Merefa — Fata Morgana. On a poem by Vladimir Strochkov
https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2026-1-30-42
Abstract
The article uses the close reading method, which implies efforts to recover the context of, and clarify hidden meanings in, a given text. For her analysis, G. Kalinkina chooses V. Strochkov’s At a train stop on the route to Kharkiv… [Na uchastke pod Kharkovom…], a poem that describes an unremarkable incident at the Merefa station. Drawing on recorded historical mentions of the station (including reminiscences and diaries written before and after the October revolution, as well as Soviet-era memoirs) and internal poetic metaphors, Kalinkina argues that the poem tells a story of a convict who declines a stranger’s offer of freedom. She suggests that the odd-looking traveller encountered by the lyric hero (himself travelling in a train car with barred windows) at Merefa symbolizes destiny disguised as a somewhat unsteady passer-by: “…descending the steps to the tracks was a nondescript fellow. / He was somewhat tipsy and looked both like diamonds and clubs…” Such a detailed analysis seeks to prove that Strochkov’s poetics is defined by a combination of the absolute clarity of verse and simplicity of the plot, but also completely impenetrable semantics and Aesopian language.
About the Author
G. E. KalinkinaRussian Federation
Galina E. Kalinkina writer, essayist, independent researcher
10 Bolshoy Gnezdnikovsky Ln., Moscow, 125375
References
1. Alyokhin, A. (2023). Across the tide / A tribute to Vladimir Strochkov (3 Apr. 1946 — 13 Dec. 2023). Kulturnaya Initsiativa, [online] 13 Dec. Available at: http://kultinfo.ru/novosti/3607/ [Accessed 10 Nov. 2025]. (In Russ.) Andreeva, O. (2019). Vladimir Strochkov’s meta-language of meta-time. 45th Parallel, [online] 21 July. Available at: https://45parallel.net/olga_andreeva/metayazyk_metavremeni_vladimira_strochkova/index.html [Accessed 10 Nov. 2025]. (In Russ.)
2. Bykov, V. (2002). The poor folk. Moscow: Vagrius. (In Russ.)
3. Chernykh, N. (2011). An open system. Vladimir Strochkov. Voprosy Literatury, 4, pp. 55-74. (In Russ.)
4. Knorring, I. (2009). A tale from my own life. Diary (2 vols). Vol. 1. Ed. by О. Bulaeva. Moscow: Agraf. (In Russ.)
5. Milyutin, D. (2009). Diary of 1876-1878. Ed. by L. Zakharov. 2nd ed. Moscow: ROSSPEN. (In Russ.)
6. Miscellaneous news. (1905). Russkoe Slovo, 5 Jan. (In Russ.)
7. News. (1911). Novoe Vremya, 27 Sept. (In Russ.)
8. Tatishchev, А. (2001). Lands and people: in the thick of the resettlement movement (1906-1921). Moscow: Russkiy put. (In Russ.)
9. Turkul, A. (1937). Drozdovites under fire. Pictures of the Civil War, 1918-1920. Ed. by I. Lukash. Belgrade: Tip. ‘Svetlost.’ (In Russ.)
Review
For citations:
Kalinkina G.E. Merefa — Fata Morgana. On a poem by Vladimir Strochkov. Voprosy literatury. 2026;1(1):30-42. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.31425/0042-8795-2026-1-30-42
JATS XML






























