Nikolai Marchenko was born in
Birzula and graduated from secondary school in
Odessa, but he always considered
Kiev to be his hometown. In 1935–1941, the poet studied at the
Taras Shevchenko State University of Kiev, which he graduated with a degree in physics, specializing in metals analysis by
X-ray fluorescence. During the
Nazi occupation in 1941–1943 he lived in Kiev. In the autumn of 1943, as the Red Army was approaching the city, he left with his father and family with the retreating German troops. Although his parents and he and his wife left voluntarily for Germany, fearing persecution by the Soviet authorities for allegedly collaborating with the German occupiers, none of them were Nazi collaborators. In reality, Morschen's father created a kind of conservatory with two students (his son with his wife) and one teacher, who was also the director – Nikolai Narokov himself. All the "collaboration" came down to the fact that the Germans, striving to create the appearance of a peaceful life being established in Ukraine, allowed the opening of this institution, exempting the students from being sent to forced labor in Germany. And when the reservation was abolished, Morshen and his wife took jobs as laborers in a military factory. Once again, they avoided being sent to the Germans. In 1944 (according to other sources, at the end of 1943), he and his family arrived in Germany, first in
Königsberg, then in
Berlin, and from 1945 in the
Zoo Camp (
British Zone of Occupation, Hamburg), where he took the name
Morshen, which later became a pseudonym, to avoid repatriation. In 1950, the Marchenko family moved to the United States, first to
Baltimore, then to
Syracuse, New York, where Morshen found a place of Russian lecture, and finally – to
Monterey, California; in the same 1950, the poet took the same position at the
Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center, where he worked until his retirement in 1977. ==Work and critical reception==