A spark will not always ignite a flame. "From a spark will ignite a flame"

Encyclopedic Dictionary winged words and expressions Serov Vadim Vasilievich

A spark will ignite a flame

A spark will ignite a flame

From the poem “Prophetic Strings” fiery sounds"(1828, published 1857) by the exiled Decembrist poet Alexander Ivanovich Odoevsky(1802-1839). These poems, which are sometimes also called the “Response of the Decembrists,” were written in response to Pushkin poem“Your sorrowful work will not be wasted...” (the so-called “Message to the Decembrists”). A. I. Odoevsky:

Our sorrowful work will not be wasted:

A flame will ignite from a spark,

And our enlightened people

Gather under the holy banner!

This line became famous as an epigraph to the title of Lenin’s underground newspaper Iskra (printed abroad in 1900-1903).

Allegorically about faith in success, the victory of one’s business, despite its difficult beginning (jokingly ironic).

From the book ABC of Safety in Emergency Situations. author Zhavoronkov V.

2. 6. BLUE FLAME OF CARBON MONOXIDE Carbon monoxide is carbon monoxide (CO), formed during incomplete combustion of substances containing carbon, a colorless, odorless gas that burns with a blue flame. Poisoning carbon monoxide is the cause of 50% of deaths in fires. Sometimes we read in

From the book Unexplained phenomena author Nepomnyashchiy Nikolai Nikolaevich

FLAME OF LOVE During its last illness, which began in January 1510 and until her death that same year, Saint Catherine of Genoa was subjected to violent attacks of unknown origin that came from within her body. One day, for example, "she was pierced

From the book Big Soviet Encyclopedia(AG) of the author TSB

From the book Everything about everything. Volume 5 author Likum Arkady

How can you put out a flame? Let's start with how fire starts. To do this you need three things. First, you need fuel, such as wood, paper, alcohol or gas. Secondly, you need oxygen. The fuel reacts quickly with oxygen. When wood burns in a fire or gas in

From the book A Million Dishes for Family Dinners. Best Recipes author Agapova O. Yu.

From the book Soviet satirical press 1917-1963 author Stykalin Sergey Ilyich

FLAME Bi-weekly illustrated literary, artistic and satirical magazine. Published in Tbilisi in 1923–1924. in the publishing house of the newspaper "Zarya Vostoka". Printed on 32 pages, there were many drawings and caricatures, reproductions of paintings and sculptures of the largest modern

From the book I Explore the World. Treasures of the Earth author Golitsyn M. S.

Place the sylvyn in the flames! Potassium salts have life-giving powers. If you apply them in the form of fertilizers to vegetable fields, you can increase the yield of vegetables several times. Potassium fertilizers are obtained mainly from the mineral sylvite - potassium chloride. It is named after the chemist

From the book Miracles: Popular Encyclopedia. Volume 1 author Mezentsev Vladimir Andreevich

Flame over the waves with this mysterious phenomenon the sailors met many times. Here is one of the latest messages. The motor ship "Anton Makarenko" was traveling through the Strait of Malacca. It was a moonless night. Light spots floated on the surface of the water, to the right and left of the ship. Suddenly they became

From the book The Author's Encyclopedia of Films. Volume II by Lourcelle Jacques

Waga koi wa moenu The Flame of My Love 1949 - Japan (84 min) · Prod. Shochiku, Kyoto (Hisao Itoya, Knosi Shimazu) · Dir. KENJI MIZOGUCHI? Scene Yoshikata Yoda and Kaneto Shindo based on the novel by Kogo Noda, based on the autobiography of Hideko Kageyama “Warawa no hanshogai” · Oper. Kohei Sugiyama · Music. Senji Ito · B

From the book The Author's Encyclopedia of Films. Volume I by Lourcelle Jacques

Fiamma che non si spegne Unquenchable Flame 1949 - Italy (104 min) · Prod. Orsa Film? Dir. VITTORIO COTTAFAVI· Scene. Ciro Angeli, Giorgio Capitani, Oreste Biancoli, Fulvio Palmieri · Oper. Gabor Pogan · Music. Gross Cicognini · Starring Gino Cervi (Don Luigi Manfredi), Leonardo Cortese

