Marina Petrovna in The Siege
Marina Petrovna is an important character in the Siege. She is an
artiste and finds it hard to put up with things happening around her. It is
hard for others to understand her. Even the heroine takes time to come to terms
with her.
We are told about Marina in the very first chapter itself. Anna’s
earliest memory of her is how he mother felt mortified after a casual meeting
with her. She was trying to be nice to Vera and asked about her and her husband
whom she lovingly refers to as Misha. But Vera could not tolerate such niceties
coming from her husband’s girlfriend. In the following chapter we see Anna
going to meet Marina and paint her portrait as demanded by her father. The
first sentence of this chapter which describes where Marina lives is striking.
The track
narrows down to a path.
This sentence in a way summarizes the life of Marina. She used to be
a famous actor like Mikhail was a well acknowledged writer. They both lost their
stature. But it Marina was more hurt by that.
Her name was wiped from posters, programmes and reviews.
She was lucky in that she was sidelined by the Soviet regime before
it became too brutal. If she had been questioned a year later, she would have
disappeared along with her name.
But an actress can’t burrow
down and work alone, hidden. She’s got to have a stage, cast,
director, lighting, and
above all an audience.
But very few are willing to associate with her now. Even Anna
doesn’t want her father to correspond with her and when a letter comes, asks he
father not to keep it in the house. Marina too doesn’t use the Postal system
anymore. She sends the letters only though people she trusts. Vera never read
those letters even when they were handed over to her. ‘It is you she writes to,
isn’t it?” Vera used to ask Mikhail when he asked her to read Marina’a letter.
Obviously, it was Anna’s father’s strategy to bring her and Marina
close to each other that made him ask Anna to go to Marina’s place and paint
her portrait. Anna is unwilling to go to see Marina and she has an argument
with her father about it. He tells her Marina was a friend of her mother. But
she knows it is not true. Her mother had explicitly told her so.
‘Isn’t she your friend as
well mammy?’
‘Not really. She’s your
father’s friend. He’s known her for a long time.’
‘But she wants to be your
friend, or she shouldn’t write to you.’
‘I daresay. But friendship
doesn’t work like that.’
This chapter and the next are written in such a way that we are
intrigued about this character who appears to be living outside the main frame
of the other actions in the story. The description of the dacha where Marina lives
and how Anna tries to find her way into the house reminds us of Kafka’a novel The Caslte. She lives thirty kilometres away from
Leningrad and twenty kilometres away from the dacha. She lives with her own
nurse and does not mingle much with the public. She has been blacklisted in her
own profession in the theatre, just like her old time love Mikhail in his
profession as a writer. Even those who associate with her could get into
trouble. Her dacha is within a forest area and she is very discrete about whom
she contact lest the state should take her away and imprison her. But it is
Marina’s life that reminds us more of Kafka’s castle than her dacha itself. All
her life she has been trying to reach something, finish something and dies
without reaching there.
As Anna tries to finish Marina’s portrait and Marina tries to strike
a warm conversation with Anna, we get to see a lot about their characters as if
one is a touch stone for the other. Anna is trying to be as professional as she
can, forget the old problems between Marina and her mother and concentrate on
her work while Marina is trying to snatch every chance to get closer to her.
Anna does her work and Marina is much impressed with it. She does she a lot of
her feature for the first time only in Anna’s drawing. Towards the end of the
day, Marina talks about Anna’s father but Anna shows the least interest.
Among other things, we forget about Marina and then she suddenly
comes back to Anna’s life. The war has begun and Anna’s father is away at the
battlefield making fortifications. Marian comes to Anna’s house when she finds
that her own dacha is about to be attacked. She has brought a lot of food for
Anna and tells her that food is the most important thing in war. Though she
comes only for two days she neverl leaves and finally dies there. After two
days, she asks Anna that she is free to go as volunteer to dig trenches and
that she can take care of Kolya. Thus begins her close association with Kolya.
Both the women try their best to keep the rest of the family alive
after Anna comes back from the trenches at the onset of winter and her father
also returns wounded. There is a Andrei too living with them and he too is much
impressed by Marina. Marina is still very energetic and she does a lot of
domestic chores, quite a new thing for her who lived always with her old nurse.
