The Suicide Pharmacy of Blok

Chkalovskaya metro station, Admiral Lazarev Embankment, 24, BC "Trinity", Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197110

Night, street, lamp, pharmacy, Meaningless and dim light. Live for another quarter of a century — Everything will be the same. There is no way out.

Night, street, lamp, pharmacy,

Meaningless and dim light.

Live another quarter of a century —

Everything will be the same. There is no way out.

 

You will die — and start all over again,

And everything will repeat as before:

Night, the icy ripple of the canal,

Pharmacy, street, lamp.

In her memoirs, Gippius wrote about meeting Blok on October 14, 1912: “He pulled out the drawer of the desk, took out a quarter sheet of paper, and handed it to me. I read: ‘Night, street, lamp, pharmacy...’ <...> This now well-known octet is dated October 10, 1912; the conversation was on October 14. The poem struck me with its grim irony. The ‘pharmacy’ seemed a remarkable poetic achievement, only at first glance a random element among night, street, and lamp. I told Blok this and half-jokingly added that I would remember these verses all the more because there was a pharmacy near our house. But Blok said very seriously: ‘There is a pharmacy near every house.’ Yes, there was a pharmacy near Blok’s house too.”

Debates still rage about which pharmacy is meant in the second poem of Blok’s cycle “Dances of Death.” According to Korney Chukovsky, this pharmacy, owned by the pharmacist Vinnikov, was located on Officers’ Street, near the “canal” of the Pryazhka River, at house number 51. Blok passed by this pharmacy every day, sometimes several times. It was called the Alekseevskaya and was on the way to his house number 57 on the same street.

Academician Likhachev, citing the testimony of Blok’s friend Ivanov, pointed to another pharmacy near the Malaya Nevka. He wrote: “We were walking along Bolshaya Zelenina... And further, before the wooden bridge to Krestovsky Island..., on the left corner he showed me a pharmacy and said that Blok is always specific in his poetry (the same was usually repeated by his cousin), and in the poem ‘Night, street, lamp, pharmacy...’ he meant precisely this pharmacy. Blok loved to walk here, loved the Petrograd side in general, even after he settled on Officers’ Street. ... The bridge to Krestovsky Island was especially deserted at night, not guarded by city policemen. Perhaps that is why it always attracted suicides. Before the revolution, first aid in accidents was usually provided in pharmacies.” Likhachev believed that the wealthy pharmacy of Vinnikov near the Mariinsky Theater, frequented by the rich artistic world, hardly corresponded to the theme of death in water, unlike the pharmacy Ivanov pointed out to him. However, when asked why Blok called the Malaya Nevka a “canal,” Likhachev did not answer. He believed that Blok was a poet, not a photographer, and the canal in this case better corresponded to his generalized vision of Petersburg.

The bridge to Krestovsky Island was especially deserted at night, not guarded by city policemen. Perhaps that is why it always attracted suicides. Before the revolution, first aid in accidents was usually provided in pharmacies. In the pharmacy on the corner of Bolshaya Zelenina and the embankment (now Admiral Lazarev Embankment, house 44), help was often given to those who attempted suicide. It was a gloomy, out-of-the-way pharmacy. The sign of the pharmacy was large vases with colored liquids (red, green, blue, and yellow), behind which kerosene lamps were lit at night to make the pharmacy easier to find (a golden pretzel was the sign of a bakery, a golden bull’s head — a butcher’s, large glasses with blue lenses — an optical workshop, etc.). The shore on which the pharmacy stood was low at that time (now the old wooden bridge has been replaced by a reinforced concrete one, the approach to it raised, and the windows of the former pharmacy have sunk halfway into the ground; there is no pharmacy here anymore). The colored lights of the pharmacy and the kerosene lantern standing at the entrance to the bridge were reflected in the water of the Malaya Nevka. The “pharmacy of suicides” had an inverted reflection in the water; the low shore without a granite embankment seemed to cut the double body of the pharmacy: the real one and the one inverted in the water, the “mortal” one. The poem “Night, street...” consists of two quatrains. The second quatrain (a reflected-symmetrical counterpart to the first) begins with the word “You will die.” If the first quatrain, relating to life, begins with the words “Night, street, lamp, pharmacy,” then the second, speaking about how after death “everything will repeat as before,” ends with words that seem to turn inside out the beginning of the first: “Pharmacy, street, lamp.” In this poem, its content is amazingly fused with its structure. The reflection of the street, lamp, and pharmacy is depicted in an inverted form.

In fact, there was another pharmacy, Novo-Mariinskaya, on Officers’ Street (now Dekabristov Street), at house number 27, near the Kryukov Canal and opposite the Mariinsky Theater. It was opened around 1910. Its owner was the pharmacist’s assistant Yakov Ivanovich Mandelstamm, and the manager was pharmacist Leib Rubin Bobrov.

The next two poems in the “Dances of Death” cycle are also connected with suicide, water, pharmacy, and lamps:

Empty street. One light in the window.

The Jewish pharmacist moans in his sleep.

And in front of the cabinet labeled Venena (poison)

.............................................................

Skeleton...

Most likely, the “icy ripple of the canal” in A. Blok’s poem refers precisely to the Kryukov Canal.

 

Source:

https://naukarus.com/apteka-v-stihotvorenii-a-bloka-noch-ulitsa-fonar-apteka

http://ksana-k.narod.ru/Book/3tom/3/literatura/13.htm

https://kudago.com/spb/list/peterburg-bloka/

 

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More stories from St. Petersburg of Alexander Blok

The poet's early childhood

Universitetskaya Embankment, 9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

In infancy, Blok lived and was raised in the family of his grandfather Andrey Beketov, a botanist and rector of St. Petersburg University.