From the book Welding author Bannikov Evgeniy Anatolievich

Welding flame Gas or welding flame is the main source of heat in welding and other gas-flame processing processes. A welding flame is formed by the combustion of a mixture of flammable gas or flammable liquid vapor with oxygen. Properties of a welding flame

From the book Encyclopedia of Modern military aviation 1945-2002: Part 2. Helicopters author Morozov V.P.

30-mm automatic grenade launcher "Plamya" At the end of the 60s, OKB-16 began work on the 30-mm automatic infantry grenade launcher AGS-17 "Plamya" (OKB-16 index - 216-P). When designing it we used constructive solutions 40-mm Taubin automatic grenade launcher,

From the book I Explore the World. Weapon author Zigunenko Stanislav Nikolaevich

Flame from a backpack In the Middle Ages, when people paid attention to the flammable liquid - oil, it also began to be used as an incendiary. At first, they simply dipped torches in oil so that they would burn longer and better, and then they began to come up with more

From the book Big book aphorisms about love author Dushenko Konstantin Vasilievich

With the help of a spark, the original design was patented by the inventor from Novokuznetsk A.P. Sharypkin. His device can be used in manual automatic firearms. Instead of a conventional mechanical striker, the author proposes to ignite gunpowder in

From the book Always Ready! [Survival Course in extreme conditions for modern men] by Green Rod

Love is like light and flame Love is an illuminated window in the middle of the night.? Giuseppe Ungaretti, Italian poet*Love should be light rather than flame.? Henry David Thoreau, American writer *Love is like a fire: from afar only smoke is visible, and the flames are visible only to those who are nearby.?

From the author's book

Other Ways to Get a Flame If you don't have a lighter, matches, or flint, there are other ways to get that precious spark. You can focus sun rays on your tinder using a magnifying glass or glasses or connect together

A spark will ignite a flame. - famous expression.

What is it about?

"From the poem “The Fiery Sounds of Prophetic Strings” (1828, published 1857) by the exiled Decembrist poet Alexander Ivanovich Odoevsky (1802-1839). These poems, which are sometimes also called the “Response of the Decembrists,” were written in response to Pushkin’s poem “Not your sorrowful work will be lost...” (the so-called “Message to the Decembrists”).
Our sorrowful work will not be wasted:
A flame will ignite from a spark,
And our enlightened people
Gather under the holy banner!

This line became famous as an epigraph to the title of Lenin’s underground newspaper Iskra (published abroad in 1900-1903). "

This expression means that the Decembrists were the first “sparks” who tried to fight the autocratic state. And that these “sparks” will inevitably give rise to more and more sparks, which will form, sooner or later, in a conflagration that will burn to the ground backward feudal relations.

Let's fast forward to modern times. It would seem that there are a lot of “sparks” - every second person calls himself a communist. But somehow the flame from these “sparks” does not form. Why?

Firstly, there is “confusion and vacillation” in the left movement. Secondly, the majority of the so-called “leftists” are social-pacifists, reformists, chauvinists and other counter-revolutionary rabble. I suspect they haven’t even read half of Lenin’s volume. And even if they read it, they didn’t understand it. And if they understand, they ignore what is written and distort it. And since this is a counter-revolutionary rabble, it is natural that under its banners it cannot unite active comrades to fight capitalism.

Hundreds of thousands of only “official communists” - that is, those who declared their adherence to one or another “official” communist party. By analogy with “legal Marxists,” “legal communists” cannot be fully communists. Otherwise, their legal position will end. Hundreds of thousands of “members” of various “communist” organizations! Just imagine this - if everyone posts a hundred leaflets - and this is absolutely no problem - tens of millions of leaflets throughout the country! To gather a meeting of one hundred thousand people, it is enough for the members of the parties themselves to come to the meeting without attracting the people. This is power! As long as she does something.

