Three Contemporary Russian Poets and Biblical Tradition: Sergey Zavyalov, Natalia Chernykh, Jaan Kaplinski

: The poets in question belong to different generations, as well as different cultural, ethnic, and even religious backgrounds. Ethnically Mordvinian Zavyalov (b. 1957), who is also a noted scholar and translator from Ancient Greek and Latin, and ethnically Russian Chernykh (b. 1969), who is trained as a librarian and grew up among hippies, are both Eastern Orthodox Christians. Jaan Kaplinski (1941–2021), half Polish and half Estonian, was born and died a Roman Catholic, yet for a considerable part of his life, until his gradual switch from the Estonian language to Russian, con‑ sidered himself a “pagan.” The article focuses on these poets’ different forms of engagement with the Holy Scripture and practices of the Christian Church. Zavyalov’s groundbreaking experimental poem Advent: Leningrad, 1941 ( Рождественский пост , 2009) intertwines fragments of liturgical ser‑ vices and recommendations for fasting around the time of Christmas with the voices of the besieged city, dying from famine during WW II. His poem’s cathartic effect is remarkable: the death is negated by Christ’s birth and history starts anew. His most recent poem I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ ( Я видел Иисусa: и Он был Христос , 2022), which will be discussed in this article, engages with the Holy Scripture and the practices of the Russian Orthodox church in an even more direct way. Chernykh’s poetry of recent decades deals with the relevance of the Bible for a practicing Christian in a largely non‑Christian world. Furthermore, Kaplinski’s posthumous Russian collection Winged Fingerprint ( Отпечaток крылaтого пaльцa ), which is to be published in 2022, can be described as a dialog with the Biblical God and death “after the end of everything.” The most prominent voice in Estonian letters, Kaplinski transforms his later lyrical poetry written in Russian into a spirited prayer for the salvation of everything seemingly “insignificant”, left out of “larger history”.


The Subject Conspicuously Absent from Academic Discussion
It is considerably difficult to find any academic work, whether in English or Russian, dedicated to the possible engagement of contemporary Russian poetry with biblical tradition. The subject simply has no place in the present-day academic industry influenced predominantly by a vulgar Marxist (one may simply say: pseudo-Marxist) approach, which treats different forms of identity as the major defining factor in the social and therefore political stance of a poet, curiously omitting the poet's religious identity and various quite autonomous questions of poetics, which may align different authors more than their presumed identities or political views. Moreover, the language of the Old Church Slavonic translation of the Bible-a language which was a literary version of Old Bulgarian and dated back to the times of Sts. Cyril and Methodius-is to a considerable degree a part of the contemporary Russian language use. It shows its presence starting in various forms of the words which Russian preserved in their Old Church Slavonic, not Eastern Slavic, versions (the latter forms are still in use in the closely related Ukrainian and Belorussian languages) and ending with the syntax of literary Russian and various verbal forms, which exist for the written language only and are conspicuously absent from everyday speech. Too often this Old Church Slavonic (Biblical) heritage is overlooked or taken for granted. Yet, of all Slavic languages only two-Russian 1 and, quite naturally, contemporary Bulgarianhave retained a direct continuity with the medieval Slavic translation of the Holy Scripture.
Thus it goes without saying that many contemporary Russian idioms can be traced back to the Old Church Slavonic version of the Bible. This connection is further fortified by hundreds of words borrowed by Russians from Byzantine Greek (and still pronounced according to the early medieval norm), in other words, taken directly from the language of the mother church, which provided medieval Russia with its version of Christianity.
The situation is further complicated by the fact that the comprehensive and accessible history of Russian poetry of the last 50 years has not yet been written, despite at least one very honest and serious attempt to produce a systemic analysis of varied poetical practices of the period (Orlitskii 2021).
While the authors discussed in this article by no means exhaust the subject, i.e., the engagement of contemporary poetry written in Russian with the literary and religious tradition of the Bible, they provide a representative variety of approaches and vouch for the significance if this engagement and the considerable variety of approaches to it.

