First Literary Attempts

Kazan Street, 39, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

A typical St. Petersburg disease - hemorrhoids!!!

In April 1829, Gogol settled on Bolshaya Meshchanskaya Street (Kazanskaya, 39), opposite Stolyarny Lane, in a cramped apartment on the fourth floor of the house of the well-known carriage master Joachim. In this house lived two tailors, a shoemaker, a dyer, and a midwife. There were also a confectionery, a small grocery shop, a winter clothing savings store, and a tobacco shop, so the entire building was plastered with signs. The writer immortalized its first owner, carriage master Johann Joachim, in his story "The Inspector General": at one point, Khlestakov regrets that master Joachim did not give him a carriage.

It is interesting to note that in the same house, from 1828 until May 1829, lived the Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz, accepted into the circle of famous Russian poets (Krylov, Zhukovsky, Vyazemsky, Pletnyov, Pushkin, Griboyedov), none of whom, in the spring of 1829, yet knew the name of Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol. Living in Joachim’s house, Gogol published the poem "Hans Küchelgarten" under the pseudonym V. Alov, which was coldly received by critics. Depressed by his failure, he retrieved copies of his poem from booksellers, rented a room for one day at the "Neapol" hotel on Voznesensky Prospect (currently the section of house 79/23), where, together with his servant Yakim, he moved the books and burned them, effectively foreshadowing the story of the second chapter of "Dead Souls." Gogol continued writing; it was here, in this house, that the first drafts of the future "Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka" appeared. Overall, Gogol had a complicated relationship with Petersburg.

All this significantly undermined the morale and health of the young man. He frostbit his nose (could this be the source of the story "The Nose"?), but also began to suffer from a typical Petersburg ailment of that time—hemorrhoids. The cause was the harsh climate, poor food, and sedentary lifestyle of city dwellers. He felt great only during the short Petersburg summer. His work life was also troubled. He was not accepted into the theater, although he was an excellent actor, performing vividly and unconventionally. In the end, he became a low-ranking official. Here, people from the petty bourgeoisie and clergy’s sons—people with bird-like rights—were copying meaningless papers, and their salaries were not enough even to properly set up a household and marry. He lasted 1.5 years and then left to become a tutor and teacher. He first taught at the Patriotic Institute, then at Petersburg University. He told stories interestingly but had problems with discipline; some lectures were poorly prepared due to a clear lack of knowledge. Ultimately, he left the faculty.

Sources:

https://www.fiesta.ru/spb/live/gogolevskie-mesta-peterburga/

http://literatura5.narod.ru/gogol2.html

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More stories from St. Petersburg of Nikolai Gogol

Nose No. 2

Chernoretsky Lane, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167

Upset by the new power that fled, they ordered a new one.

Nose No. 3 and the last one for now

Universitetskaya Embankment, 7/9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

This is not the end of the story with Kovalyov's noses.

Mom, where have I ended up!

Gorokhovaya St., 46, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol disliked Petersburg because he saw it as a symbol of artificiality, corruption, and spiritual emptiness. In his works, Petersburg often appears as a cold, impersonal city that fosters bureaucracy, moral decay, and alienation. Gogol contrasted it with the more traditional, heartfelt Russian countryside, expressing a deep ambivalence toward the city’s rapid modernization and Western influences. His critical portrayal reflects his discomfort with the social and cultural changes Petersburg represented in 19th-century Russia.

First literary experiments

Kazan Street, 39, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

A typical St. Petersburg disease - hemorrhoids!!!

Zverkov's House

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 69, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031

This is Zverkov's house. What a place! So many people live in it: so many cooks, so many visitors! And our fellow officials—there are as many as dogs, piled one on top of another.

Kuzel's House - Lepena

Malaya Morskaya St., 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000

Malaya Morskaya Street in Saint Petersburg can be proud of its literary atmosphere.

Gogol and Alexandrinka

pl. Ostrovskogo, 6, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023

One of the main characters for Gogol was His Majesty — the Theater

The Gogol monument – they shouldn’t have done that.

Malaya Konyushennaya St., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

I bequeath that no monument be erected over me and that no thought be given to such a trifle, unworthy of a Christian.

Oh, don’t believe this Nevsky Prospect!

Nevsky Ave., 38, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Всё обман, всё сон, всё не так, как кажется!