Why are there no actions visible? Why don’t rallies of tens of thousands of party members gather several times a year - just to show that there are “leftists”, that they are capable of influencing state policy. That they are determined to fight capitalism and capitalists to the end, not in words but in deeds.

This does not happen precisely because confrontation with the capitalists will inevitably lead to the loss of “official status”, to the dispersal of organizations, to imprisonment.

But wouldn’t this be the best proof that it is impossible to fight the capitalists by “peaceful means”?

The Decembrists were the first “sparks” to die in the fight against the autocracy. However, despite the period of total reaction that followed the Decembrist uprising, few would dare to call their act worthless or useless. And even more harmful. However, just try to point out the need for something like this now, in modern times, and modern “Marxists” will spit on them, trample them, and call them the most last words- from the stupid “Trotskyist”, ignorant, and further down the list.

The act of the Decembrists served as a “beacon” for subsequent generations of revolutionaries for a long time. From a couple of dozen “sparks” thousands flared up. Thousands - set millions on fire. In contrast to modern “legal communists” - who in words remain supporters of Marxism, but in reality are, in best case scenario, a worthless and incapable “ballast” of the labor movement. They extinguish any initiative, any impulse aimed at decisive action against the system of oppression, under the pretext that the situation is not roaring, the working class is not ready yet, no revolutionary party that in the best case, you will be used by the bourgeoisie and in the interests of the bourgeoisie, you will serve as stupid cannon fodder in the showdown between the gentlemen, etc., etc.

A spark will ignite a flame. Everyone's fervor individual person dissatisfied with the regime, it is necessary not to extinguish, but to inflame even more. Persistently push for unification: a spark plus a spark - a fire. And when these “sparks” are not allowed to flare up, they are extinguished as soon as they begin to smolder - this speaks of the anti-revolutionary essence of modern “communists”. The goal of which is not to rouse the masses to fight for socialism, but, at best, to sit in the pants, completely discrediting the communist movement...

Such “Marxists”, without fail, must be saddled with the shameful stigma of being contrarians.

A spark will ignite a flame

A spark will ignite a flame
From the poem “Fiery Sounds of Prophetic Strings” (1828, published 1857) by the exiled Decembrist poet Alexander Ivanovich Odoevsky (1802-1839). These poems, which are sometimes also called the “Response of the Decembrists,” were written in response to Pushkin’s poem “Your sorrowful work will not be lost...” (the so-called “Message to the Decembrists”). A. I. Odoevsky:
Our sorrowful work will not be wasted:
A flame will ignite from a spark,
And our enlightened people
Gather under the holy banner!

This line became famous as an epigraph to the title of Lenin’s underground newspaper Iskra (printed abroad in 1900-1903).
Allegorically: about faith in success, the victory of one’s business, despite its difficult beginning (jokingly ironic).

Encyclopedic dictionary of popular words and expressions. - M.: “Locked-Press”. Vadim Serov. 2003.


See what “A flame will ignite from a spark” in other dictionaries:

    FLAME, b. and dates flame, flame, flame, many. (obsolete rare) flames, flames, flames, cf. (book). 1. Fire rising above a burning object. “Our sorrowful work will not be wasted: a spark will ignite a flame.” A. Odoevsky (response of the Decembrists... ... Dictionary Ushakova

    - (1802 1839), prince, Decembrist poet, cornet (1823), participant in the uprising on December 14, 1825 Senate Square V Saint Petersburg e. Sentenced to 8 years of hard labor, served in the Nerchinsk mines, from 1837 a private in the Caucasus. Poetry is characteristic of... ... Encyclopedic Dictionary

    This term has other meanings, see Vaenga. Wikipedia has articles about other people with the same surname, see Khrulev. Elena Vaenga ... Wikipedia

    I Iskra Zakhary Yuryevich (died about 1730), one of the leaders of the Right Bank Ukrainian Cossacks, Cossack colonel (Kodatsky, then Korsun). In 1702 1704, together with the Cossack colonels Paliy, Samus and Abazin, he headed... ...