Sergey Zavyalov and the Holy Scripture
Sergey Zavyalov, as he spells his name in English, was born in 1958 in the former Imperial suburb of St. Petersburg (and summer residency of the Russian Imperial family), historically known as Tsarskoye Selo (Czar's Village), or Sarskoye Selo. The latter spelling derives from the place's initial name Sarishof, as it was known in the 1710's. In 1936 former Tsarskoye Selo became an administrative part of the city of Leningrad (as St. Petersburg was known during the Soviet era), and in 1937 it was renamed Pushkin, after one of its most famous residents, the great Russian poet Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837), who from 1811-1817 as a teenager was a student at the state-run elite boarding school for boys, Tsarskoe Selo Lyceum. After World War II the city of Pushkin was distinguished by a strong military presence, especially of artillery and air force units which stood in stark contrast to the strikingly beautiful palaces and parks of the bygone era 2 . As a very young man Zavyalov sought emotional and aesthetic refuge in the museum-like "beautiful" atmosphere of the "Russian Versailles" (Zav'ialov 2018, p. 8). Today Zavyalov is one of the harshest critics of aesthetic escapism.
Zavyalov's father was a painter, and his mother was a daughter of an Imperial artillery officer Ivan Ruda, who joined the revolutionaries (first the Socialist Revolutionary Party, then their political rivals the Bolsheviks), and, prior to his execution in 1938 3 , directed major military factories in Leningrad. Zavyalov's first exposure to religion was through his Mordvinian grandmother (on his father's side) 4 , a devout Eastern Orthodox Christian, who, as Sergey Zavyalov wrote to the author of this essay, "prayed every evening and took me to the church" (Zavyalov 2022).
This was a rather typical situation: my own first encounters with the printed Bible (a worn-out edition of the late nineteenth century) and Christianity were also through my grandmother, a successful chemical engineer, who all her life remained a deeply religious person. Parents of our generation, all of whom grew up immediately before, during, and after WW II, were too busy in pursuing new possibilities open to them in the 1960's.
"Quite possibly," Zavyalov continues about his initial encounters with the liturgy, "at first it was something like opera (but of a different kind), which my mother took me to. Yet, when I as a young man found myself among church-going intellectuals I could not share their neophyte delight" (Zavyalov 2022).
In 1985 Zavyalov graduated from the Department of Classical Languages of the School of Languages and Literatures of Leningrad (now and during the Imperial period, St. Petersburg) University and, in the years prior to his graduation, joined "Club-81," an independent writers union in Leningrad, an alternative to existing Soviet structures and active before and during perestroika; this led to a delay in the issue of his diploma, which Zavyalov received only in 1987. Upon his graduation he taught Latin, Ancient Greek and Classical Literature. It was during his student years that Zavyalov composed the poems he considered worthy of preserving (Zavyalov's earliest printed poems date back to 1984 (Zav'ialov 2022).
Written down according to the orthographic norm that existed in Russia prior to the switch to the so-called new orthography in 1918 (enforced by the Bolshevik government, yet prepared and discussed by Russian linguists years before Lenin and his allies came to power), Zavyalov's early poems presented this break with the thousand year old tradition of writing as something that can be reversed at will. Even now, despite the fact that in 1994 Zavyalov eventually embraced post-1918 orthography, he remains one of the few stubborn supporters of the old norm. His two major poems, Advent: Leningrad, 1941Leningrad, (Рождественский пост, 2009) and I Saw Jesus: And He was Christ (Я видел Иисусa: и Он был Христос, 2022), contain large sections-all of them quotations from the different church books (the Bible, prayer and liturgy books, recommendations for fasting)-printed according to the old orthographic norm and with letters (ѣ, ѳ, ѵ, oy, etc.) dropped from the present-day Russian alphabet at least one hundred years ago (some, like oy, were not in use since the eighteenth century). Zavyalov's choice testifies, albeit to a limited degree, that the tradition of writing established by Sts. Cyril and Methodius, creators of the Slavic Bible, can be successfully carried on into the twenty-first century. On a purely aesthetic level fragments of the texts, written in an openly archaic orthography in a language only partially intelligible to an average speaker of present-day Russian, play a role similar to the found objects in contemporary art and become a sort of found poetry. When inserted into both poems, those fragments produce a tension between their own elevated style and form (since everything truly old is by default seen as 'elevated' or at least 'beyond lay understanding') and the emotionally charged voices speaking in different versions of the present-day Russian. With considerable ease, indicative of his talent, Zavyalov overthrows one of the firmest conventions of Russian literature: prose, like in the case of polyphonic novels of Dostoevsky, should speak with many voices, including the voice of its author (Bakhtin 1929(Bakhtin , 1963(Bakhtin , 1984, while poetry is in essence a spirited monologue of a lyrical persona. Prominent twentieth-century Russian literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin believed that "dialogical imagination" defined a good novel and the Russian philosophicalpsychological novel in particular (nineteenth-century Russian poetry lacked "dialogical" poets like Robert Browning). Yet, it was during Bakhtin's lifetime that the clear borderline between Russian poetry and prose started to blur. Innokenty Annensky (1855-1909) and Anna Akhmatova  were the first to borrow freely from the literary devices employed by Dostoevsky and Chekhov, starting with a 'telling detail' and ending with the distancing of a lyrical persona from the poet to the degree that in each new poem this persona spoke with another voice of another character, not the poet's 'true self.' The further and rather fast disappearance of this borderline, especially among more adventurous authors of the 1990's, 2000's, 2010's, and 2020's, made Russian poetry more 'prose-like,' while Russian prose became more 'poetic,' monological and suggestive (Rybakova 2011;Vishnevetskii 2012), with the narrator's voice not truly distinguishable from that of a 'lyrical persona' (Danilov 2010; Kondrat'ev 2020; Gorbunova 2020).
Zavyalov, who started as a lyrical poet, initially wrote in accentual-syllabic rhymed verse, yet soon moved to unrhymed irregular mixed feet which to a degree imitated the quantitative meter of Ancient Greek and Latin poetry, with orthography adhering closely to the pre-1918 standard 5 . I remember reading those unrhymed texts in the samizdat publications of the 1980's and their orthography gave them an inimitable aura of otherworldliness and solemnity. Yet, when Zavyalov decided to partially reprint his early poems in 1994 (Zav'ialov 1994) (in any case, samizdat publications were not a true 'printing') and then, in their entirety, in 2022 as Odes 1984-1990(Zav'ialov 2022, he normalized the orthography and much of the initial effect had been lost. The seemingly complete separation of those poems from the Soviet 'present' was a part of a larger tendency within unofficial Russian culture of the late Soviet period, which aspired to a sort of retrospective-and largely reactionary-cultural (and political) utopia of complete return to the state of things prior to the Bolshevik takeover of 1917-1918. What was missing from this project was a clear and attractive concept of the future, which had been replaced by an idealized pre-revolutionary Russian past. Social, cultural, and economic counter-revolution of the 1990's, inspired by this utopia, brought a great disappointment and frustration to those who aspired to bridge the gap with the past and gain a fresh and clean start. Moreover, this counter-revolution forced the most sensitive minds to re-evaluate their previous stance. By 1994 Zavyalov was no longer using pre-1918 orthography for his own poems (he partially returned to it in 2009) and in the early March of 2012, at an international conference in Geneva he delivered a devastating critique of the prevailing trend inside the Soviet counterculture of the 1970's and 1980's (to which he himself had belonged). Zavyalov aptly labeled this trend as "retro-modernism" (Zav'ialov 2013). He described the atmosphere among independent poets of the period as pervaded by "depressive resignation and psychopathic resentment" towards everything contemporary leading to a "cultural revanchist approach," the glorification of the social injustices of Imperial Russia (and therefore seeing the Revolution of 1917-1918 as just a wrong episode) and widely spread view of a common man as Untermensch (Zav'ialov 2013, pp. [35][36]. Not everyone who read the transcripts of this conference was pleased with Zavyalov's analysis, yet it is hard to separate it from what transpired during the 1990's, including the inability of the key exponents of the "retro-modernist" aesthetics to produce anything of a lasting significance after they were granted complete freedom of expression and their own reactionary utopia became the official ideology of the country. Olga Sedakova (b. 1949), a poet much loved by the Slavists and described by Zavyalov as "the brightest figure among the Moscow retro-modernists" (Zav'ialov 2013, p. 36), became quite irritated with Zavyalov's talk, yet the truth was that Sedakova had not published a single significant poem since the early 1990's, while younger poets, like Zavyalov, found their true voice only after a complete break with all the illusions of the previous period.
As for Zavyalov's own development, he gradually moved from pure lyricism to epic poetry. He explored free verse, prose poem, and found poetry and paraphrased classical Russian poems either in free verse or in mixed feet. He also gave a closer look to his own Mordvinian roots and even wrote poetry that combined both the Russian and the Mordvinian languages (even more so than in the concluding section of his latest narrative poem I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ, Appendix A). He shifted away from the Christian faith of his earlier years, yet without fully embracing a Finno-Ugric version of paganism (once described by Estonian poet Jaan Kaplinski as "better faith in a bush or a tree than in anything transcendental"), and finally returned to the Eastern Orthodox Church. However, the most important change in his worldview occurred with the acceptance of Marxist social and economic analysis, which was quite reprehensible to the majority of his friends of previous years, yet an analysis sympathetic to and centered on the common man. He initially thought Marxist analysis to be incompatible with Christianity, but later decided that Christianity and Marxism are simply dealing with different realms of existence. For his aversion to various forms of "cultural Marxism" Zavyalov is sometimes labeled a "palaeo-Marxist." His unique combination of Marxist analysis and Christianity is "not a liberation theology but something more fundamental, which Biblical prophets spoke about" (Zavyalov 2022). Today he defines himself as simply a "parishioner of the Russian Orthodox Church" who sees "Catholics as brothers [and sisters] and Muslims as cousins" (Zavyalov 2022).
The true Hegelian synthesis of both stages of his creative and intellectual development came in 2009, when Zavyalov wrote Advent: Leningrad, 1941 (Zavyalov 2017) (original Russian title: Рождественский пост (Zav'ialov 2018, pp. 171-200), meaning "Christmas Fasting"), a tragic and deeply touching narrative of the worst weeks of the Finno-German siege of the former Imperial capital of St. Petersburg, renamed from 1924-1991 Leningrad ("the city of Lenin"), during WW II, when hundreds of thousands of the civil population died of starvation. Ironically, this period coincided in 1941 with fasting before Christmas, according to the calendar of the Russian Orthodox Church. In Advent: Leningrad, 1941 the author's own voice is presented through a large lyrical poem composed in unrhymed ir-regular mixed feet (much in the manner of Zavyalov's early poetry) which describes a magnificent cityscape covered with snow and which is continuously interrupted by the voices of common people dying of hunger, by fragments of a research paper on dystrophy, and by the decisions of the city's authorities about the rationing of the scarce food. Each of the seven chapters of the poem is framed by the weather report at the beginning and official releases of the Soviet Informational Bureau and quotes from the church services in the end. Advent's cathartic effect is remarkable: the death is negated by Christ's birth and history starts anew. The entire text of this narrative poem has been set to music by Sergei Akhunov (b. 1967) in a form of oratorio in 2018, and Akhunov's work was premiered with considerable success on 29 November 2021 in Moscow 6 .
Zavyalov's most recent narrative poem I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ (2022) is a sequence of six stories inspired by the Gospels: well-known episodes from the New Testament are replayed through the dialog between a male and a female narrator (not to be confused with the author) and the voice, which challenges him or her: sometimes, according to Zavyalov's own admission, it is the voice of God, or God's angel, or-in one instance-Satan. While the narrator's voice is presented in irregular mixed feet, the challenging voice of the other is presented in free verse. The things are further complicated by the use of direct or slightly altered quotations from the Holy Scripture and the Koran in the narrator's part of each episode. Each of the six parts of I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ starts with a quotation from the Gospels that provides a brief summary of what will be discussed and ends with a quotation from the Eastern Orthodox church service or prayer, something very similar to the structure of each episode found in Zavyalov's Advent. In terms of "dialogical imagination" I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ is probably the most dialogical text ever composed by Zavyalov. As such it is already an oratorio without music (and probably in no need of music), with two soloists in each episode (and different voices speaking through them), and a sort of orchestra at the beginning (the opening quotation from the New Testament in each episode), tuning the entire vocal-instrumental ensemble, and a sort of choir at the end (a prayer). The narrator's voices represent, in order, somebody living up in the mountains, possibly the author himself, since Zavyalov currently is a resident of Winterthur, Switzerland 7 (episode I. Transfiguration of Jesus); a confused sick woman of loose morals (episode II. Saint Veronica); a privileged young man annoyed by the necessity of renting three fourths of his inherited real estate (family house) to the "uncultured" émigrés "from the Oriental countries" (episode III. The Rich Young Man 8 ); a Muslim Uzbek guest worker-truck driver somewhere in Central Russia-working at the moment for miserable pay, yet hoping for the protection and mercy of Allah 9 who saves a bleeding Russian that he saw on the side of the road abandoned by those who robbed and tried to kill him (episode IV. The Good Samaritan); a working-class woman whose much-wanted son has cerebral palsy (episode V. Healing the Paralytic); and a Mordvinian peasant tractor driver, who witnessed a brutal killing of somebody by an armed gang (the tractor driver, killers, and their victim occasionally speak Mordvinian, yet the episode may be understood without any knowledge of the language), seemingly for no reason (episode VI. Christ Carrying the Cross).
This gallery of social, cultural, religious, and ethnic types is quite impressive. They are confronted by equally varied voices of the 'others': the poetic mountain-dweller by a voice asking what (if anything) he is ready to die for, the sick confused woman by a voice asking if she could define true love, the rich young man by a voice asking if he is ready to lose not only his dwelling place but his most prized possessions, which define him as a privileged intellectual (a collection of silent films and rare musical records, poetry books in uncommon languages), the Uzbek truck driver by a voice describing an impending final war of everybody against everybody, a suffering working-class mother by somebody quoting to her various ideas from contemporary cultural theory, a village tractor driver by the tempting questions about his readiness to die with no reward for his life and complete oblivion afterwards. Yet, all these types have something in common: despite their confusion, at times horror, and often despair, they know that they have witnessed something very important which will change their lives forever: they-in one way or another-met Jesus and realized that He was their true Savior and Messiah.
I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ is an absolutely unique work in the present-day field of Russian poetry and cannot be compared to anything else. Long before composing this poem, Zavyalov was already known for finding unusual approaches to well-known subjects (which he so impressively demonstrated in dealing with the Siege of Leningrad in Advent). For Zavyalov the New Testament is a text about us, our challenges and tribulations. He approaches the Bible as "first the foundation of our civilization, second the greatest literary monument, third (yet not in a hierarchical sense) the way to God. [...] Contemporary Russian poets, who entered literature from the late 1980's on, lack serious engagement with the Bible (not with religion but with the Bible), especially in comparison with the [poets of the] previous period of the mid-1950's-mid-1980's [...]" (Zavyalov 2022). I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ is an ambitious attempt to restore this engagement to its fullest.

