

Crude and realistic, he is the romantic Piskaryov's foil. The second story is of an officer, Lieutenant Pirogov. He returns to his lodging and cuts his throat. After dreaming of the woman as his wife, he decides to marry her, but when he returns to the brothel to propose the woman mocks him. Living only for his dreams, he develops insomnia and turns to opium to restore his ability to sleep and to dream.

Back in his room he dreams of her as a woman of wealth and virtue.

However, his interest in the woman is completely innocent and chaste, so he is shocked by her true nature and flees. The first story told is of a young, romantic painter, Piskaryov, who follows a dark-haired woman (whom he likens to Perugino's Bianca ) to what turns out to be a brothel. Mirsky as "'self-satisfied inferiority,' moral and spiritual." ) This is exemplified in the repeated admiring descriptions of mustaches, "to which the better part of a life has been devoted." The description of the street ends abruptly, and the story shifts to the conversation of two acquaintances who have decided to split up to each pursue a different woman seen on the street. The narrator revels in the delights of the street, but he is filled with Poshlost, (defined by literary historian D. Petersburg, and its population at different times of the day. The introduction describes Nevsky Prospekt, the central avenue of St.

The story closes with the narrator once more speaking generally of Nevsky Prospekt. The first story follows the romantic hero, the second follows his realistic foil. The story is organized symmetrically the narrator describes Nevsky Prospekt in great detail, then the plot splits to follow in turn two acquaintances, each of whom follows a beautiful woman whom he has seen on the street. Influenced strongly by the sentimental movement, the protagonist of "Nevsky Prospekt" is a pathetic and insignificant romantic, the narrator is chatty and unreliable (along the lines of Tristram Shandy, the definitive sentimental novel), and realism dominates. " Nevsky Prospekt" ( Russian: Невский Проспект) is a short story by Nikolai Gogol, written between 18 and published in the collection Arabesques in 1835. Dmitry Kardovsky's illustration for the 1904 edition.
