Malaya Monetnaya St., 12, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197101
At the corner of Malaya and Bolshaya Monetnaya streets in Petersburg stands a house where Alexander Alexandrovich Blok lived and worked from 1910 to 1912. To this day, on the top floor, you can find the window of his study, although it has changed from a study window to a kitchen window, since in the Soviet years the apartment was turned into a communal flat, housing several families at once. Until the mid-20th century, the house was crowned with a spire, but it has not survived to the present day. Blok usually did not draw the curtains of his study window, and it sometimes glowed until morning, while the poet looked out over the roofs of Petersburg and the panorama of Kamennoostrovsky Prospect. By that time, he was already recognized as the "king of poets," and there were admirers who came to his apartment just to kiss the door handle. However, the poet himself was modest and detached. Not because he was always dwelling in higher realms. He tried to protect himself from the chaos of life. There was another way of protection: Blok drank heavily. Sometimes, he would spend the night visiting all the restaurants and taverns on Nevsky Prospect. Friends recalled that even when drunk, he remained restrained, sad, with a clear gaze. He especially often frequented the beer hall at the corner of Bolshaya Zelenina and Heslerovsky (now Chkalovsky) Prospect. Blok said that the setting of his drama "The Stranger," which Meyerhold staged in 1914, was entirely copied from this beer hall — not only the interior details but also the characters. From the side of Bolshaya Zelenina, one can see the Krestovsky Bridge and the alley described in the second vision of "The Stranger." As for the house where the poet lived, it was designed by architect Pavel Vasilyevich Rezvy.
From 1910 to 1912, Alexander Blok lived here together with Lyubov Mendeleeva. Their four-room apartment No. 27 was located on the sixth, attic floor. The poet’s study had a balcony, which has been preserved to this day.
During this time, Alexander Blok wrote part of the poem "Retribution," as well as poems including "Aviator," dedicated to Vladimir Smit. In the 1950s, the attic floor was converted into a regular floor, and the spire was removed.
Not all residents know that Alexander Blok rented an apartment in this house from 1910 to 1912. But the neighbor of the Blok apartment on the stair landing remembers from his mother’s stories that Blok really lived in apartment No. 27, and since then the apartment numbering has not changed.
Sources:
https://kudago.com/spb/place/peterburg-bloka-malaya-monetnaya-ulica-d9/
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