    1. the first all-Russian political Marxist illegal newspaper created by V.I. Lenin in 1900 to organize revolutionaries. Marxist Party of Russia. Capitalism in Russia at this time developed into its last stage of imperialism, and the country was... ... Soviet historical encyclopedia

    - “Iskra”, the first all-Russian political Marxist illegal newspaper, created by V.I. Lenin in 1900. According to the plan developed by Lenin in exile (the village of Shushenskoye) in 1899-1900, the newspaper was supposed to help overcome ideological confusion and organizational... ... Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    Lenin V.I. (Ulyanov, 1870-1924) - b. in Simbirsk on April 10 (23), 1870. His father, Ilya Nikolaevich, came from the townspeople of the mountains. Astrakhan, lost his father at the age of 7 and was raised by his older brother, Vasily Nikolaevich, to whom... ... Big biographical encyclopedia

    - (Fontanka river embankment, 59), book and newspaper publishing house of the Leningrad Regional Committee of the CPSU. Founded on December 12 (November 29), 1917 as the publishing house of the Petrosovet (located in Smolny, head I. I. Ionov), from 1924 Lengiz, from 1930 Lenoblidat, ... ...

    Lenizdat- Press House on the embankment of the Fontanka River, 59. Press House on the embankment of the Fontanka River, 59, where Lenizdat is located. Saint Petersburg. Lenizdat (Fontanka River embankment, 59), book and newspaper publishing house of the Leningrad Regional Committee of the CPSU. Founded on December 12... ... Encyclopedic reference book "St. Petersburg"

    The avenue runs from Kollontai Street to Telman Street. It received its name on October 2, 1970 in honor of the first Russian revolutionary newspaper “Iskra”, and before that it was listed in the project documentation as Oktyabrskaya Street. In this area... ... St. Petersburg (encyclopedia)

Books

  • From a spark - a flame, S. Golubov. The novel "From a Spark - a Flame" is dedicated to one of the exciting episodes of the revolutionary past - the Decembrist uprising on December 14, 1825. At the center of the novel is the poet A. I. Odoevsky, a brave...

Very few works of the poet Alexander Odoevsky have survived to this day. The thing is that he did not like to transfer poems to paper, keeping them in his mind. Only thanks to him true friends we can read the poignant lines of his works.

the site recalls the biography of the fearless Decembrist, who was not broken even by imprisonment in Peter and Paul Fortress, nor exile to Siberia.

Down with autocracy!

Alexander Odoevsky was born into an old princely family. Parents gave the talented boy a wonderful home education. He began writing poetry very early, but never wrote them down. This strange habit remained with the poet for the rest of his life. Because of her, we are practically unfamiliar with Odoevsky’s work. Only close friends who had the opportunity to constantly communicate with the young man knew about his poetic talent.

At the age of 13, the young man was assigned to serve the emperor as a clerical worker. But civil service did not appeal to Odoevsky. He resigned and in 1821 entered the military service. Already an officer in the Life Guards Cavalry Regiment, he joined the Decembrist society.

This ambiguous but courageous act predetermined future life poet. On December 14, 1825, Odoevsky actively participated in the uprising on Senate Square.

Let us recall that the participants in the Russian war were called Decembrists. opposition movement, members of various secret societies. At that time, part of the nobility considered autocracy and serfdom disastrous for further development Russia.

On December 14, the interregnum broke out major uprising. Decembrists gathered on Senate Square near Bronze Horseman. This civil protest was brutally suppressed. According to officials, 1,271 people died on that black day; regular troops fired grapeshot at the crowd of rebels.

