A wife of Anna Akhmatova, a powerful woman at Rachel, who is crucified, "But Lot's wife looks back at him and she becomes a pillar of salt" (New Geneva Study Bible, Gen. 19 26). "There is Mary Magdalen, Mary (the mother of James and Joseph), and the wife of Zebedee, James and John's mother" (Matthew 27:56) "Jacob went towards the well and his uncle's flock Jacob kissed Rachel and tears poured in his eyes ... But Jacob woke up in the morning - it was Leah.
Poet Anna Akhmatova was born in Anna Gorenko, Odessa, Ukraine in 1889, and then changed its name to Ahmetova. In 1910 she married Nicola Gumirev, an important Russian poet and theorist. Shortly thereafter, Akhmatova started publishing her own poem; with Gumilyov she became the central figure of the Acmeist movement. Acmeism - similar to the work of T. E. Hulme of England and Imagism development - emphasis on clarity and craftsmanship as an antidote for overly loose style and ambiguous words of Russian late nineteenth century poetry
Anna Andreyevna Akhmatova was born in Anna Gorenko, Odessa, Ukraine on June 23, 1889. Interest in poetry began when she was young, but when her father found her wish, he told her not to humiliate her last name since she became a family . "Retreat of a female poet" He forced her to name a pen and she chose the surname of her grandmother. She studied at the law school in Kiev in 1910 and married a critic Nikola Gumirev with a poet. Soon after he got married, he went to Abyssinia and left her behind. When Gumirev left, Akhmatova wrote many poems that will be published in her first book, Evening News. Her son Ref was born in 1912. He was raised by his grandmother who did not like Akhmatova. Akhmatova protested against this situation, but her husband supported his family. During my vacation and summer, she will visit with my son. Later, Akhmatova writes: "Maternity is a bright torture, I am not worth it."