The Ratcatcher. A Lyrical satire
London: Angel Books, 2000.
Item #16100
ISBN: 0946162611
Paperback
124 pages
Marina Tsvetaeva (1892-1941) is acknowledged as one of the greatest of Russian poets. Like much of the most original Russian literature written since 1917, however, her narrative poem The Ratcatcher remained unpublished in Russia for some decades.
Tsvetaeva wrote this extraordinary work, which she subtitled a lyrical satire', in Prague and Paris in the mid-1920s. Using the story known to us as 'The Pied Piper of Hamelin', she pits Art against Philistinism in a critique of all social search for material prosperity (including that of the Bolsheviks). Even for the innovative Tsvetaeva, this is quite a new kind of writing - an explosion of clashing sounds, voices and rhythms, fuelled by anger and bitter sarcasm. At the end the Piper, who stands for the magical power of Art, takes a terrible toll on the children of the town of Hamelin - neat, comfort-loving, hypocritical and reluctant to pay its debts.
The critic D. S. Mirsky saw The Ratcatcher as the first really successful attempt to emancipate the language of Russian poetry from the tyranny of Greek, Latin and French ...', and found in it
'wit in the most imaginative 17th-century meaning of the word'.
This peak of Tsvetaeva's verse has hitherto been virtually unknown in English. Angela Livingstone, long associated with 20th-century Russian poetry and with Tsvetaeva in particular, brilliantly recreates its wild music.
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