
Akhmatova: The Poet Who Outlived the State
She answered terror with a poem too dangerous to write down, and the poem outlived the state that banned it. This episode follows Anna Akhmatova from a childhood in Pushkin's town outside Petersburg, through the cellar cabarets where a new Russian poetry was made, to the love lyrics that made her the most famous woman in Russian literature before she was thirty. Then the century turns. A husband is executed, a son is taken, and an unofficial ban erases her name from print for fifteen years. We trace how a banned poet composed her greatest work without ever writing it down, how a cycle of short poems became the memorial for a generation of the disappeared, and what it means to treat memory itself as a form of resistance. The episode ends among honors that arrived forty years late, a difficult masterpiece three decades in the making, and a bronze figure standing by a river, looking at a prison. Settle in, and let a long life of courage keep you company. Please listen only in safe, restful contexts.