Young Shevyrev was enrolled in the Moscow archives of the Foreign Ministry where he came to know other "archive youths", as the Russian followers of
Schelling were then known. His translations of German Romantic poetry won him respect in the literary circles. In 1829, Princess
Zinaida Volkonskaya invited him to look after her young son in Italy. After returning to Russia four years later, Shevyrev published the first Russian study of
Dante.
Sergey Uvarov secured for him a professorship in Moscow. In the late 1830s Shevyrev joined
Mikhail Pogodin, the editor of
Moskvityanin, in opposing
Belinsky and his pro-Western colleagues. His later years were devoted to completing the bulky
History of Russian Literature. Many of the letters collected in
Gogol's
Correspondence with Friends were addressed to Shevyrev. At the beginning of
Alexander II's liberal reign, Shevyrev was accused by Count
Bobrinsky of being a pro-government (
kvas) patriot. The elderly scholar "lost his temper and hit Bobrinsky in the face. Bobrinsky flew off the handle: he dashed at his opponent, knocked him to the floor, and began to trample him underfoot". Shevyrev (who had a rib broken in the scuffle) left Russia "in disgust", never to return again. == Works ==