Untimely thoughts of a bitter quote about the revolution. Comprehension of the revolution. "Untimely Thoughts" by A.M. Gorky. Problems of “Untimely Thoughts”

Maxim Gorky

« Untimely thoughts" - the name of a cycle of cultural short stories by Friedrich Nietzsche, written in 1873-1876. In one of them, entitled “On the benefits and harms of history for life,” the German philosopher reflects on how heavy a burden the memory of the past is for a person: “Look at the herd that grazes near you: it does not know what what is yesterday, what is today, it jumps, chews grass, rests, digests food, jumps again, and so on from morning to night and day after day, closely tied in its joy and in its suffering to the pillar of the moment and therefore not knowing melancholy, nor satiety. This spectacle is very painful for a person, since he is proud of the animal that he is a man, and at the same time looks with a jealous eye at his happiness - for he, like an animal, wants only one thing: to live without knowing anything. satiety, no pain, but strives for this unsuccessfully, because he desires it differently than an animal. A person can perhaps ask an animal: “Why don’t you tell me anything about your happiness, but just look at me?” The animal is not averse to answering and saying: “This is because I am now forgetting what I want to say,” but immediately it forgets this answer and remains silent, which greatly surprises the person. But man is also surprised at himself, at the fact that he cannot learn to forget and that he is forever chained to the past; no matter how far and no matter how fast he runs, the chain runs with him.”

Thirty-odd years will pass, and in another country, under different circumstances, in another historical situation, there will be a person who will also want to express his “untimely thoughts” to his contemporaries and again draw a parallel between man and animal. This man is Maxim Gorky. A series of 58 of his articles under the same title will appear in print in April 1917-June 1918.

For Gorky, these fourteen months became a time of great hopes and terrible disappointments. The son of a cabinetmaker and a bourgeois woman, who went through the harsh “universities” of life; a self-taught genius who traveled a lot, lived “at the bottom” among tramps, earned his living by day labor; a writer who knew fame in his homeland, in Europe and America; “petrel of the revolution”, repeatedly arrested for political activity, after February 1917, he seemed to see the fulfillment of his cherished aspirations: Russia’s turn to a new, free life. That's right - " New life" - became the name of the newspaper he founded. But very soon the understanding came: life turned out differently than it had been imagined before. It was then that “Untimely Thoughts” spilled onto the newspaper pages.

At first they were devoted to topical problems, but still familiar to any state experiencing a political cataclysm: the ethics of inter-party struggle, freedom of speech, the need to achieve public consent. But with every week their tone changed: more and more often reports began to appear about massacres, about widespread robbery, robberies, pogroms, about the impoverishment and brutalization of entire cities and provinces, about lynchings, about the systematic violation of human dignity . And the criticism of the Bolsheviks and their leaders became louder and louder. Gorky wrote: “ People's Commissars They treat Russia as material for experiment; the Russian people for them are the horse into which bacteriologists inoculate typhus so that the horse produces anti-typhoid serum in its blood. This is the kind of cruel experiment doomed to failure that the commissars are carrying out on the Russian people, not thinking that an exhausted, half-starved horse might die. The reformists from Smolny do not care about Russia: they coldly condemn it as a sacrifice to their dream of a world or European revolution.” The answer was not long in coming: “Pravda” accused the writer of turning from a “petrel” into “a loon, which cannot access the happiness of battle,” the publication of “New Life” was suspended several times, and on July 16, 1918, the newspaper, with the knowledge and Lenin's approval was closed completely. Four months later, anticipating terrible upheavals on the eve of the first hungry revolutionary winter, Gorky collected his “Novozhiznaya” publications and published them as a separate book. “Untimely Thoughts” was published by the publishing house “Culture and Freedom”, with which the most authoritative figures of the Russian liberal movement- V. N. Figner, G. A. Lopatin, V. I. Zasulich, G. V. Plekhanov and others.

