(320 words) Pushkin more than once created in his works the image of a faithful, loving, selfless soul, capable of decisive and bold actions. The ideal heroine of Pushkin migrated from book to book, embodied in a variety of forms. However, Tatyana Larina became Pushkin’s beloved image, which went tightly into the history of literature.
Perhaps this conclusion seems quite subjective, but not every heroine of his works, the poet so openly and sincerely confessed his love, carefully drawing the image of Tatiana, full of depth, sincerity and tragedy. “Forgive me, I love my dear Tatiana so much” - as if the poet justified himself, and in this confession to this day there is an endless tenderness for one of his most successful, according to many critics, characters.
Paradoxically, in his novel, Pushkin does not idealize Tatyana's Sweet Ideal. Tatyana grows wild, romantically inclined and even somewhat sentimental girl, reads romance novels, indulging in naive girlish fantasies. The provincial environment of the backwoods leaves its mark on the character of the heroine: she is quite predictable and trivial in her dreams. However, in contrast to the static and stingy of Olga’s feelings, Tatyana is, first of all, a personality, a deep and passionate nature, capable of not only contemplating, but also acting.
The embodiment of romantic dreams for a girl becomes Onegin, whom she draws in her imagination as special and mysterious. The heart, ripened for the first real feeling, chooses its hero, making it the focus of all virtues and virtues. Having fallen in love with Onegin, Tatyana decides on open recognition; Olga's artificial coquetry is disgusting to a heroine who is not used to cunning. In a love letter, the remarkable strength of a girl’s character and the openness of her feelings first appear. She is convinced of the nobility of Eugene so much that she believes him her love.
“Tatyana, dear Tatyana, I pour tears together with you ...” the author laments, but at the same time admires the heroine’s courage. However, Pushkin embodies in Tatiana not only the ideal of a loving soul, but also of a noble soul, devoted to duty. The married heroine refuses Onegin's love, remaining true to herself and the foundations on which her own ideas about honor and conscience are based.
So, “Sweet Ideal” by Pushkin became for the reader a stable archetype of female virtue, purity and spiritual nobility.