Russian poet and writer. His works include the novel in verse
Eugene Onegin (182331) and the tragic drama
Boris Godunov (1825). Pushkin's range was wide, and his willingness to experiment freed later Russian writers from many of the archaic conventions of the literature of his time.
Pushkin was born in Moscow. He was exiled in 1820 for his political verse and in 1824 was in trouble for his atheistic opinions. He wrote ballads such as
The Gypsies (1827), and the prose pieces
The Captain's Daughter (1836) and
The Queen of Spades (1834). He was mortally wounded in a duel with his brother-in-law.
© RM 2009. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.