Later in the story we find that she was pregnant from Mikhail. She
met a doctor and effected an abortion. She had known it was a male foetus. She
tells a fantasy about this to Anna and then she tells her what really happened.
We feel that it was to win over her by giving Mikhail a son that Vera went
ahead with her pregnancy so late in her life. But it is Marina who had the good
fortune to bring take care of Vera’s death. Kolya has the same feelings for her
and Mikhail, his father.
Marina fulfils one last thing in her life. She takes care of her
lover till his death and even after his death for days since it takes several
days for them to bury her. Before he is buried she too dies. Before she dies
she gives them two bottles of jam which she was resisting to touch. But she
dies without being able to touch the jam. Through her death she was able to
help the rest of the family, with her rations and those two bottles of jam.
Marina’s is a tragic story which reminds us of what happens to
artists in a totalitarian state and how they make is even worse by not being
able to manage their emotional instability. In the present day society where
family is the boundary of relationships, her love for Mikhail was not
recognized even by Mikhail. She is able to hear his thoughts but he is quiet
reticent near her. Everyone found fault with her. Only death was kind to her by
putting an end to her life soon after Mikhail’s. They get to lie together in
the same mass tomb, close to each other, a privilege she won over Vera.
Who is Who
Anna
Mikhailovna Levin
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Protagonist,
Kolya’s mother, Vera’s and Mikhail’s father, nursery assistant at the local
nursery school and works under Elizaveta Antonova, falls into a relationship
with Andrei, her childhood friend, befriends Maria Petrovna, her father’s
lover later in life, works hard at the dacha and saves her own and her
brother’s life, very practical and hopeful, strong and aware of her own
feelings and emotions and limitations, determined and persevering. She is 18
when her mother dies and 23 when the blockade happens.
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Andrei
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A
dedicated doctor, talks medical science all the time, Romantic and falls in
love with Anna. He comes from Siberia and stays with the Levins during the
worst part of their life. He is very romantic and has great respect for Anna’s
father and his work. One day on his way to hospital he almost gets lost in
the snow storm. He is much loved by Kolya too.
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Maria
Petrovna
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An
actress, fall in love with her long time friend Mikhail after her gets
married, tried to befriend Vera, her lover’s wife and fails, befriends her
lover’s daughter Anna, lives with them during the siege and dies before it is
all over. We are introduced to her through Anna’s memories of her childhood
and then when Anna really goes to her dacha to draw her portrait as directed
by her father. It is also interesting that Marina forces Anna to draw the portrait
of her father as he lies dead. She was pregnant from her relationship with
Mikhail before Anna was born, it was a boy but she opted for abortion. She was
seeing a doctor who fell for her and she told Mikhail that she had had an
abortion and he was upset and wrote some poems of grief and Vera found the
poems insincere. She is not a supporter of Stalin and lives in her past
glory. She is suspected to be a rebel and it is true. She later sort of
sacrificed her life for Anna’s family by saving two bottles of jam for her
and she couldn’t use them. A very interesting character, very much like Andrei
and when Andrei hears that she sat near Mikhail’s dead body for days, he asks
Anna whether she also would do the same. Anna refuses first and then yields.
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Mikhail
Ilyich Levin
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A
passionate writer, he speaks good German and French apart from Russian. The
time he spent in two European countries as early as 1912 has enriched him and
also made him a suspect. The government can always label him as man with
suspicious foreign connections. He writes stories and lives on his translation
and editing work. The writers’ committee has put a ban on his works. They found
that his work is not as optimistic as Stalin expects it to be. It is full of
gloom and doom. So, he keeps on writing and keeps them to himself. He is a
lover of Pushkin’s poems and can recite most of them. When he dies Marina
places a book in his hands and it is a book of poems by Pushkin. Marina sits
near his dead body for days and when she dies, Anna and Andrei place their
dead bodies together on the same bed and they are buried close together in a
mass grave. They could never unite like this while they were alive. Anna says
that Marina loved him but he only loved the fact that Marina loved him. He
was very devoted to his wife and admired Marina for her artistic qualities
and he is happy to see those qualities inherited by his daughter. His second
child Kolya is very affectionate towards him as if he is his grandfather and
not his father but we don’t see him showing much affection to his son Kolya.
He dies after getting wounded in bombing. Andrei brings him home and the
whole family takes care of him till he dies. His body is left like that for
more than ten days since there is not one strong enough to drag it to the
cemetery.
