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Pushkin's tradition

Pushkin,/kloc-a great Russian national poet in the 9th century, the main representative of Russian romantic literature and the founder of Russian critical realism literature. He was born in a noble landlord family and received a good family education since childhood. 18 1 1 year entered the children's primary school in Huangcun, Petersburg. The outbreak of the Great Patriotic War aroused his great patriotic enthusiasm. After graduation, he worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and was exiled several times because of his progressive tendency in creation. 1837, the 38-year-old poet died in a conspiracy duel. Pushkin has many literary talents. As a poet, he wrote more than 800 lyric poems and dozens of narrative poems, and used various forms and rhythms, such as the fairy tale The Fisherman and the Golden Fish, the political lyric poem Ode to Freedom, the long romantic narrative poem Tzgang and the long realistic narrative poem yevgeni onegin. In terms of novels, his short story "The Postman" initiated the tradition of describing "little people" in Russian literature, and the Collection of Belgin's Novels became a model of Russian short stories. The novel The Captain's Daughter and the novella The Queen of Spades are also masterpieces. He also left several poetic dramas and a lot of political comments.