The Hermit (¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿, 1883) is a powerful philosophical poem by Ilia Chavchavadze - Georgia's literary father, moral reformer, and national icon. This edition revives the first English translation by Marjory Scott Wardrop, providing modern readers access to one of the foundational texts of 19th-century Georgian literature. Written during a time of cultural and political struggle, The Hermit tells the story of a man who flees society to seek meaning in the silence of nature. Through the Hermit's voice, Chavchavadze reflects on moral decay, spiritual anguish, and the personal cost of…mehr
The Hermit (¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿, 1883) is a powerful philosophical poem by Ilia Chavchavadze - Georgia's literary father, moral reformer, and national icon. This edition revives the first English translation by Marjory Scott Wardrop, providing modern readers access to one of the foundational texts of 19th-century Georgian literature. Written during a time of cultural and political struggle, The Hermit tells the story of a man who flees society to seek meaning in the silence of nature. Through the Hermit's voice, Chavchavadze reflects on moral decay, spiritual anguish, and the personal cost of witnessing injustice. The poem is at once an allegory of national conscience and an intimate confession of ethical pain. Chavchavadze's poetic style is refined and deeply resonant, fusing Romantic introspection with Christian ethics and patriotic sentiment. Though brief in length, The Hermit carries immense emotional weight - its language deceptively simple, its themes timeless: duty, exile, responsibility, and awakening. Marjory Wardrop's original late-19th-century translation is here restored, carefully annotated, and lightly edited for clarity. The edition includes an introduction on the historical context of 1880s Georgia - a land caught between imperial pressures and cultural revival - as well as footnotes explaining theological and literary allusions. For readers of spiritual literature, Eastern European classics, and poetic philosophy, The Hermit offers a rare glimpse into the soul of a nation and the burden of moral clarity in a world that often chooses silence.
Ilia Chavchavadze (1837-1907) was a Georgian writer, poet, journalist, and national figure regarded as the founding father of modern Georgian literature and political thought. A nobleman by birth and educated in law in St Petersburg, Chavchavadze became the leading voice of the Georgian national revival in the 19th century. Through his literary works, political essays, and civic activism, he championed cultural independence, social reform, and the preservation of the Georgian language and identity under Russian imperial rule. Assassinated in 1907, he remains a symbol of moral integrity and patriotism, and was canonised by the Georgian Orthodox Church in 1987.
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