
“Take with you all human emotions. Do not leave them on the road, for you will not pick them up later.”— Nikolai Gogol
From Dead Souls, Chapter 6 (1842), Gogol's direct address to the reader about not losing one's humanity with age.
The Story of Nikolai
Ten Days of Fasting, Then the Fire
In the final years, Gogol fell under the influence of a fanatical priest, Father Matvei Konstantinovsky, who convinced him that his literary work was sinful. On the night of February 11, 1852, Gogol burned the manuscript of the second volume of 'Dead Souls' in his fireplace. He then began a severe fast, refusing food and medical help. Ten days later, on February 21, 1852, he was dead at forty-two. The doctor's diagnosis was unclear. The writer who had made Russia laugh at itself destroyed his own masterpiece and starved himself to death because a priest told him his gift was a sin.
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