The trial of the Decembrists was the most severe. Five were sentenced to death by quartering, 31 by beheading, and 16 to lifelong exile at hard labor. A little later, Emperor Nicholas I commuted the punishment for almost all the Decembrists. Instead of being quartered, the five most desperate revolutionaries were hanged. They were Pestel, Ryleev, Muravyov-Apostol, Bestuzhev-Ryumin and Kakhovsky. Terrible fact, three of the five hanged during the execution fell from the noose and were hanged a second time. These unfortunates were Muravyov-Apostol, Kakhovsky and Ryleev.

In 1826, the deportations of arrested Decembrists to Siberia began. One of them was Alexander Odoevsky. After a whole year in the dungeons of the Peter and Paul Fortress in shackles, he was sent to the prison camp. The poet was sentenced to 12 years of hard labor, and after its completion he had to go to eternal settlement in Siberia.

Life beyond

All those exiled by the Decembrists considered Odoevsky their singer and herald. He wrote the unspoken hymn of the Decembrists, who were not broken by the hardships and hardships of exiled life.

Our sorrowful work will not be wasted:

A flame will ignite from a spark,

And our enlightened people

Gather under the holy banner!

We will forge swords from chains
And let us light the flame of freedom again!
She will come upon the kings,
And the peoples will sigh with joy!

On February 1, 1827, Odoevsky, together with Naryshkin and the Belyaev brothers, was sent to Siberia - to Chita. There he was placed along with some other Decembrists in an old dungeon. The prisoners were taken to work every day: first to dig holes for the building being constructed, and when summer came, to fill up the ravine located at the end of the village. After the onset of Siberian frosts, they were transferred to a newly built prison. The Decembrists were content with an insignificant state allowance, many of them were exhausted to the extreme. Many were saved by their wives, who, undaunted by hardships, went to Siberia following their husbands. Fearless women managed to create a more or less tolerable environment for the exiled convicts. Soon books and newspapers in Russian and Russian began to arrive from relatives and friends from the capital. foreign languages. Behind the walls of the casemate, diligent reading and joint discussion of what was read began. For entertainment, a choir of singing lovers was created. They found their own musicians, among whom, by the way, was Odoevsky. Odoevsky also took an active part in a small religious society, who found shelter in one of the corners of the casemate.

Father's death

In 1837, the emperor relented and shortened the term of imprisonment for some Decembrists. Odoevsky was allowed to transfer as a private to the Caucasus. Here he became friends with Lermontov and Ogarev. Few of the poet’s poems have survived only thanks to these faithful friends. They recorded for Alexander Ivanovich.

In the Caucasus, Odoevsky became friends with Mikhail Lermontov. Photo: Public Domain

In 1839, General Raevsky undertook an expedition to the Black Sea coast with the aim of strengthening the Lazarevsky fort between Subashi and Sochi. Almost all the Decembrists who served their sentences in the Caucasus took part in it, and with them Odoevsky, assigned to the regiment of linear Cossacks. Seeing the daring of the brave warriors, Odoevsky began to imitate them and for some time he himself became interested in military affairs.

In the summer of that year, news came of his father's death. It struck Odoevsky like thunder. The poet quickly changed physically and spiritually, turning from cheerful, childishly carefree, to sad and thoughtful. Previously, he loved company, now he did not leave the tent for days on end, he said that his last connection with life had been severed.

The poet was more than once in danger of being killed, but was struck down not by weapons, but by local fever. He died in Psezuan on August 15, 1839 in the presence of his Chita comrades. The death of Odoevsky was equally mourned by his close friends, the Decembrists, and by officers and ordinary soldiers.

Alexander Odoevsky was buried near the sea. But the grave has not survived. Soon the fortification passed to the mountaineers. When it was recaptured again, one of the poet’s friends decided to visit the poet’s grave, but saw that it had been dug up. So Odoevsky’s burial place disappeared without a trace.