Grenadier Regiment Barracks - Youth

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The poet Alexander Blok's mother divorces her husband and later marries the military officer Franz Kublicki-Piottukh. The family moves to the barracks of the Grenadier Regiment. From 1889 to 1906, Blok lives with his mother and stepfather in an apartment in the officers' barracks of the Life Guards Grenadier Regiment.

Gymnasium Period

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My mother took me to the gymnasium; for the first time in my life, from a cozy and quiet family, I found myself among a crowd of neatly cut and loudly shouting boys; I was unbearably scared of something, I would have gladly run away or hidden somewhere; but at the classroom door, though open, I felt an impassable boundary. They seated me at the front desk, right in front of the teacher’s podium, which was pushed up close to it and on which the Latin teacher was about to step any minute. I felt like a rooster whose beak had been chalked to the floor, and it remained bent and motionless, not daring to raise its head… *Confession of a Pagan.* A. Blok

Universities of the Bloc

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The famous poet Alexander Blok graduated from Saint Petersburg University at the beginning of the 20th century. He started in the Faculty of Law but finished university as a student of Philology. In his letters, he sometimes mentioned the time he spent within the university walls. Like today's students who move from school to university, Alexander Blok was amazed by the freedom that higher education grants after the tedious rote learning in school. “At university, of course, it is much more interesting, and besides, there is a very strong feeling of freedom, which I, however, do not misuse and attend lectures diligently” (Letter to his father, 18.10.1898).

The Marriage of Blok

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Alexander Blok and Lyubov Mendeleeva, the daughter of chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, had known each other since childhood. But it was in the summer of 1898, when they worked together on an amateur home production of *Hamlet*, that they grew closer. Their estates near Moscow, Shakhmatovo and Boblovo, were neighbors, and their parents had always been friends. She perfectly fit the image of a professor’s daughter: a strict and reserved gymnasium student. At that time, Blok was not yet “the” Blok — he was only destined to become a famous poet. He asked for Mendeleeva’s hand and heart much later and married his beloved only in 1903, at the age of 23. Lyubov Dmitrievna became the poet’s muse and influenced the creation of his first book of poems, *Verses About the Beautiful Lady*. Their relationship, with interruptions, lasted until the poet’s final years.

Nemetti Theater

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Modern residents of St. Petersburg associate Dekabristov Street exclusively with the Mariinsky Theatre. Numerous disputes and regrets remain in history about the demolished Palace of Culture of the Fifth Five-Year Plan, and even earlier, the building of the decoration workshops destroyed by fire, which has now been rebuilt into a Concert Hall. It was precisely on this site, listed on the city’s posters as Mariinsky-3, that the best theatrical venues and the most amazing park in the city once stood.

Blokovskaya "Stranger" - Ozerki Station

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“In the evenings above the restaurants, the hot air is wild and deaf…” Who isn’t familiar with these lines from the famous Blok poem *The Stranger*? Under the poem, there is a note: “April 24, 1906, Ozerki.” It is commonly believed that the poet wrote it in the station restaurant in Ozerki. But where exactly? In this popular summer suburb, there were two stations: one on the Finland railway line, the other on the Ozerki branch of the Primorskaya (Sestroretskaya) railway…

Poem Retribution

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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.

The Last Address of Blok

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Died "from lack of air." A contemporary recalled: "They had just removed the plaster mask from his face. It was quiet and solemnly desolate... nearby, by the wall, stood Anna Akhmatova quietly weeping; by six o'clock the room was filled with those gathered for the memorial service. Anna Akhmatova lay dressed in the shroud of the deceased, with a gaunt, yellowish-pale face... In death, he lost the appearance of greatness and took on the visage of suffering and decay."

Two graves of Blok - the first is Smolensk Cemetery

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Surprisingly, there are two graves of Alexander Blok in Saint Petersburg. Fans of the poet visit both of them, as no one is still certain where his remains are actually buried. Initially, Blok was buried at the Smolensky Orthodox Cemetery, alongside other family members. According to his will, the tombstone was made in the form of a simple wooden cross. In 1944, it was decided to move the grave to the Volkovo Cemetery, to the prestigious Literatorskie Mostki (Writers' Footsteps). Blok’s biographers never saw the point in this action, considering it unnecessary. The new burial site caused many discrepancies regarding where admirers of Blok’s work should make their pilgrimage. Historians claim that only the skull was moved to the Volkovo Cemetery, while the rest of the remains stayed in place. This version was confirmed by the art historian, academician Dmitry Likhachyov. Today, at the Literatorskie Mostki, one can see a beautiful memorial in the form of a black stele with the poet’s name and years of life. Fans love this place and willingly come to honor the memory of the outstanding Russian symbolist.

Two graves of Blok - the second is Volkovo Cemetery

Rasstannaya St., 30, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 192007

In 1944, it was decided to move the grave to the Volkovo Cemetery, to the prestigious Literatorskie Bridges. Block's biographers never saw the point in this action, considering it unnecessary. The new burial gave rise to many discrepancies regarding where fans of Block's work should make their pilgrimage. Historians claim that only the skull was moved to the Volkovo Cemetery, while the rest of the ashes remained in place. This version was confirmed by the art historian, academician Dmitry Likhachyov. Today, at the Literatorskie Bridges, one can see a beautiful memorial in the form of a black stele with the poet's name and years of life. Admirers love this place and willingly come to it to honor the memory of the outstanding Russian symbolist.

Controversial monument to Blok

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In Saint Petersburg, on Dekabristov Street, a monument to Alexander Blok was unveiled. The bronze sculpture, 3.6 meters tall, was placed in the square near the house where the poet lived for nine years from 1912 to 1921. The authors of the sculpture are Evgeny Rotanov and architect Ivan Kozhin.