Gorky gave his collection the subtitle: “Notes on Revolution and Culture,” but today, decades later, it could also be called a universal manual on historical ethics for every Russian (and the fact that this work is deeply national is beyond doubt) . Quotes from it can easily be found on the front pages of most modern Russian newspapers. periodicals : “We sought freedom of speech so that we could speak and write the truth. But telling the truth is an art, the most difficult of all arts, because in its “pure” form, not connected with the interests of individuals, groups, classes, nations, the truth is almost inconvenient for the average person to use and is unacceptable for him . This is the damned property of the “pure” truth, but at the same time it is the best and most necessary truth for us... Conscience has died. The sense of justice is aimed at the distribution of material wealth. Where there is too much politics, there is no place for culture... The destruction of the unpleasant organs of publicity cannot have the practical consequences desired by the authorities. This act of cowardice cannot stop the growth of hostile sentiments... The Russian people, due to the conditions of their historical development, are a huge flabby body, devoid of taste for state building and almost inaccessible to the influence of ideas capable of ennobling acts of will; The Russian intelligentsia is a head painfully swollen from foreign ideas, connected to the body not by a strong spine of unity of desire and goals, but by some barely discernible thin nervous thread... The Western world is harsh and distrustful, it is completely devoid of sentimentalism. In this world, the matter of assessing a person is very simple: do you love, do you know how to work? If so, you are the person the world needs, you are the person by whose power everything valuable and beautiful is created. You don’t like it and don’t know how to work? Then, with all your other qualities, no matter how excellent they are, you are an extra person in the workshop of the world. And since Russians do not like to work and do not know how, and the Western European world knows this property of them very well, then it will be very bad for us, worse than we expect... They rob - amazingly, artistically. There is no doubt that history will tell about this process of self-plunder of Rus' with the greatest pathos... And this weak, dark people, organically inclined to anarchism, is now being called upon to be the spiritual leader of the world, the Messiah of Europe. They lit the fire, it burns badly, it stinks of Russia, dirty, drunken and cruel. And so this unfortunate Rus' is dragged and pushed to Calvary in order to crucify it for the salvation of the world. Isn’t this a “messiahism” with a hundred horsepower?.. I am especially suspicious, especially distrustful of the Russian man in power - a recent slave, he becomes the most unbridled despot as soon as he acquires the opportunity to be the ruler of his neighbor. And as long as I can, I will repeat to the Russian proletarian: “You are being led to destruction, you are being used as material for inhuman experimentation, in the eyes of your leaders you are still not a person! "..."

The appearance of a separate edition of “Untimely Thoughts” caused a number of critical articles in the Bolshevik press. Gorky's subsequent relations with the Soviet government were ambiguous. In 1921, due to deteriorating health, at the insistence of Lenin, he went abroad for treatment. Ten years later he returned to his homeland to be proclaimed the main writer of the era. He died under mysterious circumstances. He was buried in the Kremlin wall. Untimely Thoughts was not reprinted during his lifetime. Moreover, the book was confiscated from libraries and destroyed. It ended up in second-hand bookshops only by mistake. The poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko recalled: “In 1960, I was walking along the old Arbat and suddenly I saw “Untimely Thoughts” on a street book stand - this book that was considered completely disappeared. It was sold for only three rubles. I immediately grabbed it and hid it in my bosom, looking around furtively. Gorky was then so canonized as a communist saint that only a few knew about the existence of this book.”

The title of a book by the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900).

In Russia, the expression became widely known thanks to the writer Maxim Gorky, who also named a series of his journalistic articles written in the first months after the October Revolution of 1917 and published in the newspaper “Novaya Zhizn” (December, 1917 - July, 1918). In the summer of 1918, the new authorities closed the newspaper. Gorky’s “Untimely Thoughts” was published in 1919 as a separate edition and was not reprinted in the USSR until 1990. In his articles, the writer condemned the “socialist revolution” undertaken by the Bolsheviks:

“Our revolution gave scope to all the bad and brutal instincts that had accumulated under the lead roof of the monarchy, and, at the same time, it threw aside all the intellectual forces of democracy, all the moral energy of the country... The People's Commissars treat Russia as material for experience...

The reformers from Smolny do not care about Russia; they are cold-bloodedly dooming it to be a victim of their dream of a world or European revolution.”

Playfully and ironically about an opinion that is expressed inappropriately, at the wrong time, when society (the audience) is not yet ready to perceive and appreciate it.

Problems of “Untimely Thoughts”

Gorky puts forward a number of problems that he tries to comprehend and resolve. One of the most significant among them is the historical fate of the Russian people.

Relying on all his previous experience and on his many deeds confirmed reputation as a defender of the enslaved and humiliated, Gorky declares: “I have the right to tell the offensive and bitter truth about the people, and I am convinced that it will be better for the people if I tell this truth about them.” first, and not those enemies of the people who are now silent and hoarding revenge and anger in order to... spit anger in the face of the people..."

The fundamental difference in views on the people between Gorky and the Bolsheviks. Gorky refuses to “half-adore the people,” he argues with those who, based on the best, democratic intentions, passionately believed “in the exceptional qualities of our Karatayevs.”