The World Seen through the Biblical Lens: Natalia Chernykh
Yet, it is hard to fully agree with Zavyalov's rather grim assessment of present-day Russian poetry's engagement with the Bible (or rather lack of it): there are a few notable exceptions to this state of affairs, one of them being Natalia Chernykh.
The glass may be half-empty for Zavyalov, yet for a less critical eye it is half-full. As Natalia Chernykh insists, "[t]he Biblical element is very strongly present in the literature, especially in the Russian literature" (Chernykh 2022).
What is even more surprising is that Zavyalov knows her poetry very well: he wrote a preface to one of Chernykh's better poetry collections In Praise of Insomnia (Πохвaлa бессоннице, Moscow, 2009) (Chernykh 2009, pp. 7-11). Yet, it may well be the singularity of her voice and the inability to classify it that sets her quite apart from anybody else, including 'Christian existentialists' of the older generation, like Sergei Stratanovsky (b. 1944). This problem is dealt with in Zavyalov's preface: "[H]er poetry is too far from the retro-modernist heroics of [spiritual] resistance [to everything contemporary], and from, in essence, comfortable magnificence and transgressive intentions" (Chernykh 2009, p. 8). According to Zavyalov, Natalia Chernykh's poetry and her worldview are defined by the three deeply felt and easily detectable (yet not so easily definable) elements: its national character (нaродность), strong religious feeling, and realism (Chernykh 2009, pp. 8-10). In one of the two opening elegies from In Praise of Insomnia (On Dates: Date Two/К свидaниям: второе) we see a remarkable fusion of all three elements. The subject of this poem is the stroll of a lyrical persona with unnamed "he" in Sokolniki, one of the several historical parks in Moscow, a former falcon hunting forest of the Grand Dukes and Czars of Muscovy. Unlike parks in the Central and Western Europe or even in St. Petersburg and its suburbs (including Tsarskoye Selo), major parks in Moscow are chunks of previously wild nature and as such preserved more of a national character than the contemporary cosmopolitan metropolis itself. For a lyrical persona such a visit is indeed a reunification with the natural and the national, yet in a very sober way (Zavyalov calls it "realism"). Contemplation of formerly wild nature with perennial clouds hovering over Moscow (this city has no more than 60 sunny days each year) triggers in her mind references to nature in the New and Old Testaments (Revelation 10:6 and Genesis 8:13), both dealing with the destruction of the 'old' and creation of a 'new' land and new sky with the help of water, which, in its turn, triggers the image of the distant Baltic Sea and the cloudy sky over St. Petersburg (Moscow is hundreds of miles away from any sea and is surrounded by woods, rivers, and occasional swamps). Chernykh does not just quote from the Bible, she sees the world through the biblical lens, and we, together with her, witness the beginning of something very important: When we go to Sokolniki I will forget the unbearable pressure of memories, and all of a sudden, the image of wretched reality will move and take off like a crane wedge, [...] the events will lose their heavy weight forever, as it has been promised in the Revelation, and there should be time no longer. When we go to Sokolniki (and travel through space with no time with a lightness of an arrow), we will see the swollen April sky over the Baltic Sea which existed before the separation of earthly and heavenly waters, a sky over Noah's dwelling place before the waters retreated. (Chernykh 2009, p. 21) This is a true beginning of the new world and new feelings, although the word "love" is never mentioned and the poem's lyrical persona understands that those feelings may not be mutual: "[B]ecause I fit you like opium fits the blood [i.e., doesn't fit at all],/and I need you, not your time and certain glory" (Ibid.). The ending is even more remarkable: if the feelings are destined to be one-sided, let the nature, not the poet engage in lamenting.
Only the leaves of linden-trees in Sokolniki continue their plaintive funeral chant. I thought it should be solemn and strong. (Ibid.) This poem, written in a combination of irregular mixed feet and free verse with occasional rhymes, is very typical of Chernykh's mature style: clear, direct, emotionally charged, using the Bible as an endless resource of images and inspiration, and yes, very national in its feeling. Natalia Chernykh was born in 1969 in Chelyabinsk-65 (in 1994 renamed Ozyorsk), a closed mid-size city in the lower part of the Southern Ural Mountains region which was built for those who worked in the Soviet nuclear industry. As Chernykh recollected: "Both of my parents worked for the defense industry, the city was known as a 'P. O. Box' and had many residents, who were born in Moscow and Leningrad. As a result, many of my parents' friends were people of mostly intellectual aspirations. Many of them were communists, yet almost everybody was baptized as an Orthodox Christian. My mother, a head of the engineering department, read the Bible at her workplace with little precaution. Since my father was from the Cossack family, his idea of religion had to do with being true 'Russian.' Everything solemn for him was divine. And what could be more solemn than the Eucharist? Yet he didn't become a believer. [...] I have always been reading the Gospels, even in my most tempestuous years of youth" (Chernykh 2022).
After her parents' separation in 1981 and their subsequent divorce in 1982, she moved to L'viv, Western Ukraine (1985-1986), while her mother, also living and working in Western Ukraine, contemplated the possibility of becoming a nun. In 1987 Natalia Chernykh relocated to Moscow. Although she briefly attended a college in L'viv, majoring in library science, most of her education was through her own reading. She worked as a librarian at the Maxim Gorky Literary Institute, a technician at the Soyuzmulfilm (Soviet Animation Film) Studios, a schoolteacher, and a translator and internal reviewer for the major Russian publishing houses. During her early years in Moscow, she sold books in the streets, often in very cold weather, which seriously damaged her health. It was from the late 1980's on that Chernykh got involved with hippies. Furthermore, she wrote poetry.
Her first four printed collections of poetry-Shelter (Πриют, 1996), Residence Permits (other possible translation: Views on Life; Bиды нa жительство, 1997), Saturday of Souls (Родительскaя субботa, 1999), Silent Holiday (Тихий прaздник, 2002)-were remarkable, yet in a different way than her more mature output. They signaled flexible and sensitive talent, able to go easily into the most difficult modes of expression, such as automatic writing (all prose fragments in Residence Permits and some of the poems too), while yet retaining remarkable facility and 'sweetness' of expression. Combined with the fact that those poems were written by a practicing Christian (one of the very few among Moscow poets of her generation), something that was obvious for anybody, who read those collections (given their limited run, mostly other Moscow literati), their author appeared as a person capable of larger achievements in the future and still happily young at heart. Literary maturity has nothing to do with biological age and may arrive earlier or much later, or never arrive at all. In the opening elegy (On Dates: Date One/К свидaниям: первое) from Chernykh's absolutely mature poetry collection In Praise of Insomnia (2009) a lyrical persona/poet, now in her late thirties, speaks of herself as being still "too young at heart" (Chernykh 2009, p. 20).
From the mid-2000's on fearless self-criticism and rather harsh self-assessment (which Christians promptly call humility) would be an integral part of her writing which, combined with growing mastery and ability to speak in a matter-of-fact way about the most difficult subjects, will make Natalia Chernykh one of the key Russian poets alive.
Yet, before discussing Chernykh's present poetry a few more words should be said about her earlier work. The poems comprising her first four printed collections read as a rather spontaneous account of the author's personal and religious life and her aesthetic interests, with a quite predictable emphasis on folk rock (Simon & Garfunkel (Chernykh 1997, pp. 12, 25)) and progressive rock (King Crimson (Chernykh 1997, pp. 30-33)), all too predictable for the young Moscow intellectual of the late Soviet and early post-Soviet era 10 , although she also composed a rather surreal verse play Etude about Mussorgsky and Pushkin (Chernykh 2002, pp. 55-65). Nature, when it appears in her early work, is tamed and safe, and even wild animals speak with familiar and not in any sense threatening voices of their domesticated relatives (or the voices we, humans, ascribe to themthose of slightly deranged women and men), like in her early narrative poem The Territory of Beasts (Chernykh 1996, pp. 37-49). Chernykh initially wrote in charming accentualsyllabic, mostly unrhymed, yet occasionally rhymed, verse, and gradually progressed to freer verse (first to mixed feet, then to vers libre) which was more or less expected from a poet of her generation. Moreover, a carnal aspect of human existence is suspiciously absent from the poems included into those collections, as if, if we are to quote Eastern Orthodox Hymns of Ascent, known to any church-going Eastern Christian (hymns, quoted by Zavyalov in his I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ), "[f]rom the years of my youth,/[not too] many passions combat[ted] me." Those are the poems of an author very much at peace with herself and the word around her.
Since I followed Chernykh's creative evolution closely, I remember when the change of heart occurred. In 2006 she posted online a newly composed poem Camena (Кaменa), a 14 line-long monologue of an Ancient Roman prophetic deity (a character with enormous personal significance for Chernykh), who spoke to some Russian poet (a rather collective image) in rhymed and slightly irregular anapestic tetrameter (a meter that sounded less mechanical to a Russian ear than, say, iambic tetrameter widely used in the Russian poetry from the middle of the eighteenth-century on). Everything was unusual about this poem, from its slightly bewildering title to a strangely prophetic and solemn tone. In word-forword translation, without any attempts to retain meter (except for the first line) and rhyme, the poem reads: I'm a Russian Camena and misery's bread, inspiration controls my fingers, I am as cold as one's instincts and as hot as revelation, I used to be human, now I am in a state-before-resurrection, I am just a Camena, a gift and a reward, I used to live in the ruins of hell 11 . Now listen and write it down, for it hasn't transpired yet, and not everybody is God's poet: my appearance [here] is for some reason, I am Camena, a state-before-resurrection. I hang as Damocles' steel over you, o poet, and pierce you like a brace soldier's [shoulder], for you are of God's will and eternal, you are poetry's liver and heart 12 . (Chernykh 2007, p. 7) I am not aware of any other Russian poem of the period that captured a truly tectonic shift in the culture of the mid-2000's. Old paradigms and modes of expression-late Soviet language and thinking (be it a thinking of those who were nostalgic for the Soviet times, or of a large group of those who were nostalgic for now largely imaginary Imperial times 13 ) which still dominated the post-Soviet period (and which Chernykh poetically describes as the "ruins of hell"), should be discarded without any pity. A new language, a new vision, adequate to the challenges of contemporary times (which Chernykh calls "a state-before-resurrection," or "предвоскресенье" in Russian, a word she borrowed, to my great surprise, from Igor-Severyanin 14 ) and the not so distant future (equaled to the resurrection and blossoming of true life), should be established. The poet's tone in this poem is both prophetic and severe: in the final four lines she compares herself to a "Damocles' steel" (a reference to both the Ancient Greek sword of Damocles and Damascus steel of the Middle Ages) hanging over contemporary poetry. Only very few poets (including Chernykh herself) were able to acknowledge the new challenge they were facing back then. The aforementioned Zavyalov's talk in Geneva was very much a part of the same tendency: a final farewell to the illusions (and delusions) of the previous decades.
From now on Natalia Chernykh was composing poetry for the forthcoming future, not for the time being.
Her most remarkable printed collections to date are In Praise of Insomnia (2009) and Screening Before the Release (Зaкрытый покaз, 2018).
