A member of the noble , or, more accurately, Boratynsky family, the future poet received his education at the
Page Corps at
St. Petersburg, from which he was expelled at the age of 15 after stealing a snuffbox and five hundred roubles from the bureau of his accessory's uncle. After three years in the countryside and deep emotional turmoil he entered the army as a private. In 1820 the young poet met
Anton Delvig, who rallied his failing spirits and introduced him to the literary press. Soon the military posted Baratynsky to
Finland, where he remained for six years. His first long poem,
Eda, written during this period, established his reputation. In January 1826 he married the daughter of Major-General
Gregory G. Engelhardt. Through the interest of friends he obtained leave from the Emperor to retire from the army, and he settled in 1827 in
Muranovo just north of Moscow (now a literary museum). There he completed his longest work,
The Gipsy, a poem written in the style of Pushkin. Baratynsky's family life seemed happy, but a profound melancholy remained in the background of his mind and of his poetry. He published several books of verse which Pushkin and other perceptive critics praised highly, but which met with a comparatively cool reception from the public, and with violent ridicule on the part of the young journalists of the "plebeian party". As time went by, Baratynsky's mood progressed from pessimism to hopelessness, and
elegy became his preferred form of expression. He died in 1844 at
Naples, where he had gone in pursuit of a milder climate. == Poetry ==