Beginning his book with the message that the revolution gave freedom of speech, Gorky announces to his people the “pure truth,” i.e. one that is above personal and group biases. He believes that he is highlighting the horrors and absurdities of the time so that people can see themselves from the outside and try to change in better side. In his opinion, the people themselves are to blame for their plight.

Gorky accuses the people of passively participating in state development countries. Everyone is to blame: in war people kill each other; fighting, they destroy what has been built; in battles, people become embittered and brutalized, lowering the level of culture: theft, lynching, and debauchery become more frequent. According to the writer, Russia is not threatened by class danger, but by the possibility of savagery and lack of culture. Everyone blames each other, Gorky bitterly states, instead of “confronting the storm of emotions with the power of reason.” Looking at his people, Gorky notes “that they are passive, but cruel when power falls into their hands, that the celebrated kindness of their soul is Karamazov’s sentimentalism, that they are terribly impervious to the suggestions of humanism and culture.”

Let's analyze an article dedicated to the “drama of the 4th of July” - the dispersal of demonstrations in Petrograd. In the center of the article, the picture of the demonstration itself and its dispersal is reproduced (precisely reproduced, not retold). And then follows the author’s reflection on what he saw with his own eyes, ending with a final generalization. The reliability of the report and the immediacy of the author’s impressions serve as the basis for emotional impact on the reader. Both what happened and the thoughts - everything happens as if in front of the reader’s eyes, which is why, obviously, the conclusions sound so convincing, as if born not only in the author’s brain, but also in our consciousness. We see participants in the July demonstration: armed and unarmed people, a “truck-car” closely packed with motley representatives of the “revolutionary army”, rushing “like a rabid pig”. (Further, the image of the truck evokes no less expressive associations: “a thundering monster”, “a ridiculous cart”.) But then the “panic of the crowd” begins, afraid of “itself”, although a minute before the first shot it “renounced the old world” and “ shook his ashes from her feet.” A “disgusting picture of madness” appears before the eyes of the observer: the crowd, at the sound of chaotic shots, behaved like a “herd of sheep” and turned into “heaps of meat, mad with fear.”

Gorky is looking for the cause of what happened. Unlike the absolute majority, who blamed everything on the “Leninists”, Germans or outright counter-revolutionaries, he calls main reason the misfortune that happened was “severe Russian stupidity,” “lack of culture, lack of historical sense.”

A.M. Gorky writes: “Reproaching our people for their inclination towards anarchism, their dislike of work, for all their savagery and ignorance, I remember: they could not be otherwise. The conditions among which he lived could not instill in him either respect for the individual, or a consciousness of the rights of a citizen, or a sense of justice - these were conditions of complete lawlessness, oppression of man, the most shameless lies and brutal cruelty.”

Another issue that attracts Gorky's close attention is the proletariat as the creator of revolution and culture.

The writer, in his very first essays, warns the working class “that miracles do not really happen, that they will face hunger, complete disruption of industry, destruction of transport, prolonged bloody anarchy... for it is impossible to pike command to make 85% of the country’s peasant population socialist.”

Gorky invites the proletariat to thoughtfully check their attitude towards the government, to treat its activities with caution: “My opinion is this: the people’s commissars are destroying and destroying the working class of Russia, they are terribly and absurdly complicating the labor movement, creating irresistibly difficult conditions for all future work of the proletariat and for the whole progress of the country."

To his opponent’s objections that workers are included in the government, Gorky replies: “From the fact that the working class predominates in the Government, it does not follow that the working class understands everything that is done by the Government.” According to Gorky, “People's Commissars treat Russia as material for experiment; the Russian people for them are the horse that bacteriologists inoculate with typhus so that the horse produces anti-typhoid serum in its blood.” “Bolshevik demagoguery, heating up the egoistic instincts of the peasant, extinguishes the germs of his social conscience, therefore the Soviet government spends its energy on inciting anger, hatred and gloating.”

According to Gorky’s deep conviction, the proletariat must avoid contributing to the destructive mission of the Bolsheviks; its purpose is different: it must become “an aristocracy among democracy in our peasant country.”

“The best thing that the revolution has created,” Gorky believes, “is a conscious, revolutionary-minded worker. And if the Bolsheviks lure him into robbery, he will die, which will cause a long and dark reaction in Russia.”

The salvation of the proletariat, according to Gorky, lies in its unity with the “class of the working intelligentsia,” for “the working intelligentsia is one of the detachments of the great class of the modern proletariat, one of the members of the great working family.” Gorky appeals to the reason and conscience of the working intelligentsia, hoping that their union will contribute to the development of Russian culture.

