Wrath a great strength did impart, Straight on Glukhóvsky he flung himself, Buried the knife in his heart.
As Starkóvsky is going out he meets Lyúba in evening, but not low-necked, dress carrying a cushion with stars and ribbons.
The great manoeuvre plain, near which the Moscow garrison is lodged, in the vicinity of Petróvsky Park and Palace.
As a boy of seventeen Ostróvsky had already developed a passion for the theatre.
The plays of Ostróvsky are of varied character, including dramatic chronicles based on early Russian history, and a fairy drama, "Little Snowdrop.
As a dramatist, Ostróvsky is above all else a realist; no more thoroughly natural dramas than his were ever composed.
This was the field that Ostróvsky made peculiarly his own.
In the earlier play Ostróvsky had adopted a satiric tone that proved him a worthy disciple of Gógol, the great founder of Russian realism.
Besides all this, the drama was the cause of the dismissal of Ostróvsky from the civil service, in 1851.
Ostróvsky frequently gives to the persons in his plays names that suggest their characteristics.
Ostróvsky rarely uses the drama to treat of great moral or social problems.
Men and women live and love, trade and cheat in Ostróvsky as they do in the world around us.
Good-heartedness is the touchstone by which Ostróvsky tries character, and this may be hidden beneath even a drunken and degraded exterior.
Beginning with 1852 Ostróvsky gave his whole strength to literary work.
With this merchant class Ostróvsky was familiar from his childhood.
Towards the end of his life Ostróvsky gained the material prosperity that was his due.
When the strictness of the censorship was augmented during that same year, after "the Petrashévsky affair," all literary men fell under suspicion.
But Ostróvsky accomplished far more than the creation of a Russian theater: he brought the stage to the highest pitch of ideal realism, and discarded all ancient traditions.
Petrashévskyians in prison at Tobólsk and gave Dostoévsky a copy of the Gospels.
While Zhukóvsky removed poetry from earth and rendered it ethereal, Bátiushkoff fixed it to earth and gave it a body, demonstrating all the entrancing charm of tangible reality.
Two volumes, Sir John Bowring, contain many specimens from Lomonósoff to Zhukóvsky inclusive.
Karamzín and Zhukóvsky were not long in adding their testimony to the lad's genius, and the latter even acquired the habit of submitting his own poems to the young poet's judgment.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vsky" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.