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  1. 10 de nov. de 2010 · Su madre, Maria Alexandrovna Meyn, cuyo deseo frustrado había sido siempre ser concertista de piano, era una mujer culta de abolengo polaco. Siendo su madre la segunda esposa de Ivan, Marina tenía dos medio hermanos. Más tarde también tendría una hermana.

  2. Tsvetaeva's mother Maria Alexandrovna Meyn was a gifted pianist of Polish and German ancestry. Maria Alexandrovna's father, however, considered a concert career unsuitable for a decent young woman, so Maria performed only at home. At 22, she married Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev, a 44-year-old widower with two small children.

  3. 5 de abr. de 2022 · Escaleras internas dividían su departamento en tres niveles y la poeta se esmeró en decorarlo, buscando, acaso, reencontrarse con el gusto y la delicadeza estética de su infancia, aquel pasado confortable e ilustrado provisto por su madre, María Alexandrovna Meyn, destacada pianista, y su padre, Iván Tsvietáieva, filólogo ...

  4. The poet had German blood, her mother née Maria Alexandrovna Meyn being half-Polish, half-German. Tsvetaeva was brought up by a German nanny and used to point out that her first languages were both Russian and German.

    • Professional Contacts, Marriage, Lesbian Relationships
    • Husband's Involvement with Espionage
    • Return to The Soviet Union
    • Her Work
    • References

    She began spending time at Voloshin's home in the Black Sea resort of Koktebel (trans. "Blue Height"), a well-known haven for writers, poets and artists. She became enamored of the work of Alexander Blok and poet Anna Akhmatova, although she never met Blok and did not meet Akhmatova until the 1940s. Describing the Koktebel community, the émigréVikt...

    Meanwhile, Tsvetaeva's husband was rapidly developing Soviet sympathies and was homesick for Russia. He was, however, afraid because of his past as a White soldier. Eventually, either out of idealism or to garner acceptance from the Communists, he began spying for the NKVD, the forerunner of the KGB. Alya shared his views, and increasingly turned a...

    In 1939 she and her son returned to the Soviet Union. She could not have foreseen the horrors which were in store for her. In Stalin's Russia, anyone who had lived abroad was suspect, as was anyone who had been among the intelligentsia before the Revolution. Tsvetaeva's sister had been arrested before Tsvetaeva's return; although Anastasia survived...

    From a poem she wrote in 1913, she displays her propensity for prophecy: 1. Scattered in bookstores, greyed by dust and time, 2. Unseen, unsought, unopened, and unsold, 3. My poems will be savoured as are rarest wines - 4. When they are old. However, during her lifetime her poetry was much admired by poets such as Valery Bryusov, Maximilian Voloshi...

    Marina Tsvetaeva, Selected Poems, translated by Elaine Feinstein. Penguin Classics, 1994 ISBN 0140187596
    Earthly Signs: Moscow Diaries, 1917-1922. edited and translated by Jamey Gambrell. Yale University Press, 2002 ISBN 0300069227
    Tsvetaeva,Edited & annotated by Angela Livingstone. Viktoria Schweitzer, London: Harvill, 1992. ASIN: B000TKF556
    Hope Against Hope. Nadezdha Mandelstam. London: Harvill Pres, new ed. 2002 ISBN 1860466354
  5. rolfgross.dreamhosters.com › Tsvetaeva › P-BiographyMarina Tsvetaeva

    Mother Maria Alexandrovna Meyn, 1903 Father Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev, 1895 Marina's mother, Maria Alexandrovna Meyn, the second wife of Ivan Tsvetaev, had sacrificed her ambition of becoming a pianist to her marriage. A stern and serious woman of Baltic-German extraction, she was the opposite of her husband's cheerful first wife. With

  6. 3 de dic. de 2014 · Wednesday, 3 December 2014. Marina Tsvietaieva (1892 - 1941) - Russian. Marina was born in Moscow on 8 th October 1892. Her parents were Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev, a university lecturer and Maria Alexandrovna Meyn, who was a concert pianist of Polish and German origin. Marina had a privileged upbringing.