Background
Galina Galina (born Glafira Mamoshina) was born on February 24, 1870, in Saint Petersburg City, Russian Federation. She was born into the family of Adolf Rinks. Her real father was the teacher of gymnasium Nikolai Mamoshin.
translator children 's writer poet
Galina Galina (born Glafira Mamoshina) was born on February 24, 1870, in Saint Petersburg City, Russian Federation. She was born into the family of Adolf Rinks. Her real father was the teacher of gymnasium Nikolai Mamoshin.
Galina Galina began writing poetry at the age of 9. The first poems were published in 1895 in the literary journal Zhivopisnoye Obozrenye. In the next four years the poetess cooperated only with this edition, and since 1899 began to be published also in other magazines and almanacs. By her own admission, the poetry and social activity of P.F. Yakubovich had a very significant power on her early creativity. Critics also noted significant power on her of the works of S.J. Nadson.
The works of the first years are dominated by love lyrics, the subject of spiritual experiences. More mature creative work is characterized by an appeal to topical social topics, civil and patriotic pathetics.
Since the second half of the 1900s, Galina Galina has been active in translation activities. She also published a significant number of children 's works, both poem and prosaic, notably two collections of fairy tales (in 1903 and 1908).
The information about the life of Galina Galina after the October Revolution of 1917 is contradictory. According to one data, she followed S. I. Gusev-Orenburgsky to emigration. According to others, after separating from her husband, she remained in her homeland and died in blockade Leningrad in 1942. In any case, any of her literary work or social activism in the post-revolutionary period is unknown.
Galina Galina actively participated in public life. Openly expressed sympathy to the participants of the student movement, victims of political repression, including in creativity.
The most roundly declaration of civic position was the 1901 poem "Les rubyat, molodoy, nezhno-zelonyy les…" - the response to the suppression of students of Kiev University in 1900.
Galina Galina was twice married. The first husband was the postal telegraph official A.S. Einerling. After the divorce, Galina Galina married the writer S.I. Gusev-Orenburg, take of his surname. Galina Galina had 3 children.