In Praise of Insomnia, published in the respected "Russian Gulliver" poetry series 15 , presents a panorama of sleepless and therefore constantly alerted mind and everything it reflects: suburbs and parks of Moscow, lakes, rivers, woods of larger Russia (with forays into imaginary Japan and Ancient Ireland), love, faith, Nature (with the capital N), which is no longer tamed, but magnificent and strong. The poet's voice attains at times incredible power, driven by a creative impulse to improve the world around her (and thus complete the work started by its Divine Creator), that is, ultimately through deeply felt love, which, in Dante's words, moves the sun and other stars (l'amor che move il sole e l'altre stelle).
In Screening Before the Release, brought out by a major publishing house Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie (New Literary Review, which also publishes a quarterly periodical of the same title), Chernykh previews with her trusted audience-her readers-certain poetic practices and modes of expression before releasing them for the general audience. Since Screening Before the Release was printed in 300 copies only, the book's run perfectly fits its title. (Yet, it is a pity that a book of such a remarkable achievement and power has such a limited run.) Screening Before the Release contains a few texts, which are already among Chernykh's great achievements. All the poems are written in mostly unrhymed free verse, with sporadic return to mixed feet and rhyme and occasional repetition of groups of words and epithets (an artistic device similar to the ones used in both folklore and musical composition).
Chernykh continues the prophetic line of Camena with a rather odd, yet very powerful elegy entitled Cassandra (Кaссaндрa) (Chernykh 2018, pp. 53-55) which presents the great Trojan priestess of Apollo at the moment of her rest from prophesying the things, in which nobody believes, and her turn to cleaning her altar of sacrificial "blood and grease" (Chernykh 2018, p. 53). It is very tempting to see this poem as a self-portrait of Chernykh, who understands too well that what she is often saying-in her sometimes oblique, sometimes very direct way-her contemporaries cannot listen to and recognize as truth. In this regard Chernykh is not alone: a few other Russian poets share her feeling, yet she is able to articulate it with the uniquely powerful words and images.
Cassandra is contrasted with Agricantina (Aгрикaнтинa), an ecstatic ode (very much in the mode of Pablo Neruda), which celebrates the pleasure of good cooking and eating and compares it to the delights of Paradise (Chernykh 2018, pp. 59-62). This is something new for Chernykh, or at least for her lyrical persona, who finally finds the language to describe, with due pleasure and grace, more carnal aspects of human existence.
Those aspects are at full play in rather surreal (but Chernykh carefully avoids this word) narrative in four parts, titled Supernaturalism, or Social/Sexual Help (Cупернaтурaлизм, или социaльнaя секс-помощь), which describes the weird cohabitation of a lyrical persona, who rents a room in the apartment of one of the Moscow literati, with her landlord, a "low type" and narcissist, who continues to live in the same apartment with the purpose of fully and shamelessly exposing his intellectual, emotional, and sexual life to a narrator (Chernykh 2018, pp. 27-36), as if she were not a human being but some otherworldly, almost angelic witness (he, a married man estranged from his wife, is regularly visited by a much younger girlfriend, who comes during the time, when his tenant is home, so that she is made privy to everything between this character and this other woman). As a result, the lyrical persona is forcefully introduced into someone else's life, of which she is unwilling to be a part, yet there is a suspicion that it might have been an unspoken deal from the start, a sort of reversed situation with the inquisitive reader, who now crosses the virtual borderline between himself and his favorite poet and demands to listen to his own story. The outside, real and natural, world is internalized and-because of that-becomes surreal and supernatural. This verse narrative, a truly masterful and fearless work, paves the way for Chernykh's three best narrative poems, which conclude Screening Before the Release with a powerful crescendo: Shaheedah, Travels of a Hearing-Impaired Female, and Noah's Bus.
Shaheedah, or Шaхидкa (pronounced shaheedkah) in Russian (this is the original title of this narrative poem (Chernykh 2018, pp. 115-20)) is a female Muslim witness of/martyr for true faith. In the present-day Russian this word usually describes a female suicide bomber (during the 1990's and 2000's, in the time of and immediately after the First and the Second Chechen Wars Russia witnessed a number of suicide bombings, including a few devastating attacks in the permanently crowded Moscow subway). The poem itself is the story of a certain Liliya or Liya (the latter name is a Russian version of the biblical Leah), an acquaintance of a lyrical persona, and has a disquieting flavor of the first-hand account (although the lyrical persona learns of the horrifying death of her former classmate from the newspaper). This Liya (baptized as Liliya, which means "lily" in Russian, cf. Song of Solomon 2: 1) is a graduate of the School of Languages and Literatures of the Moscow State University and comes from a Russian family with one Jewish grandmother on her mother's side (which qualified her for aliyah, i.e., repatriation to Israel). As a young rebel 16 , Liliya-Liya has distanced herself from her parents-and therefore from any interest in Eastern Orthodoxy or Judaism-and passed through infatuation with different fringe ideologies, which speak against "this world," its "wordy" books and moral "swamp" (Chernykh 2009, pp. 116-17). Liya-Liliya finally found fulfillment in a love affair with a married Muslim man (an attentive reader suspects: a recruiter), who deserted her too, yet now she has changed her name to Leila and is ready to sacrifice her life for true faith. Her final moments are described as a reunification with God in a "happy" Dionysian dance of death. I am not aware of any other contemporary Russian poem that demonstrates so powerfully the dead end of all ideologies, which dominated the country's public discourse of the 1980's and 1990's, and which speaks so powerfully for the necessity of change.
Chernykh was the first poet to openly discuss the psychological roots of political terrorism in post-Soviet Russia, one century after Andrei Bely did that in regard to late Imperial Russia in his great modernist novel Petersburg (the protagonist of which, a young man in deep conflict with his parents and hopelessly in love with his best friend's wife, is manipulated by terrorists into planting a time bomb in the study of an unnamed government official, who turns out to be his own father). Shaheedah also registered the deep confusion in the minds of those who came of age in the Russia of the 1990's, when the official liberal anticommunist (neoliberal, to be more precise) ideology of the government and widely proclaimed freedom of speech and expression went hand in hand with economic 'reforms' that made the absolute majority of the country's population very poor, while allowing a selected few belonging to the ruling elite to privatize enormous amounts of government property, inherited from the Soviet Union, in their own interests. The population aptly named this criminal 'privatization' prikhvatizatsiya (grabification) and had no kind feelings for members of the ruling elite, who betrayed their fellow citizens and the country. Hence, the temporary rise of all sorts of political radicalism (which eventually subsided) on the fringes of the post-Soviet society.
Chernykh's second narrative poem at the end of the Screening Before the Release collection, Travels of a Hearing-Impaired Female (Πутешествия слaбослышaщей) describes the largely imaginary world travels of a lyrical persona, who is happily protected from the false and deceptive language of this world by being partially deaf and can only see the world's positive side and, yes, beauty. In a purely poetic way, it is an antithesis to the suicidal and destructive denial of the world found in Shaheedah.
Finally, in Noah's Bus (Ноев aвтобус) one finds a synthesis of pro and contra. From my communication with the author, I know that she attaches particular importance to this narrative poem. The lyrical persona takes a bus, still the most accessible mean of public transportation in Russia, and observes a gallery of attractive and not so pleasant types, who travel with her inside a new Noah's Ark through the flooded territories of post-Soviet life. This poem is an obvious reference to God's words to Noah in the Bible, which Chernykh's considers her continuous source of inspiration (and, as she wrote to me, a "foundation of my writing" (Chernykh 2022)): "Of every clean beast thou shalt take to thee by sevens, the male and his female: and of beasts that are not clean by two, the male and his female" (Genesis 7: 2). The lyrical persona does not judge fellow travelers but accepts them as they are on their way to new life and salvation with truly Cristian humility and mercy. In Noah's Bus she reveals herself as a national poet, the one her Russian colleagues may learn a lot from.
Like many other poets, Chernykh has written much more than has made it into her books. Three Poems of 2014 (Appendix B), composed in free verse and for some reason not included into any collection of her poems, present Chernykh's poetic style in it most advanced form. Her heart is no longer with the natural (and the real), which is from now on being constantly transformed into the supernatural (which, in its turn, verges on the dream-like and surreal). A series of references to the Old Testament in the first poem Joseph is Dreaming (Иосиф Πрекaрсный видит сны), then a bridge between the Old and New Testament in the second poem Night in Ramah (Ночь в Рaме), and finally the author's Christian sensibility combined with Russian folk wisdom in the third poem Diocletian's Gold (Диоклетиaново золото) are like the seeds thrown into the fertile soil of poet's creativity; they grow into new, unheard of plants of imagination. Although the result seems to be rather close to automatic writing (which Chernykh has already practiced in her early poetry collection Residence Permits), this similarity is superficial. Each of the three poems is held together by a very clear vision, in which elements, like numerous pieces in a jigsaw puzzle, are randomly mixed and reassembled again, never in the previous, original order. In Joseph is Dreaming Pharaoh's (not Joseph's) two separate dreams of skinny and well-fed cows and seven ears of wheat (Genesis 41: 1-7), later interpreted, and therefore correctly "re-dreamed," by Joseph (Genesis 41: 24-33), are indeed separated from each other and inserted-in a reversed order (ears of wheat first, cows second)-into different parts of a poem, and a reader, who is not well-acquainted with the Bible may interpret both "ears of wheat" and "cows" as a continuously surreal flow of Chernykh's imagination; yet this imagination is very much rooted in the biblical text itself. In Night in Ramah Rachel-together with the Mother of God-is weeping "for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not" (Matthew 2: 18). Chernykh deliberately gives the wrong number of dead boys birthed by the Old Testament Rachel (in order to destabilize the readers, making them pay more attention to what they read, an artistic technique called "defamiliarization" and introduced into Russian literature by Count Leo Tolstoy): instead of Joseph and Benjamin, she speaks of five (!) sons. The figures do not match, even if we count Jesus, whose birth is described in the words of the Holy Virgin (the concluding words of a poem) "the Nativity of your son and of Mine." Finally, in Diocletian's Gold we have a poetic commentary on the words of Christ: "Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's" (Matthew 22: 21). The Caesar in Chernykh's poem is Diocletian, a "sword of [pagan] gods," famous for his brutal prosecution of Christians. Diocletian's appearance in full imperial glory is expected to shine "like gold." Yet, any Russian reader of this remarkable poem knows the saying: "Not everything that glitters is gold." The Bible for Chernykh is an endless resource of powerful images, a lens, which improves her vision of the world. "The Bible," summarizes Chernykh, "is clearly a book of poetry. Even chronicles and parables in it resemble poetic texts. And the fact that humanity divides biblical texts into verses, and liturgical texts into fragments from the Gospels and Acts of the Apostles (approximately: stanzas), suggests that we perceive the Bible as the most poetic of all poetic books" (Chernykh 2022).

