Letter 3355
Tchaikovsky Research
Date | 18/30 September 1887 |
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Addressed to | Pyotr Jurgenson |
Where written | Maydanovo |
Language | Russian |
Autograph Location | Klin (Russia): Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve (a3, No. 2577) |
Publication | П. И. Чайковский. Полное собрание сочинений, том XIV (1974), p. 218 |
Text and Translation
Russian text (original) |
English translation By Brett Langston |
18 сент[ября] [18]87 Майдан[ово] Действуй, пожалуйста, совершенно по произволу. Подчинюсь всякому твоему решению, ибо в последние дни я рассудил, что в самом деле нельзя ребячиться и давать больше, чем следует. А всё-таки смертельно хочется купить!!! 30 р[ублей] нужно послать Марье Марковне Логиновой. Спасибо за хлопоты! Очень, очень благодарен. Твой, П. Чайковский |
18 September 1887 Maydanovo Please act entirely as you see fit [1]. I'll defer to your every decision, because in the last few days I've concluded that I really can't be childish and give more than I ought to. All the same I'm dying to buy it!!! 30 silver rubles need to be sent to Mariya Markovna Loginova [2]. Thank you for your trouble! I'm very, very grateful. Yours, P. Tchaikovsky |
Notes and References
- ↑ Jurgenson had been negotiating on Tchaikovsky's behalf to purchase land from Nadezhda Vasilyevna Novikova, who was the owner of the Maydanovo estate where Tchaikovsky was renting a house.
- ↑ Mariya Markovna Loginova (née Palchikova; 1823-1888), daughter of the composer Mark Palchikov, who was engaged as a piano teacher for young Pyotr in Votkinsk by his parents around 1845. By 1848, as Modest informs us in his biography of the composer, the eight-year-old Pyotr could already play the piano as well as she could. In 1883, Tchaikovsky unexpectedly received a letter from her asking for financial assistance. He granted her a pension and also corresponded regularly with her during the last three years of her life (none of these letters, however, has come to light) — see Жизнь Петра Ильича Чайковского, том 1 (1997), p. 41. Modest's assertion that Mariya was a former serf has recently been disproven — see http://expositions.nlr.ru/eng/ex_manus/Chaikovsky/teacher_music.php .