The International Weekly Miscellany, Volume I. No. 8 | Page 3

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In truth, the lady enjoyed the favor
of Prince Paskiewich. General O---- boasted that during the eleven
months that the circus staid he was not absent from a single
performance. The Polish Count Ledochowski, on the other hand, said
that he had been there but once when he went with his children, and
saw nothing of the performance, because he read Schiller's William
Tell every moment. This was Polish opposition to Russian favoritism,
but it also affords an indication of the national peculiarities of the two
races.
From deficiency in taste for dramatic art arises the circumstance that
talent for acting is incomparably scarce among the Russians. Great as
have been the efforts of the last emperors of Russia to add a new
splendor to their capitals by means of the theater, they have not
succeeded in forming from their vast nation artists above mediocrity,
except in low comedy. At last it was determined to establish dramatic
schools in connection with the theaters and educate players; but it
appears that though talent can be developed, it cannot be created at the
word of command. The Emperor Nicholas, or rather his wife, was, as is
said, formerly so vexed at the incapacity of the Russians for dramatic
art, that it was thought best to procure children in Germany for the
schools. The Imperial will met with hindrance, and he contented
himself with taking children of the German race from his own
dominions. The pride of the Russians did not suffer in consequence.
While poetry naturally precedes dramatic art, the drama, on the other

hand, cannot attain any degree of excellence where the theater is in
such a miserable state. It is now scarcely half a century since the effort
was begun to remove the total want of scientific culture in the Russian
nation, but what are fifty years for such a purpose, in so enormous a
country? The number of those who have received the scientific
stimulus and been carried to a degree of intellectual refinement is very
small, and the happy accident by which a man of genius appears among
the small number must be very rare. And in this connection it is
noteworthy, that the Russian who feels himself called to artistic
production almost always shows a tendency to epic composition.
The difficulties of form appear terrible to the Russian. In
romance-writing the form embarrasses him less, and accordingly they
almost all throw themselves into the making of novels.
As is generally the case in the beginning of every nation's literature,
any writer in Russia is taken for a miracle, and regarded with stupor.
The dramatist Kukolnik is an example of this. He has written a great
deal for the theater, but nothing in him is to be praised so much as his
zeal in imitation. It must be admitted that in this he possesses a
remarkable degree of dexterity. He soon turned to the favorite sphere of
romance writing, but in this also he manifests the national weakness. In
every one of his countless works the most striking feature is the lack of
organization. They were begun and completed without their author's
ever thinking out a plot, or its mode of treatment.
Kukolnik's "Alf and Adona," in which at least one hundred and fifty
characters are brought upon the stage, has not one whose appearance is
designed to concentrate the interest of the audience. Each comes in to
show himself, and goes out not to be in the way any longer. Everything
is described and explained with equal minuteness, from the pile of
cabbages by the wayside, to the murder of a prince; and instead of a
historical action there is nothing but unconnected details. The same is
the case with his "Eveline and Baillerole," in which Cardinal Richelieu
is represented as a destroyer of the aristocracy, and which also is made
up of countless unconnected scenes, that in part are certainly done with
some neatness. These remarks apply to the works of Iwan Wanenko
and I. Boriczewski, to I. Zchewen's "Sunshine", five volumes strong; to
the compositions of Wolkow, Czerujawski, Ulitinins, Th. Van Dim, (a
pseudonym,) in fact to everything that has yet appeared.

On the part of the Imperial family, as we have already said, everything
has been done for the Russian stage that could possibly be done, and is
done no where else. The extremest liberality favors the artists, schools
are provided in order to raise them from the domain of gross
buffoonery to that of true art, the most magnificent premiums are given
to the best, actors are made equal in rank to officers of state, they are
held only to twenty-five years' service, reckoning from their
debut,--and finally, they receive for the rest of their lives a pension
equal to their full salaries. High rewards
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