Life-Long Fighting with and Longing for Absolute: Jaan Kaplinski
Jaan Kaplinski (1941-2021) presented probably the most unusual and unique approach to a dialog with biblical tradition in present-day Russian letters. To start with, he is known as the most important poet in the Estonian language, the creator of modern Estonian literary idiom, who gave contemporary poetry in this language facility and sophistication comparable to the best achievements of any other poetry composed in the twentieth century in major European languages.
Since I have no knowledge of Estonian I will limit my further discussion to the poems that Kaplinski produced in Russian, his second or third language (he claimed the Võro language, a dialect version of Southern Estonian, to be his first language and literary Estonian, based on Northern Estonian, a second one 17 ). Like tens of millions of other non-Russian citizens of the former Soviet Union Kaplinski knew Russian from his early years, yet he consciously made literary Estonian his key medium for the most part of his life. Moreover, as Kaplinski confessed to me in 2015, during our only meeting 18 , he treated literary Estonian very much as a futuristic project (in the same manner as Velimir Khlebnikov treated Russian), full of endless possibilities.
Kaplinski was born in Tartu on 22 January 1941, a few months after Estonia became a part of the Soviet Union (and in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries it was, for almost 200 years, a part of the Russian Empire) to a Polish father and an Estonian mother. He was baptized as Catholic and, as he told me in 2015, his name on his baptismal certificate, written in Latin, read "Ioannes Kaplinski." Jan in Polish, Jaan in Estonian, and Ян, Яaн, or even Янъ (as Kaplinski sometimes wrote, using the pre-1918 Russian norm) in Russian were, according to his own words, adaptations of his original first name. Kaplinski's father Jerzy Kaplinski (1901Kaplinski ( -1943 War (1919War ( -1921. In 1933 he started his work as a lecturer in Polish in Estonia, at the University of Tartu and soon learned Estonian well enough to deliver his lectures in this language 19 . In 1938 Jerzy Kalpinski married Estonian dancer and later translator from Polish and French Nora Raudsepp . By all accounts they were a very happy and quite exceptional couple. Victor Terras, who as a young man observed them in Tartu, told me many times in his inimitable Russian: "О, если бы вы знaли, что это былa зa семья!" (Oh, I wish you knew them as a family!) On the second day of the German invasion of the Soviet Union Jerzy Kaplinski was arrested as an ethnically Polish person (Poland was already under German control) and in November 1943 he died in Vyatka Correctional Labor Camp (Vyatlag), most likely of starvation. In the 2000's Jaan Kaplinski learned that the Kaplinskis, who always considered themselves Polish patriots and, except for his father, intermarried with Polish nobility, actually descended from Jakob Cohen, one of the supporters and the brother-in-law of Jakob Frank (1726-1791), a Jewish religious leader who claimed to be a reincarnation of the self-proclaimed 'messiah' Sabbatai Zevi (1626-1676) and whose followers denied much difference between their interpretation of Judaism and Christianity (Cohen's sister Hannah was married to Frank). Jakob Cohen, Jaan Kaplinski's great great great great grandfather, most likely took his new last name Kapliński (a proper spelling of Kaplinski in Polish) from his godfather. Later, the Kaplińskis, like many other Polish Frankists, intermarried with szlachta (Polish landed nobility) and became fully Polonized. Jaan Kaplinski embraced this new information with much enthusiasm, for it added more color to his already colorful background.
As for his grandfather on his mother's side Jaan Raudsepp (1877-1961), he seemed to be an Estonian socialist. His daughter Nora (1906-1982), Jaan's mother, was born, while Jaan's grandfather was serving his prison sentence in Pskov (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 22). When in 2004 Kaplinski joined the Estonian Social Democratic Party, which was no longer a radical socialist party, but rather a moderate center-left organization, he could always claim that he was following in the footsteps of his own ancestors. His sympathies were always with the disadvantaged and the forgotten.
Early exposure to at least three languages-two closely related ones from the Finnish branch of the Finno-Ugric languages (the Võro language and literary Estonian) and one from the Slavic branch of Indo-European languages (Russian)-and probably his father's genes helped Kaplinski to become a true polyglot: before gradually switching to Russian he, already a classic author of Estonian literature, tried his hand at writing poetry in Finnish, English and the Võro languages. As if it was not enough, he himself trans-lated from French (sometimes together with his mother), Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish, Chinese, and yes, English too.
Yet, according to Kaplinski's own testimony (Kaplinskii 2014, pp. 7-8), his first poems were written in Russian under the influence of Mikhail Lermontov's great Romantic ballad Air Ship (Bоздушный корaбль, 1840), a free translation of a poem by Baron Joseph Christian von Zedlitz (1790-1862) about imaginary return of a dead emperor (Napoleon) to France, which no longer welcomed him. Finding his early Russian poems unsatisfactory, Kaplisnki opted for literary Estonian (a language of education in Estonia since the early 1920's, not exactly very close to the Võro language) and eventually established himself as the most important voice in contemporary Estonian literature. In 1980 he initiated and signed The Letter of 40 Intellectuals against discrimination against the Estonian language, the gradual Russification of Estonia, and the recklessness of Soviet Estonian authorities in their dealings with youth protests. In the years 1990 to 1992 he was a member of Eesti Kongress, an alternative parliament, consisting of descendants of the citizens of the pre-1940 Estonian Republic and aiming at the country's complete political independence and continuity with the first Estonian state . From 1992 to 1995 he was a deputy of the Estonian State Assembly (Riigikogu), first representing the moderate Center Party, then as an independent. He gradually moved to the left and became a social democrat. By 2000 he started to write in Russian. According to Russian poet and literary historian Valery Shubinsky Kaplinski's first significant writing in Russian was a short story entitled "Real Numbers" (Действительные числa), composed at the Baltic Sea writers' retreat on the Swedish island of Gotland, where Shubinsky, a resident of St. Petersburg, was also present at the moment of writing (Shubinsky 2021) 20 . Poems in Russian followed. In the newly independent Estonia Russian lost its state-protected status, became a minority language, and was no longer an existential threat to Estonian. As such it started to be viewed by Kaplinski as a language of great poetry and his parents' secondary education, and thus a new and very interesting medium to explore. Kaplinski came to writing in Russian as a fully developed poet in a language other than Russian, although with articulated sympathy for some nineteenth-and early twentieth-century Russian poets of great talent like Mikhail Lermontov (1814-1841), Aleksandr Blok (1880-1921), Vladislav Khodasevich (Chodasiewicz in Polish, 1886-1939), himself like Kaplinski half-Polish and raised as a Roman Catholic, and Georgy Ivanov (1894Ivanov ( -1958. This situation set him apart from the mainstream of the Russian tradition. Almost the entire body of work by Lermontov, Blok, Khodasevich, and Georgy Ivanov (not to be confused with another great twentiethcentury Russian poet Vyacheslav Ivanov, no relation to Georgy) was written in rhymed accentual-syllabic verse. Although Kaplinski produced a few examples of fine rhymed accentual-syllabic poetry in Russian, his main strength was with unrhymed meditative poetry in mixed feet with the obligatory caesura (metrical pause) in the middle of each line, something that was closer to the syntax of colloquial Russian, which Kaplinski sensed so well.
Yet, his first Russian collection White Butterflies of the Night (Бѣлыя быбочки ночи, Tallinn, 2014) opened with a beautiful accentual-syllabic rhymed poem, a gesture of reverence to more than two centuries of Russian accentual-syllabic poetry. Its final stanza reads in word-for-word translation: There are faces reflected in the watery mirror-I don't know who is methe white butterfly has a dream that it is a poet a philosopher (Kaplinskii 2014, p. 5) This idea that "life is a dream"-la vida es sueño,-if we are to quote a title of Pedro Calderón de la Barca's famous play of 1636 in which the action takes place in a purely imaginary Poland and (probably) Russia, the countries not entirely alien to Kaplinski-is one of the key motifs of Kaplinski's Russian poetry. The final stanza of another, unpublished accentual-syllabic rhymed poem, a variation on a famous poem by Georgy Ivanov (Kaplinski composed it in June 2020, when he knew that he was dying), treats death as the "awakening" from a transitory dream of life to fuller existence and a better dream of afterlife, thus forming an arch with the opening poem of White Butterflies of the Night. It reads in word-for-word translation: The book, a story of myself, is about to enda story written by somebody else's hand. Will I wake up in my own or somebody else's dream beyond other rivers, in an alien land? 21 An even more important gesture was Kaplinski's choice of pre-1918 Russian orthography for the poems, the author's preface, and the afterword to White Butterflies of the Night written by none other than Sergey Zavyalov (himself a great advocate of the traditional Russian orthography). In his first Russian collection Kaplinski aimed at a direct continuity with the tradition of the early medieval monks Sts. Cyril and Methodius, the first translators of the Bible into Old Church Slavonic which eventually affected Kaplinski's worldview. It was easy to write in Estonian and be a pagan (Estonia was and remains for the most part a nominally Lutheran country, with articulate Eastern Orthodox and Catholic minorities), as Kaplinski considered himself for the most part of his life, to pray to the elements and nature. Yet, Russian language and literature were literally permeated with the references to the Bible and Christianity and have always retained a very inspired dialog with both. Rainer Maria Rilke's statement that, "while other countries border on mountains, oceans and rivers, Russia borders on God," 22 referred to this engagement of the Russian language and culture with the Bible. Like Kaplinski, the young Rilke also wrote a few Russian poems (he spent some time in Russia, where he met with Count Leo Tolstoy and a very young Boris Pasternak), yet his best poetry was of course written much later and in his native German. As for Kaplinski, his gradual switch to Russian meant a reevaluation of his own relationship with monotheism and the Catholic faith of his Polish ancestors. During our meeting in 2015 Kaplinski confided to me that he considered himself a "Catholic with doubts" (сомневaющийся кaтолик), yet doubts, as we know, are a normal part of any faith. The opening lines of the very first poem in the main part of White Butterflies of the Night-after the introductory poem and author's preface-are a commentary on the initial and final words of the Nicene Creed: I can only pray to God who resurrects everybody extinct not me (Kaplinskii 2014, p. 13) All that Kaplinski's lyrical persona could hope for at this point was an "alternative reality/where I would be able to print my books using letters Ѣ and Ѳ/and read-under my own government-Blok and Khodasevich/together with my father," as Kaplinski said in a concluding poem from his first Russian collection (Kaplinskii 2014, p. 83), an elegiac, very touching, sober, and sad meditation on time, history, and personal fate. The reason for that was too obvious: it was the poet's complete break with the contemporary state of things and the growing need to deal with the things that would (hopefully) endure: "yes, I was born here/yet I am originally not from this place I was neither made under the Soviets/nor in Estonia" (Ibid.) An epigraph, quoting from a sarcastic poem of Kaplinski's favorite Georgy Ivanov-about the imminent return of the pre-revolutionary Russian orthography ("Ъ will rise from the dead, Ѣ and Ѳ will come back too") which, as we know, never occurred-adds even more sobriety to Kaplinski's own piece. At the end of his afterword Sergey Zavyalov asked one, yet the most important question: "[I]s contemporary Russian poetry strong enough to sustain [the presence of] this book?" (Kaplinskii 2014, p. 91) To everybody's surprise White Butterflies of the Night was greeted with much enthusiasm in Russian literary circles, Kaplinski received two prestigious awards (the Russian Prize in 2015 23 and the Andrei Bely Prize in 2018 24 ), and three more collections of original Russian poems followed (Kaplinskii 2017(Kaplinskii , 2018(Kaplinskii , 2021. Unfortunately, due to his publishers' requests he had to abandon pre-1918 orthography, which suited his poetry so well. In 2017 Kaplinski was diagnosed with an incurable condition (progressive bulbar palsy), which gradually led to his inability to speak (everyone who ever had a chance to talk with Jaan remembered what an inspired conversationalist he was). However, he continued to compose poetry in Russian, which only improved in its depth and quality-a remarkable late blossoming for an author, who, as he himself joked, became a very young poet again at the age of 75. In 2016 Kaplinski was nominated for the Nobel Prize in the literature (again), yet, given the fact that poetry from Estonia occupied a very humble place in the minds of those who judged the nominees, the poet's chances (despite his spectacular achievements) were slim. The prize that year went to Bob Dylan, who did not even acknowledge the award.
Kaplinski's last Russian poetry collection Winged Fingerprint (Отпечaток крылaтого пaльцa), composed during and after 2017, when he knew that he was dying, is his best one. The collection's enigmatic title is explained in its penultimate poem: this "winged fingerprint" is God's imprint on His creation and on . . . my life, which also, as it often seems to me, bears a winged fingerprint of God, with Whom I was fighting, for Whom I was longing almost from my childhood. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 79) This is a clear reference to Jacob's dream (in Kaplinski's view, la vida es sueño anyway) in which he encountered and fought with God, Who in turn changed Jacob's name to Israel (Genesis 32: 24-30). The majority of the poems in Winged Fingerprint are meditations on history, personal life, human creativity (man is a symbolic animal, according to Ernst Cassirer), death, immortality, faith, and yes, God. Kaplinski reveals himself as a wise poet-philosopher, who is ready to share his final thoughts on those subjects with his future readers (he knew that the book would be published most likely after his death). There is no collection of poems like that in the entire history of Russian poetry.
As stated in the preface to Winged Fingerprint: "With this [...] book Russian poetry, a rather new phenomenon in comparison with the poetries of Europe, especially Italian poetry (which traces its genealogy to Ancient Rome), and even the poetries of England and Germany, has finally achieved its clear maturity" (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 5).
In a key poem from the collection, composed during his stay on Madeira, an island in Atlantic Ocean halfway from Europe to North America ("an island, which I reached only once in my life,/yet was longing for it all my life," as he wrote in a penultimate poem of Winged Fingerprint), Kaplinski speaks of the happiest, and most desperate for those who have no faith, state of mind and heart, when the simplest things observed, like an armchair abandoned on the beach, symbolically reveal the fuller reality beyond them: Old armchair lays on the beach and is half-buried in sand. It is not only me who is alone like this armchair, like everybody within the circular confines of the horizon. Only God is not here or there and not alone. He simply is and persists to be God here and there, behind 0 and ∞, far away from His name and from everybody, who believes or does not believe in Him. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 31) This is a state of things which allows Kaplinski's lyrical persona, like those who are on the very top of Dante's purgatory (Dante, Beatrice), to reach the location, where [n]o human speech is heard, the wind subsides, allowing us to hear something else, something reminding us of a light sound of flames or birds flying and allowing us to stop for a moment, since this ladder is no longer a ladder but a tree with a top almost reaching the clouds, the sky . . . (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 59) -a clear reference to Jacob's ladder (Genesis 28: 10-17) and the spiritual ladder of Plato and the Platonic philosophers, and also (possibly) to a topography of Dante's purgatory (one should keep in mind that Dante is the most important epic poet of the Christian tradition), which is a conic structure (a mountain) with the trees of earthly paradise (paradiso terrestre) on top, while sky and open space are the realm of paradise.
Kaplinski died on 8 August 2021 as a Christian, and his funeral service, attended by family members, friends, and political dignitaries, was held in the Catholic cathedral of his native Tartu (Roman Catholicism, like Eastern Orthodoxy, is a minority denomination in Estonia). In a few Russian poems from Winged Fingerprint he imagined himself flying posthumously as a swift over everything he loved, a motif which appeared also in the penultimate poem of the collection: " . . . God's fingerprint on a wave, which reached the shore,/a print of the swift's wing on a white little cloud . . . "). One of his last wishes was that instead of financially contributing towards the funeral his friends and admirers would contribute to the Estonian Ornithological Society, also known as "Birdlife Estonia."