“The proletariat is the creator of a new culture—these words contain a wonderful dream of the triumph of justice, reason, and beauty.” The task of the proletarian intelligentsia is to unite all the intellectual forces of the country on the basis of cultural work. “But for the success of this work, we must abandon party sectarianism,” the writer reflects, “politics alone cannot educate a “new man,” by turning methods into dogmas, we do not serve the truth, but increase the number of harmful misconceptions.”

The third problematic element of “Untimely Thoughts,” closely related to the first two, were articles on the relationship between revolution and culture. This is the core problem of Gorky's journalism of 1917-1918. It is no coincidence that when publishing his “Untimely Thoughts” as a separate book, the writer gave the subtitle “Notes on Revolution and Culture.”

Gorky is ready to endure the cruel days of 1917 for the sake of the wonderful results of the revolution: “We, Russians, are a people who have not yet worked freely, who have not had time to develop all our strengths, all our abilities, and when I think that the revolution will give us the opportunity to work freely, to create all-round creativity, - my heart is filled with great hope and joy even in these damned days, drenched in blood and wine.”

He welcomes the revolution because “it is better to burn in the fire of revolution than to slowly rot in the trash heap of the monarchy.” These days, according to Gorky, is born new Man, who will finally throw off the accumulated dirt of our life over centuries, kill our Slavic laziness, and enter into the universal work of building our planet as a brave, talented Worker. The publicist calls on everyone to bring into the revolution “all the best that is in our hearts,” or at least to reduce the cruelty and anger that intoxicate and defame the revolutionary worker.

These romantic motifs are interspersed in the cycle with biting truthful fragments: “Our revolution has given full scope to all bad and brutal instincts... we see that among the servants of Soviet power, bribe-takers, speculators, swindlers are constantly being caught, but honest people who know how to work so as not to die of hunger, sell newspapers on the streets.” “Half-starved beggars deceive and rob each other - this is what the current day is filled with.” Gorky warns the working class that the revolutionary working class will be responsible for all the outrages, dirt, meanness, blood: “The working class will have to pay for the mistakes and crimes of its leaders - with thousands of lives, streams of blood.”

According to Gorky, one of the most primary tasks of the social revolution is to cleanse human souls - to get rid of “the painful oppression of hatred”, to “mitigate cruelty”, “recreate morals”, “ennoble relationships”. To accomplish this task, there is only one way - the path of cultural education.

What is the main idea of ​​“Untimely Thoughts”? Main idea Gorky is still very topical today: he is convinced that only by learning to work with love, only by understanding the paramount importance of labor for the development of culture, will the people be able to truly create their own history.

He calls for healing the swamps of ignorance, because it will not take root in rotten soil. new culture. Gorky suggests, in his opinion, effective way transformations: “We treat work as if it is the curse of our life, because we do not understand the great meaning of work, we cannot love it. Facilitating working conditions, reducing its quantity, making work easy and enjoyable is possible only with the help of science... Only in the love of work will we achieve the great goal of life.”

Supreme manifestation historical creativity the writer sees it in overcoming the elements of nature, in the ability to control nature with the help of science: “We will believe that a person will feel the cultural significance of work and love it. Work done with love becomes creativity.”

According to Gorky, science will help make human labor easier and make him happy: “We Russians especially need to organize our higher mind- science. The broader and deeper the tasks of science, the more abundant the practical fruits of its research.”

He sees a way out of crisis situations in careful attitude to the cultural heritage of the country and people, in uniting workers of science and culture in the development of industry, in the spiritual re-education of the masses.

These are the ideas that form a single book of Untimely Thoughts, a book current problems revolution and culture.

Conclusion

“Untimely Thoughts” evokes mixed feelings, probably like the Russian Revolution itself and the days that followed it. This is also a recognition of Gorky’s timeliness and talented expressiveness. He had great sincerity, insight and civic courage. M. Gorky’s unkind look at the history of the country helps our contemporaries to re-evaluate the works of writers of the 20-30s, the truth of their images, details, historical events, bitter forebodings.

The book “Untimely Thoughts” remains a monument to its time. She captured Gorky's judgments, which he expressed at the very beginning of the revolution and which turned out to be prophetic. And regardless of how the views of their author subsequently changed, these thoughts turned out to be extremely timely for everyone who had to experience hopes and disappointments in the series of upheavals that befell Russia in the twentieth century.