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Sin and Sorrow Are Common to All
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Sin and Sorrow Are Common to All : ウィキペディア英語版
Sin and Sorrow Are Common to All

''Sin and Sorrow Are Common to All'' (''Grekh da beda na kovo ne zhiviot'', Грех да беда на кого не живёт)〔This Russian proverb is not mentioned in the play directly but one of the characters Kuritsyn's final words describe things in a way which might be summed up by it: "Never expected or even guessed at, the grief came. Grief lives not in the woods, but among people."〕 is a four-act drama by Alexander Ostrovsky, written in 1852 and published on the No. 1, 1863 issue of ''Vremya'' magazine, edited by the Dostoyevsky brothers. It premiered in the Maly Theatre in Moscow, on 21 January 1863, as a benefit for director Alexander Bogdanov. Later that year, Ostrovsky was awarded the Uvarov Prize for it.
==Background==
In mid-1862, Ostrovsky returned from his European voyage which, according to biographer Vladimir Lakshin, made him "more enlightened and wise," giving even more poignancy to "his love-hate relations with the Russian () character... Love for all of our generosity, impracticality, tolerance, openness to goodness. Hatred for backwardness, moral ignorance, samodurstvo (tyranny ) and the eagerness to succumb for the darkest of passions."〔

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