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・ Denis Cuspert
・ Denis Cvitičanin
・ Denis Cyr
・ Denis César de Matos
・ Denis Côté
・ Denis D'Amour
・ Denis D'Onofrio
・ Denis d'or
・ Denis Dallan
・ Denis Dalton
・ Denis Daly
・ Denis Daly (Galway politician)
・ Denis Daly (judge)
・ Denis Daly (Kerry politician)
・ Denis Dangue Réwaka
Denis Davydov
・ Denis de Belleval
・ Denis de Boisse
・ Denis de Rougemont
・ Denis de Sallo
・ Denis Dechko
・ Denis Decrès
・ Denis DeJordy
・ Denis Delaney
・ Denis Delestrac
・ Denis Dempsey
・ Denis Denisenko
・ Denis Denisenko (footballer)
・ Denis Denisov
・ Denis Dercourt


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Denis Davydov : ウィキペディア英語版
Denis Davydov

Denis Vasilyevich Davydov (; – ) was a Russian soldier-poet of the Napoleonic Wars who invented a specific genre – hussar poetry noted for its hedonism and bravado – and spectacularly designed his own life to illustrate such poetry.
==Biography==

Davydov stemmed from a great family of Russian nobility. After gaining celebrity as an indefatigable guerrilla leader of the Russian Patriotic War, he became one of the most popular men in the country. Young men of Pushkin's circle viewed him as a model romantic hero and the Decembrists prized his company as well.
Davydov's poems read like a diary of the hussar and bon-vivant that he was. Admired by Belinsky for their organic quality and Russianness, they address such themes as courage in battle, harlots, vodka, and the value of true friendship. In them he sings the praise of reckless valor, on the field of battle as well as before the bottle.
The diction in some of his poems is rather unconventional, and occasionally his words have to be replaced by dots, but it is always full of spirit and great rhythmical go. His later poems are inspired by a late love for a very young girl. They are passionately sentimental and as vivid and alive in diction and rhythmical elasticity as his hussar verses. Pushkin had a high opinion of his poetry and used to say that Davydov showed him the way to be original.〔D.S. Mirsky. ''A History of Russian Literature''. Northwestern University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-8101-1679-0. Page 82.〕
The literary mask of a dashing hussar is belied by some of Davydov's lesser known writings, such as the anti-absolutism' poem 'Head and Feet', there he described the 'Tsar-Chevalry' relationes as the possibility of head to live its life only on and with feet.
He brought out an ''Essay towards a Theory of Guerilla Warfare'' (1821) and ''Some events from the life of Denis Vasilievich Davydov'', a series of recollections on military life, used by Leo Tolstoy in writing ''War and Peace''. Davydov even makes an appearance in Tolstoy's novel in the person of Vasily Denisov. According to D.S. Mirsky, "in his autobiography he indulges in a veritable orgy of puns and jokes not always in the best of taste. His military writings are fresh, vigorous, and racy; and his memoirs contain some of the best military reading in the language".〔D.S. Mirsky. ''A History of Russian Literature''. Northwestern University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-8101-1679-0. Page 118.〕
The grave of Denis Davydov with his statue right above it is situated next to the exit door (left from outside) of the katholikon of the Novodevichy Convent.

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