of seventeen Bunin made his debut as a poet, when his poem appeared
in a magazine in St. Petersburg. He continued to write poems and published in
1891 his first story, 'Derevenskiy eskiz' (Country Sketch) in N.K. Mikhaylovsky's
journal Russkoye bogatstvo. In 1889 he followed his brother to Kharkov, where he
became a local government clerk. Bunin then took a job as an assistant editor of
the newspaper Orlovskiy Vestnik, and worked as a librarian, and district-court
statistician at Poltava. Bunin wrote short stories for various newspapers, and
started a correspondence with Anton Chechov, becoming a close friend with him.
Bunin was also loosely connected with Gorky's Znahie group. In 1894 Bunin had
met Leo Tolstoy, whose works he admired, but he found impossible to follow the
author's moral and sociopolitical ideas. In 1899 Bunin met Maxim Gorky, and
dedicated his collection of poetry, LISTOPAD (1901), for him.
"Like all wealthy Americans he was very liberal when traveling, and believed in
the complete sincerity and good-will of those who so painstakingly fed him,
served him day and night, anticipating his slightest desire, protected him from
dirt and disturbance, hauled things for him, hailed carriers, and delivered his
luggage to hotels; So it was everywhere, and it had to be so at Naples."
(from 'The Gentleman from San Francisco', 1915)
From 1895 Bunin divided his time between St. Petersburg and Moscow. He traveled
much, married in 1898 the daughter of an Greek revolutionary. By the turn of the
century, Bunin had published over 100 poems. He gained fame with such stories as
'On the Farm,' 'The News From Home,' 'To the Edge of The World,' 'Antonov Apples',
and 'The Gentleman from San Francisco' (1915), which depicts an American
millionaire who cares only about making money. He dies in a luxury Italian hotel
and is shipped home in the hold of a luxury liner. Several tales focused on the
life of peasants and landowners, but after the revolution of 1905 Bunin's
peasant themes became darker in tone. The author, who knew village life more
closely than did the urban intellectuals, considered the folk ignorant, violent,
and totally unfit to take a hand in government. Later he wrote about the
Bolsheviks in his notebook Cursed Days: A Diary of Revolution: "What a terrible
gallery of convicts!"
As a translator Bunin was highly regarded. He published in 1898 a translation of
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha, for which he was awarded by
the Russian Academy of Science the Pushkin Prize in 1903. Among Bunin's other
translations were Lord Byron's Manfred and Cain, Tennyson's Lady Godiva, and
works from Alfred de Musset, and François Coppée. In 1909 the Academy elected
Bunin one of its twelve members.
After Bunin's first marriage ended, he married again in 1907. When he was 40,
Bunin published his first full-length work, DEREVNIA (1910, The Village), which
was composed of brief episodes in the Russian provinces at the time of the
Revolution of 1905. The story, set in the author's birthplace, was about two
peasant brothers - one a cruel drunk, the other a gentler, more sympathetic
character. The Village made his famous in Russia. Bunin's realistic portrayal of
village life destroyed the idealized picture of unspoiled peasants, and arose
much controversy with its "characters sunk so far below the average of
intelligence as to be scarcely human." Two years later appeared SUKHODOL (Dry
Valley), a lament for the passing of gentry life and a veiled biography of Bunin's
family.
"These «ruthless» works caused passionate discussions among our Russian critics
and intellectuals who, owing to numerous circumstances peculiar to Russian
society and - in these latter days - to sheer ignorance or political advantage,
have constantly idealized the people. In short, these works made me notorious;
this success has been confirmed by more recent works." (from 'Autobiography')
Before World War I Bunin traveled in Ceylon, Palestine, Egypt, Turkey, and other
countries - these journeys also left marks on his poems and prose works. Between
1912 and 1914 Bunin spent three winters with Gorky on Capri. After revolution in
October 1917, he left Moscow and moved to Odessa for two years, eventually
leaving Russia on the last French ship to sail from Odessa. He emigrated to
France, where he settled in Grasse. In the 1920 Bunin published his diary
OKAYANNYE DNI, where he bitterly attacked the Bolshevik regime. Other later
works include the autobiographical novel ZHIZN ARSEN'EVA: U ISTOKA DNEJ (1933,
The Life of Arsenyev), novella MITINA LUBOV (1925, Mitya's Love), TYOMNUYYE
ALLEI (1946, Shadowed Paths), written during the Nazi occupation, and
VOSPOMINANIYA (1950, Memories and Portraits).
In exile Bunin wrote only of Russia. Bunin's name had been mentioned several
times in Nobel Prize speculations and the whole process had became a burden for
the author. According to a story, Bunin was stopped in Berlin on his way to
Stockholm to receive the award. Nobel winner or not, he was arrested by the
Gestapo, interrogated - the excuse was jewel smuggling - and he had to drink a
dose of castor oil. During World War II Bunin, who was a strong opponent of
Nazism, remained in France and it is said he sheltered a Jew in his house at
Grasse throughout the Occupation. Bunin died of a heart attack in a Paris attic
flat on November 8, 1953. His projected trilogy, which began with ZHIZN
ARSEN'EVA (1927-33, The Life of Arsenyev) was characterized by the Russian
writer Konstantin Paustovski "neither a short novel, nor a novel, nor a long
short story, but is of a genre yet unknown." The second part, LIKA, was
published in 1939. Bunin modified his views of the Soviet Union after World War
II, and a five-volume selection of his work appeared in his native country.