Some of us
hold on to our heroes. They remind us that human nature is not universally
detestable, that virtue can prevail in the most difficult and compromised of souls
and circumstances. Dr. Johnson, for one. Anton Chekhov, Louis Armstrong and Whittaker
Chambers. Make your own list. Near the top of mine is Nadezhda Yakovlevna
Mandelstam, née Khazina, who was born in Saratov in western Russia on Oct.
30, 1899.
In 1922, the
annus mirabilis of modernism, she married the poet Osip Mandelstam. It
is one of history’s grand and tragic love affairs. After her husband’s arrest
in 1938, she never saw him again. Nadezhda (hope in Russian) lived a
life of internal exile and was forbidden to return to Moscow until 1964. She earned
a meager living teaching and translating while writing two of the twentieth
century’s essential books, Hope Against Hope (1970) and Hope
Abandoned (1974). Both were first published in the West in English,
translated by Max Hayward.
Nadezhda was
tough, argumentative, brilliant and bellicose. She took no one’s shit, not even
the KGB’s. And yet she could write in Chapter 40 of Hope Abandoned:
“Now and
then you run into a kind person, someone who suddenly appears when you least expect
it, like a messenger out of the blue telling you all is not lost, to hold your
head high and never despair. But the important thing is not to let him pass you
by and to say the right word so that he reveals himself: otherwise you will go
your separate ways and the message will fail to reach you.”
The final two
pages of Hope Abandoned are the letter Nadezhda wrote to Osip in October
1938 when he was already in a Siberian transit camp, two months before his
death. One sure gauge of emotional dysfunction is the ability to read this
letter without tears. She writes:
“My every
thought is about you. My every tear and every smile is for you. I bless every
day and every hour of our bitter life together, my sweetheart, my companion, my
blind guide in life.”
Nadezhda Mandelstam
died on this date, Dec. 29, in 1980 and was buried in Kuntsevo Cemetery in
Moscow, where Varlam Shalamov, Anatoly Rybakov, Ramón Mercader and Kim Philby
are also buried.
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