Nikolai Semenovich Tikhonov was born on November 21, 1896, in St.
Petersburg, Russia. His father was a barber. Young Tikhonov studied at
School of Commerce in St. Petersburg. He dropped out and became a
stenographer at the Office of the Imperial Trade Fleet and Ports of
Russia, in St. Petersburg. At that time he wrote his early poems. From
1914-1918 he served as a hussar in the Imperial Russian Army in the
First World War. His first literary teacher was poet Nikolai Gumilev.
From 1918-1944 Tikhonov lived in St. Petersburg (then Leningrad). He
joined the literary group Serapionovy Bratya (The Serapion Brothers).
The group was initiated in February of 1921, by
Yevgeni Zamyatin who professed,
at his literary seminars with aspiring writers, that: "true literature
can be created only by madmen, hermits, heretics, dreamers, rebels, and
skeptics." They took their name from the story of E.T.A.Hoffmann titled
'Serapion Brothers', about artistic freedom. The group included
Mikhail Zoshchenko, Lev Lunts,
Konstantin Fedin, Vladimir Pozner,
Viktor Shklovskiy, Mikhail
Slonimsky,
Vsevolod Ivanov, Elizaveta Polonskaia,
Nikolai Nikitin, and
Veniamin Kaverin. The
Serapion Brothers was under the patronage of critic and writer
Yuri Tynyanov.
They also attended seminars of
Korney Ivanovich Chukovskiy. They lived in the famous
artistic community known as 'Dom Iskusstv' (House of Arts) in a former
aristocratic palace on the Nevsky Prospect in St. Petersburg. The
writers of the group were non-conformists and were in opposition to the
official Moscow-based Soviet literature. Their leader
Yevgeni Zamyatin
fearlessly criticized the Soviet policy of "Red Terror" and
intimidation of intellectuals. Some writers of the Serapion Brothers'
group were under severe criticism and were censored. Tikhonov chose to
split from Serapion Brothers and turned to the Soviet official
literature and politics.
In 1925 Tikhonov coined the famous propaganda slogan about the
Bolshevik Communists and their stubbornness: "Gvozdi by delat is etikh
ludei; krepche b ne bylo v mire gvozdei" (Turn this people to nails;
there would be no stronger nails in the world). He wrote a propaganda
poem about
Lenin and pleased Soviet officials during the ideological
struggle of the 1920's. During the 1930's Tikhonov made a fast
political career under the dictatorship of
Joseph Stalin. Tikhonov chose to
comply with the Soviet official line in literature and served the
Soviet propaganda during his first trip abroad. In 1935 he was a member
of the Soviet delegation to Peace Congress in Paris. There he connected
with the French communists, such as
Louis Aragon and
Elsa Triolet. He adopted the
methods of "socialist realism" in his writings. He eventually made an
impressive career as a literary administrator, rising to Member of the
Board of the Soviet Writers' Union during the Second World War. He was
a friend of
Andrei Zhdanov. In 1944 he was appointed the Chairman of the
Soviet Writer's Union and Moved to Moscow. In 1946 he switched places
with his friend
Aleksandr Fadeyev, who became the Chairman again, and Tikhonov
remained Member of the Board at the Soviet Writer's Union for many more
years. He opposed poets of the younger generation of the 60's at the
time of "Thaw" that was initiated by
Nikita Khrushchev. During the rule of
Leonid Brezhnev he took the side of
Mikhail Sholokhov against
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and other dissident
writers.
His early book of poetry "Twelve Ballads" (1925) remained his best
work. Tikhonov was among the hard-line literary officials in Soviet
Russia. He was awarded the Stalin's Prize three times (1942, 1949,
1952), the Lenin's Prize twice (1957 and 1970), and many other Soviet
awards and decorations. From 1946-1979 he was continuously elected
representative to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. Nikolai Tikhonov died
on February 8, 1979, in Moscow, and was laid to rest in the Novodevichi
Convent Cemetery in Moscow, Russia.