Yu.K. Lukoyanova

Kazan Federal University, Kazan, 420008 Russia

E-mail: lukyulia@yandex.ru

Received August 10, 2021

 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Full text PDF

DOI: 10.26907/2541-7738.2021.4-5.154-161

For citation: Lukoyanova Yu.K. The word den’ in N.M. Yazykov’s poetic worldview. Uchenye Zapiski Kazanskogo Universiteta. Seriya Gumanitarnye Nauki, 2021, vol. 163, no. 4–5, pp. 154–161. doi: 10.26907/2541-7738.2021.4-5.154-161. (In Russian)

Abstract

The article analyzes the usage of the temporal lexeme den’ (‘day’) by N.M. Yazykov, a romanticist poet and a contemporary of A.S. Pushkin, with the help of the methods of contextual analysis, component analysis, and literary text interpretation. It was revealed that N.M. Yazykov used this word to name a part of a day (from morning to evening), a time interval (24 hours), and a calendar date. In most contexts under study, the word den’ has the plural form dni (‘days’) and the meaning of “time”. Various tropes (metaphor, personification, and epithet) were identified. The poet used them to describe natural landscapes, as well as the inner world, thoughts, doubts, experiences of his lyric characters. Furthermore, he turned them into a stylistic device (gradation, antithesis) by placing the word den’ with other temporal lexemes. Due to the metaphorical transformations and the author’s individual perception, the stylistically neutral word den’ acquires various connotative shades in N.M. Yazykov’s poems. The analysis of the semantics and valency of this word demonstrates that N.M. Yazykov’s worldview is characterized by a feeling of the transience of time, its swiftness, and the past is considered brighter than the present. The study adds substantially to our understanding of the specifics of the poet’s perception of time and his worldview.

Keywords: vremya (‘time’), den’ (‘day’), temporal words, poetic text, N.M. Yazykov

References

  1. Maslova A.G. The problem of time in the late 18th-century Russian poetry about the transience and vanity of life. Vestnik Nizhegorodskogo Universiteta imeni N.I. Lobachevskogo, 2011, no. 2, pp. 333–339. (In Russian)
  2. Romodina N. Time as understood by Pushkin. Available at: https://www.proza.ru/2014/05/26/989. (In Russian)
  3. Grigor’ev V.P. “Where time blooms like a bird cherry tree…”. In: Logicheskii analiz yazyka: Yazyk i vremya [Logical Analysis of Language: Language and Time]. Moscow, Indrik, 1997, pp. 296–301. (In Russian)
  4. Shtyrlina E.G. The lexeme den’ (day) in J. Brodsky’s poetic language. Vestnik Vyatskogo Gosudarstvennogo Gumanitarnogo Universiteta. Filologiya i Iskusstvovedenie, 2011, no. 2, pp. 135–139. (In Russian)
  5. Buchmeyer K. N.M. Yazykov. In: Yazykov N.M. Polnoe sobranie stikhotvorenii [Complete Collection of Poems]. Moscow, Leningrad, Sov. Pisatel’, 1964, pp. 5–52. (In Russian)
  6. Kosintseva E.V. The national patriotic and spiritual foundations of N.M. Yazykov’ poetry. Extended Abstract of Cand. Philol. Diss. Moscow, 2006. 21 p. (In Russian)
  7. Shestakova L.L. Poetics of water landscape in Nikolai Yazykov’s poems. Russkii Yazyk v Shkole, 2008, no. 2, pp. 38–41. (In Russian)
  8. Abasheva D.V. N.M. Yazykov i narodno-poeticheskaya traditsiya [N.M. Yazykov and Folk Poetic Tradition]. Moscow, MPGU, 2017. 264 p. (In Russian)
  9. Lukoyanova Yu.K. The words god (year) and godina (times) in Nikolai Yazykov’s poetry: Features of use. Filologiya i Kul’tura. Philology and Culture, 2018, no. 3, pp. 39–43. (In Russian)
  10. Shaikhutdinova R.I., Lukoyanova Y.K., Irgasheva T.G. Specifics of using lexeme “hour” in the poetic language of N. Yazykov. Modern Journal of Language Teaching Methods, 2018, vol. 8, no. 11, pp. 419–423.
  11. Gok E., Lukoyanova Y.K., Brenchugina-Romanova A.N. The noun “century” in N. Yazykov’s poetic world. Humanities and Social Sciences Reviews, 2019, vol. 7, no. 6, pp. 799–802.
  12. Vasil’ev N.L., Zhatkin D.N. Slovar’ N.M. Yazykova [N.M. Yazykov’s Dictionary]. Moscow, Flinta, Nauka, 2013. 120 p. (In Russian)
  13. Notes. In: Yazukov N.M. Polnoe sobranie stikhotvorenii [Complete Collection of Poems]. Moscow, Leningrad, Sov. Pisatel’, 1964, pp. 573–677. (In Russian)

 

The content is available under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.