Dialog Worth Listening to Very Carefully
What is the place of this dialog between contemporary poetry composed in Russian and the Bible in the international and historical contexts? Sergey Zavyalov mentions as possible participants in that dialog "the great poetry of the English language (Donne and Milton, T. S. Eliot and Auden), great French poetry (Péguy, Claudel), Byzantine poetry, which never entered the world literary canon, and individual [outstanding] names like Gregory of Narek, Yehuda Halevi, Grigory Skovoroda, Taras Shevchenko, Odysseas Elytis" (Zavyalov 2022). Natalia Chernykh prefers a broader, less specific, and more inclusive view: "The Bible provides us with a very good sense of sacred space. And sacred action. Poetry, in its essence, is also an action, and we know that" (Chernykh 2022). And Jaan Kaplinski pleads for the restoration and remembrance of anything unjustly forgotten.
In the end, Zavyalov reaffirms the absolute necessity of faith inside the world fractured either by war with its side effects of hunger, the destroyed infrastructure of urban life, and so on (Advent: Leningrad, 1941), or by our own wrong understanding of the purpose of our existence (I Saw Jesus: And He Was Christ). Chernykh's poetry deals with the problem of the relevance of the Bible as a lens through which the world can be seen and interpreted by a practicing Christian. And Kaplinski's Russian poetry of the last two decades of his life can be described as a dialog with the Biblical God and death 'after the end of everything' as well as a spirited prayer for the salvation of everything deemed 'insignificant' (including, yet not limited to, extinct species, languages, and cultures), everything left out of the secular triumphalist narrative of 'larger history. ' Unyielding faith in absolute truth and the ability to see your life's ultimate purpose, the relevance of the Bible as a lens aimed at the world around us, an attractive vision of the future (in, other words, of a world to come after us), which will not discard anybody or anything as 'insignificant'-a vision born out of much struggle and doubt; this is, in sum, one way to characterize the contribution of Zavyalov, Chernykh, and Kaplinski to the ongoing engagement with the Bible in other parts of the world, and it should be treated with all due seriousness.