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Kolya
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He
is only five or six and is unhealthy in several ways. He considers his sister
like his mother and his father like his grandfather. His mother died at his
birth. He is a typical child with his interest in war games, stubborn nature,
hunger, insensitivity to the harsh realities of life. Anna says he is a
typical Levin because of his studious nature. It is by pure luck and the care
shown by the adults around him that he survives the blockade. When he is
hungry, there are three things that Anna is able to provide him with during
the blockade; a root of liquorice, her own fingers or a piece of his old
leather school bag which was already used for soup a few days before!
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Vera
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Vera
is a radiologist and she is totally aware of health issues but she relents to
her husband’s need for a full fledged family and opts to get pregnant and
dies delivering a child. Probably, when Mikhail heard that the foetus Marina
aborted was male, it would have promoted Vera to try her luck at giving him a
male child. A very amiable person, scholarly, unrelenting in personal
matters, not so much of an artist, Vera is always upset about Marina and refuses
to have anything to do with her. Paradoxically, it is Marina who gets to be
with Mikhail on his eternal sleep. Anna has some sweet memories of her
two-week life with her mother at the dacha during a vacation.
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Olya
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A
student Vera was very fond of. After Vera’s death she lost her job and was
suspected as a rebel and faced much hardship in life.
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Elizaveta
Antonova
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Anna’s
boss at the childcare centre; a typical bureaucrat who is not at all creative
or sensitive and ironically she is in charge of very small children; she is a
stern administrator as she throws her weight around; being a turncoat she
manages to get to Moscow when the blockade gets worse and lives there safe
and secure
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General Hunger and General Winter
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Though
these are made to sound like the fantasy names of two kinds of hardships,
later we find that the word general is used literally. Hunger and Winter
affects everyone in general and they prove to be lacking in several humane qualities.
They are the characters in a story written by Mikhail and it becomes a
prophesy in his own life.
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Darya Alexandrovna
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She
is Anna’s neighbour and she is the first one to inform Anna of the coming catastrophe.
She demonstrates how people are going to behave from then onwards by refusing
to giver Anna jar of honey she had promised.
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Vasya Sokolov
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Vasya
Sokolov is one of the Sokolovs in Leningrad. He played building a dam with
Anna when he was young. They had built it across a stream fed by melting snow.
Anna’s hair grip falls into the dam and it disappears as their tiny dam
breaks letting the water flow through. Later in life as Vasya is driving a
government truck loaded with food for the starving village, his truck breaks
down and all he needs is a hair grip to lengthen a circuit. He can’t find it
and he dies in the snow with a small girl wail about a lost hair grip still
ringing in his ears.
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Katya
|
She
is a little 15 year old absent minded girl who dies in the trenches dug by
the volunteers when a wall collapses on them. Being slow in movement, she is
not able to move out of harm’s way. She was digging with Anna for more than a
week and used to be very nice to her. They wrap her body in a some rag and
throw it on the roadside.
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Katinka
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This
is another young woman who is digging with Anna.
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Evgenia
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Evgenia
another young woman used to be very optimistic about herself. She become a
prostitute later on and comes to Anna’s help whenever she has some trouble in
the market place or in the street.
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Pavlov
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He
is in charge of the food supply or the rations during the blockade. His
position is far from being a covetable one in that he is the one to take
decisions about how much they are allowed to eat each day. He is the one has
to prevent people from dying and at the same time hope that more people die
to leave their rations for the living.
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Zina
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She
is Anna’s neighbour and her husband who works at a factory in Leningrad has
convinced her that the Levins are rebels and that they should have nothing to
do with them. When her baby is weak, Anna decides to share Kolya’s ration with
her though Mariana objects to this. A few days later she brings her baby who
has been dead for three days to Anna and asks her to draw a portrait of her
baby.
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Fedya
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Feyda,
once against the Levins, is later moved by Anna’s selfish act of giving Kolya’s
ration of sugar to his and Zina’s baby later patches up with her. He contacts
kidney disease but he survives the blockade more dead than alive. His wife
adores him.
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Dear Sir:
ReplyDeleteIt would be very helpful if you could post some sample answers and general essay structures for both papers. Thank you.
Sure. I am hard pressed for time now. As soon as I sit down...
ReplyDelete