
Maskerata
Lermontov's Masquerade is a powerful romantic drama about jealousy, honor, deceit, and deadly suspicion, set in the elegant world of balls, intrigue, and social masks.
Masquerade Mikhail J. Lermontov's drama is set in the aristocratic Petersburg world of balls, gambling dens, intrigues and social conventions. At the centre of the work is Evgeny Arbenin, a rich, intelligent and proud man of a quick temper, once a passionate gambler, now the husband of the young and naive Nina. Along with them, the princess, Baroness Štral, salon acquaintances and especially The Stranger, a figure who instigates revenge, suspicion and exposure, also play an important role.
The plot begins at a masquerade ball, where a misunderstanding and a lost bracelet create a chain of misinterpretations. An object that passes from hand to hand becomes evidence where there is no real evidence. Arbenin, already prone to distrust and wounded vanity, begins to believe that Nina is cheating on him. Instead of talking and checking, he gives in to jealousy, social insinuations and his own pride. The salon episode gives rise to a tragic denouement: Arbenin punishes Nina for her alleged infidelity, and the truth only comes to light when it is too late.
Lermontov depicts not only a marital tragedy but also the mechanism of high society in which rumor is worth more than truth, and a mask more than a face. Arbenin is one of the most complex characters of Russian romanticism: simultaneously strong and weak, lucid and blinded, master of the situation and a man who collapses under the weight of his own doubt.
In Lermontov's oeuvre, Masquerade occupies an important place because it combines romantic passion, social criticism and intense psychological tension. It is a drama about jealousy, honor and self-destruction, but also about a world in which illusion triggers real catastrophes.
One copy is available
- The cover is missing