I. Transfiguration of Jesus
And after six days Jesus taketh with him Peter, and James, and John, and leadeth them up into an high mountain apart by themselves: and he was transfigured before them. And his raiment became shining, exceeding white as snow; so as no fuller on earth can white them. On the Mountain You were Transfigured, O Christ God, and Your disciples beheld Your glory as far as they could see it; so that when they would behold You crucified, they would understand that Your suffering was voluntary, and would proclaim to the world, that You are truly the Radiance of the Father!

II. Saint Veronica
And a certain woman, which had an issue of blood twelve years, and had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse, when she had heard of Jesus, came in the press behind, and touched his garment. For she said: "If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole." And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up; and she felt in her body that she was healed of that plague. Of Your own will You were pleased to ascend the Cross in the flesh to deliver Your creatures from bondage to the enemy. Therefore, with thanksgiving we cry aloud to You: You have filled all with joy, O our Savior, by coming to save the world.

III. The Rich Young Man
And when he was gone forth into the way, there came one running, and kneeled to him, and asked him, Good Master, what shall I do that I may inherit eternal life? Then Jesus beholding him loved him, and said unto him, One thing thou lackest: go thy way, sell whatsoever thou hast, and give to the poor. And he was sad at that saying, and went away grieved.

Mark 10: 17, 21-22
Am I truly a rich young man? Am I truly eating the very last crumbs from my family's table? My grandfather owned a mansion and a villa up in the mountains also a textile factory which he jokingly called ergasterion 29 Are you ready to die because everything will be covered by or evaporate with the water?
Then we had to sell the factory. And my father got rid of a villa. I was eight. I cried and cried. Now two thirds of a mansion I rent to immigrants.
It barely covers my bills.
Are you ready to die because your air will be poisoned and dissolved in the highest? You, haters of Zion, shall be put to shame by the Lord Almighty, for as grass in the fire you shall all be withered.
By the Holy Spirit, every soul is made living, is exalted, and made shining through purification, by the Threefold oneness, in a hidden manner.

IV. The Good Samaritan
And Jesus answering said, A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves, which stripped him of his raiment, and wounded him, and departed, leaving him half dead. But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was: and when he saw him, he had compassion on him, and went to him, and bound up his wounds, pouring in oil and wine. The prayer was interrupted I thought: "Let me die of Allah's rage Let him burn me out with fire" 36 I had to finally go and see "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful" And all of them will pray five times a day and read their prayers in the same language I went into a ditch and saw a human being you know all covered with blood couldn't speak just moaned I thought I still had a chance to take him to a hospital Since Allah did not let him die before he should live! "No one can ever die without Allah's permission" 37 The day will come and infidels will stand against infidels Open pain, they said, was more visible than pain, which was asleep. Yet the true problem was dreams. Dreams like water in a nearby river: they raised up with melting snow, and brought new movements, sounds, meanings. And hues. And combinations of strange figures.
Then the shadow appeared split into thin stripes, and, with all those stripes combined, presented itself, and turned all visible, tangible, and taken inside, including cold and warmth, into its opposite.
. . . the cold metal-blue sky over your head lacked any answer. Horrible torture filled your entire being; while devouring desirable beauty, you rolled down your bed: your fall-over was so obvious, so frightening (yet there was none), full of approach and attraction, your hands were in the hands of a female, both pairs melting, then, while dust was mixing with dust, some musical instrument shrieked in your neighbor's place (somebody added a rhythm to its shrieking), and March evening revealed itself like a one-eyed soldier over the neighborhood.
You enjoyed it and arrived in spasms of horror, in shrieks of released inability . . .
like mutilated branches, while baring their animal teeth, come together again, like ice crunches under your feet, like lovers fall of the roof . . .

