The title Karamzin uses for his story, "Poor Liza", creates right away an image of a woman helpless and dependent. Liza does, indeed, live up to this image. She is a very fragile woman of an excessively emotional nature, who is very vulnerable and easily hurt. That is the protocol for most, if not all, women throughout history and leading up to the early 19th century Russia. In those times a woman's role was defined by her status and for Liza there is no other prospect than marriage. She isn't posed with the question of what to do with her life, whether to get married or get an education, for her that conflict does not exist. As Liza meets Erast, her calm and nonchalant life takes a different focus, and she becomes consumed with her feelings for him and devotes herself to that relationship completely. She says to Erast, "when you press me to your heart, and glance at me with your tender eyes, oh! then I feel so good, so good, that I forget myself, I forget everything except-Erast!" (61) It is very easy for a woman of that time to loose herself because she doesn't live for herself, or for personal happiness. She lives for her family as a child, and, later in life, for her husband and children. So it is no surprise that Liza invests all her
The title Karamzin uses for his story, "Poor Liza", creates right away an image of a woman helpless and dependent. Liza does, indeed, live up to this image. She is a very fragile woman of an excessively emotional nature, who is very vulnerable and easily hurt. That is the protocol for most, if not all, women throughout history and leading up to the early 19th century Russia. In those times a woman's role was defined by her status and for Liza there is no other prospect than marriage. She isn't posed with the question of what to do with her life, whether to get married or get an education, for her that conflict does not exist. As Liza meets Erast, her calm and nonchalant life takes a different focus, and she becomes consumed with her feelings for him and devotes herself to that relationship completely. She says to Erast, "when you press me to your heart, and glance at me with your tender eyes, oh! then I feel so good, so good, that I forget myself, I forget everything except-Erast!" (61) It is very easy for a woman of that time to loose herself because she doesn't live for herself, or for personal happiness. She lives for her family as a child, and, later in life, for her husband and children. So it is no surprise that Liza invests all her