The Image of Winter, Christmas, and Epiphany in Tютчев: Between Cosmos and Mystery
Introduction: The Winter Cycle as a Metaphysical Drama
For Fedor Ivanovich Tютчев, a poet-philosopher and a singer of the world's elements, winter and the holidays associated with it are not just seasons and calendar dates. They are key symbols in his unique natural philosophical and religious system, where nature is personified, and man is involved in the cosmic drama of existence. Winter in Tютчев's work is a time of triumph of chaos and sleep, while Christmas and Epiphany are moments of the divine beginning breaking into this icy world, yet not negating its tragic duality.
The Image of Winter: "Charm," "Chaos," and "Immaterial" Existence
Tютчев perceives winter not as a passive state of nature, but as an active, demonic force with its own will and aesthetics.
Winter as cosmic chaos: In the poem "Insomnia" ("The monotonous chime of the clock..."), the night winter landscape becomes a portal into the primordial chaos. The monotonous chime of the clock is just a thin shell, behind which the "call" of the all-consuming abyss is heard: "As the ocean encompasses the globe of the earth, / The earthly life is surrounded by sleep." Winter night is a time when the boundaries between the ordered world and the element are erased.
The magic of winter's paralysis: In "Enchanted by Winter..." the forest is enchanted, plunged into a "wonderful sleep." This picture is beautiful, but in its beauty lies an icy, lifeless perfection. "He [the forest] stands, enchanted, — / Not a corpse and not alive — / Enchanted by a magical sleep, / All entangled, all chained / By a light downy chain...". This state of "non-life" is a key Tютчевian intuition about winter: it is not death, but another form of existence, "immaterial" and ethereal.
Winter as a time of philosophical despair: "Enshrouded in a stuffy drowsiness..." here winter becomes an external expression of the inner emptiness, the "full-night" state of ...
Read more