No, not like that.
And what about the moon? The moon was shining clearly and silently, the traders were passing by. Several painful years passed by like cows: a skinny one, then a well-fed one 51 .
Only dreams were alive. Although it was not recommended to believe them. Did you try? Did everything go well? Who? A reader? Or the one whose name was sweeter than those dreams?
The dreams are like bread. Any dream is like bread. It can't be voided.
The grapes wept over the chalice of Benjamin.
Dream was fortified, blessed, and royal. Reality was closer to the grave. As for space -it could be heavier or lighter. The space, which spirit explored for food (we had enough interpretations; it was true that they were untrue)the desired food was like paradise, which had already become food.
. . . in a thirst for feeding paradise fire wakes up and carries horrible dreams. Yet all dreams are horrible.
Wait, my precious, wasn't it a hug of death, which looked like a married woman? 52 Wasn't this approach caused by a smell of your dream around your tender neck?
Why make things complicated? Raven, bread, grapes, and a woman are followed by a prison and your father. As if they are not. Yet, when you look, they are. And 'yes' and 'no' (like one creature?) have one heart and two bodies, yet they pass. But the voice is certainly present. The sound is your firstborn. It is your voice.

II. Night in Ramah
Two voices, one silence: voices pierce, silence oppresses, flashes of voices and a shadow of silence wander around.
Rachel cries out to the Holy Virgin, who stands at the Holy Cross 53 . Celestial body rests in the body of honey and dryness. We hear Caesar's steps: the sword of gods moves towards the hero, who is invisible behind the smoke from an altar. Like Caesar at dawn and a very long back of his head.

My mistress gracious
Jupiter, please visit our floors and give us our bread and movies. Yet this Jupiter is a warrior; his strict mouth shines like the flames on an altar.
Great Alexander, be humbled. Your spacious lion-like beauty doesn't fit the Roman cosmos. And my Caesar is cut out of an Old World sycamore tree and protects the sounds of Etruscan mysteries and the blood of my brethren, also the granites covering the public square which make my feet tired, and much-desired rest on a paid-for bed, and some groceries from the nearby quarter (with a discount for sunflower oil).
Jupiter is a relative of mine. And of my street.
And of all rude wagons moving there. And of everybody in those wagons.
And of everybody in this world who, in the absence of fate, stop and freeze for a moment.
Moment, time, eternity. And Diocletian. Like a sword kept in its scabbard, not yet a smell of blood, but a cry of Sybil, or some sick girl in the inner space (compressed by many breaths) of a suburban temple.
And the shadows of the Moirai are spiked by three rays. Caesar enters the stage. He is almost invisible through the magnificent crowd around him. One can only see the long tanned back of his head.
The time went slowly, and the future didn't exist: a boy, who was destined to become my father, drank milk bought from a Finnish milkwoman 60 and was taken for walks to the Summer Garden 61 , and a head of prison in Pskov 62 where my Estonian grandfather served his half-year sentence for his anti-government activities-congratulated him on a birth of his daughter, who was destined to become my mother and live as a widow for forty years with her memories of war 63 and bohemian youth in Paris, which I visited for the first time when she was no longer alive. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 22) Moonlight drips from the roofs of the buildings on asphalt, speed bumps, roofs of the sleepy cars. Motorcycle roar dissolves into silence. Two white ships disappear into Ocean 64 . Old armchair lays on the beach and is half-buried in sand. It is not only me who is alone like this armchair, like everybody within the circular confines of the horizon. Only God is not here or there and not alone. He simply is and persists to be God here and there, behind 0 and ∞, far away from His name and from everybody, who believes or does not believe in Him. Here and now He simply plays hide and seek with waves and little nimble crabs on wet sand and leaves His fingerprints on sand and water. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 31) He stands in his worn old pants and colorless shirt at the gate of the department store-Jesus Christ, with a whip in the bosom, and Santa Claus stands inside the store, next to a Christmas tree from dawn to dusk, from dusk to dawn he nods his head. Next to him is a deer made of electric bulbs. A Christmas carol comes from a public restroom. Jesus is waiting: his birthday is a month and a half away. Adam and Eve, Moses and Aaron, like all those small creatures in the ancient sea whose shells sunk to the very bottom and became limestone, occasionally marblea material for tombstones and monuments for some of us: they are gradually getting covered with moss and lichen and become a momentous resting place for hover flies and bumblebees and keep for a while a glow of the setting sun. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 45) I ascend a black and white ladder 69 . Somebody, who looks like a dark panther 70 , moves ahead of me, although, upon reaching the thirty second step 71 , this person is no longer this person but probably Haydn or Beethoven.
No human speech is heard, the wind subsides, allowing us to hear something else, something reminding us of a light sound of flames or birds flying and allowing us to stop for a moment, since this ladder is no longer a ladder but a tree with a top almost reaching the clouds, the sky 72 and the top's color will turn from green to the darkest blue, like a sky, revealing one by one its early stars: Arcturus, Vega, do, re, mi, fa, soland our longings and dreams will mingle in our hearts with a faith in inaudible music of the spheres. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 59) Looking at a little spotted butterfly, which holds for the entire day to a windowpane as if some finely designed badge glued to it, I want to believe that it has a name, a name, which reminds us of something long forgotten like a message from the forest of symbols, forêt des symboles, where we are often lost, while trying to translate the flight of the small insects and the specks of dust, the voices of creeks and aspen leaves, kingfishers and orioles, the silence of moss covering stones under the pine-trees on a hill and high spindrift clouds, which promise us an excellent sunny day tomorrow-into our human language.
(Kaplinskii 2022, p. 61) They probably wait for me there, on the other side; I don't know for sure, yet I dream that the birds, who died crushing against our windowpanes, being caught by the nets of the bird-catchers and paws of male cats, are alive over there, forests are preserved which we have already destroyed, also my broken and lost toys and my books are preserved, old manuscripts, extinct languages (Pictish, Siculan, Cretan, Etruscan), the art of telling one's future according to bird's flight, animal entrails, thunder and thunderbolts, telling the future that has already become present and is simply ourselves, our lives, our time, our houses, gardens and flights of the swifts over the old Kremlin 73 , over bees and bumblebees in the thickets of white lamium in a small park next to the river. (Kaplinskii 2022, p. 74) Indelible prints of an invisible finger on a fresco on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, on a last pale leaf falling from a linden-tree, on the last page of a little old notebook resting in a dusty drawer of a writing desk, God's fingerprint on a wave, which reached the shore, a print of the swift's wing on a white little cloudthis wingprint spends a night in the Southeast over an island, which I reached only once in my life, yet was longing for it all my life, which also, as it often seems to me, bears a winged fingerprint of God, with Whom I was fighting 74 , for Whom I was longing almost from my childhood. Mostly thanks to an influential essay by the eighteenth-century Russian poet and scholar Mikhailo Lomonosov Introduction to the Benefits of Church Books for the Russian Language (Πредисловие о пользе книг церковных в российском языке) (Lomonosov 1950(Lomonosov -1983. 7, pp. 585-92).
2 Another contemporary Russian poet Valery Shubinsky (b. 1965), mentioned later in this essay, also spent part of his childhood in the former Tsarskoye Selo, where his father, an artillery officer, was stationed. 3 During the so-called Great Purge of 1936-1938. 4 Mordva is an ethnic group living mostly in the Volga region and speaking two closely related languages of the Finno-Ugric family, Erzya and Moksha: a situation to a degree paralleled by the existence of the Northern and Southern Estonian language; see more on that subject in relation to Jaan Kaplinski. 5 For a deeper analysis of Zavyalov's poetry of the early and middle periods, composed prior to his most interesting work of the present "synthetic" period, see (Orlitskii 2021, pp. 918-36). The dark irony is that Zavyalov and his family, themselves Russian émigrés, rent an apartment made of one quarter of what used to be a mansion of the wealthiest nineteenth-century resident of Winterthur, who donated paintings, mostly by German and Swiss Romantics, to the local Museum of Fine Arts and earned his enormous wealth through shameful trade in slaves; two other quarters of this rather beautiful house are also rented. 9 After the dissolution of the Soviet Union millions of guest workers from its former republics moved to Russia. 10 I remember composer Vladimir Martynov (b. 1946) referring in our conversations to the music of King Crimson as a "work of genius" and a major influence on his own creative work since the 1970's.

11
A clear reference to the first decade of post-Soviet life. 12 Vital organs for any human organism: a cleaner of toxins and a pump for blood. 13 Although in the 1990's some of those who were born and went through elementary school in Imperial Russia, including my own grandmother, were still alive.
During our discussion of an earlier draft of this essay Natalia Chernykh informed me that she was asked to write an internal review of the White Butterflies of the Night for the Russian Prize Committee. Her very positive review might have played a role in Committee's final decision. 24 In 2018 Sergey Zavyalov was a member of the Andrei Bely Prize Committee and cast his vote for Kaplinski. 25