In Boundlessness


In Boundlessness is a second major poetry collection by Konstantin Balmont, first published in 1895 in Moscow. Following Under the Northern Sky, it features 95 poems, some of which bear first signs of the author's experiments with the Russian language's musical and rhythmical structures he would later become famous for.
The book came with an epigraph from Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov: "Kiss the earth and love tirelessly and insatiably; love everyone and everything, keep seeking delight and ecstasy." Balmont read Crime and Punishment at sixteen, and The Brothers Karamazov a year later. "It gave me more than any other book I've ever read," he later wrote of this novel.
The initial reviews by mainstream critics were lukewarm, but the Symbolist faction of the Russian artistic community embraced the book as an innovative work. In retrospect it is regarded as an important artistic statement that in many ways shaped the face of Russian literary modernism.

Notable poems

  • "Okean". A poem dedicated to Valery Bryusov with whom Balmont was 'bound by a thread of both friendship and animosity'. The two, according to Marina Tsvetayeva, "walked as pair... In those years once you've mentioned one, you couldn't help meaning the other one too. Balmont-Bryusov. Joint rulers." Tsvetayeva considered them the Russian Symbolism's 'Mozart-and-Salieri', each signifying an extreme end of artistry. "Balmont: utter and complete openness. Bryusov: toughness... Childish creator and labourer creator... Joy of giving, Balmont. Joy of possessing, Bryusov."
  • "Ya mechtoyu lovil ukhodyashchiye teni...". A declaration of the poet's quest for artistic truth, through climbing up a symbolic stairway in pursuit of the unfathomable. "The symbolic method here is taken to the extreme of perfection," opined the critic Ellis, who defined this method as "treating the real world as means to the end," the spectrum of reflections," and "the temple of symbols propped by columns of life" which a poet enters in order to "seek eternity in fleeting things, and boundlessness in all things relative and limited."
  • "Voskres'shiy". Re-evaluation of the early suicide attempt in the symbolist's terms. The poet feels the need to die so as to recognize in him "the light of eternity."