Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin. Walking through Odessa.

A little more than a year since the summer of 1823, the poet spent in Odessa, here he was asked to come here after exile in Chisinau and was appointed subordinate to Count Vorontsov.
In Odessa, Alexander Sergeevich wrote two chapters of "Eugene Onegin", a poem "Gypsies", as well as many other works.
In Odessa, Pushkin developed friendly relations with the Countess of Vorontsov, who grew into a deep sense. With her husband and the head of Pushkin in Odessa - Count Vorontsov - the poet's friendship did not work. IVORONTSOV was inclined towards the poet hostilely and Pushkin paid him for this with evil epigrams. Soon these relations ended in the deportation of the poet to the village of Mikhailovskoye.
In Odessa in memory of the poet there is a monument on Primorsky Boulevard, a museum of the poet on the street with the name Pushkinskaya works.

ALX_8485.jpg

Camera Nikon D7100
photo by @frodo1977

@cleverbot

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