While the bridge is not the most famous or picturesque, it is connected with some of the most prominent authors in Russian literature. In 1829,
Alexander Pushkin mentioned Kokushkin bridge in a famous
epigram. For the first edition of
Eugene Onegin, the poet commissioned an illustration depicting himself and Onegin walking together along the quay. Upon receiving the illustration, which represented him leaning on a parapet with his back turned towards the
Peter and Paul Fortress, he was exceedingly displeased with the result (which had little in common with his own preliminary sketch, illustrated to the right) and scribbled the following epigram underneath:
Fyodor Dostoevsky's
Crime and Punishment starts with a mention of the bridge:
K. bridge here means Kokushkin bridge. In
Mikhail Lermontov's unfinished novel
Shtoss, the main character, the artist Lugin, looks for
Shtoss House near Kokushkin Bridge. It is conceivable that Lermontov took the actual
Zverkov House as the prototype of Shtoss House. Zverkov House was a famous apartment house near Kokushkin Bridge. In 1829, the then young and unknown
Nikolai Gogol rented a room in that house, where he wrote
Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka, as commemorated by a plaque on the house. Gogol liked to place the characters in his writings in real locations that he had visited. In "
Diary of a Madman", Gogol sends Poprishchin over the Kokushkin Bridge to the Zverkov House. == References ==