Perhaps Odoevsky’s poetry would have disappeared without a trace for future generations if the friends of the careless or overly modest poet had not written down his works. During Odoevsky’s lifetime, only one of his poems, “Saint Bernard,” was published. Only in 1883, almost 50 years after the poet’s death, was a small collection of poems published by one of the poet’s surviving friends, the Decembrist Rosen. More than half of it consisted of poems hitherto almost completely unknown. But Lermontov’s poem dedicated to his close friend and ally Alexander Odoevsky is well known:

I knew him: we traveled with him
In the mountains of the east, and the melancholy of exile
They shared together; but to the native fields
I'm back and it's time to test
It rushed by in a lawful line;
But he didn’t wait for the sweet moment:
Under a poor camping tent
The disease struck him down, and with him
He took the flying swarm to his grave
Still immature, dark inspirations,
Deceived hopes and bitter regrets!

Strings of prophetic fiery sounds
It has reached our ears,
Our hands rushed to the swords,
And - they just found shackles.

But be calm, bard! - chains,
We are proud of our destiny,
And behind the prison gates
In our hearts we laugh at kings.

Our sorrowful work will not be wasted,
A flame will ignite from a spark,
And our enlightened people
Will gather under the holy banner.

We will forge swords from chains
And let us light the flame of freedom again!
She will come upon the kings,
And the peoples will sigh with joy!

Late 1828 or early 1829
Chita

“Prophetic strings of fiery sounds...” For the first time - Sat. "Voices from Russia", ed. Free printing house of A. I. Herzen, book. 4. London, 1857, p. 40, under the title: “Response to Pushkin’s message” with the note: “Who wrote the response to the message is unknown.” The same text, with the same title, was reprinted in volume 1 of the “Russian Library” (“Collected poems by Pushkin, Ryleev, Lermontov and others, best authors", Leipzig, 1858U, in the 1st edition - anonymously, and in the 2nd with the signature: Iskander. For the first time under the name O. - “Poems by Pushkin, not included in the last collection of his works.” Berlin, 1861, in a note to the message of A. S. Pushkin “In the depths Siberian ores..." Repeatedly published in foreign publications. In Russia for the first time with passes - RA, 1881, book. 1; for the first time in full - and N. O. Lerner’s notes to volume 4 of the Collected Works of A. S. Pushkin, ed. S. A. Vengerova. St. Petersburg, 1910. Preserved in several authoritative lists. Pech. according to identical lists of I. I. Pushchin (TsGIAM, f. 279, op. I, archive unit 248, sheet 4 vol. -5) and the secret archive of the III Department (TsGIAM, f. 109, op. I, unit . 2234, l. 2 and 4), as amended by Art. 4 according to the “Notes” of M. N. Volkonskaya, where, obviously for censorship reasons, Art. 8 and omitted last stanza. With the exception of Art. 1, the text by I. I. Pushchin is identical to the list by P. I. Bartenev (TsGALI, f. 46, op. 2, item 445). Based on the text by Pushchin - Volkonskaya, the poem was published for the first time - ed. 1936. Until now, it is considered beyond doubt that A.S. Pushkin’s message to the Decembrists was written at the end of 1826 - beginning of 1827. and was transferred in January 1827 to A.G. Muravyova, who was leaving for Siberia. Hence, O.’s answer is always dated back to 1827. But in the unpublished work of M.K. Azadovsky, dedicated to this poem by A.S. Pushkin, it is convincingly proven that in reality A.S. Pushkin’s message was written at the end of 1828. Consequently, O.'s answer could not have been written earlier than the end of 1828 - beginning of 1829. Date: 1828 is also on the list of P.I. Bartenev; All other lists of O.'s poem have no date. In most lists (mainly later ones) and in printed texts there are discrepancies:

Art. 4 But they only found shackles
Art. 11 And our Orthodox people
Art. 14-15 And again we will light the fire of freedom,
And with her we will attack the kings

In addition, on the list of P.I. Bartenev:

Art. 1 Strings of prophetic memorable sounds

The answer to A.S. Pushkin is the most famous poem O., which was distributed in numerous lists and became firmly entrenched in the arsenal of underground revolutionary poetry. The line “From a spark will ignite a flame” served as the epigraph for Lenin’s Iskra.

Year of writing: 1828-1829



Did you like the article? Share with your friends!