Osip Mandelstam (1891–1938) was born and raised in St.  Petersburg, where he attended the prestigious Tenishev School, before  studying at the universities of St. Petersburg and Heidelberg and at the  Sorbonne. Mandelstam first published his poems in Apollyon, an  avant-garde magazine, in 1910, then banded together with Anna Akhmatova  and Nikolai Gumilev to form the Acmeist movement, which advocated an  aesthetic of exact description and chiseled form, as suggested by the  title of Mandelstam’s first book, Stone (1913). During the  Russian Revolution, he left Leningrad for the Crimea and Georgia, and  settled in Moscow in 1922,where his second collection of poems, Tristia,  appeared. Unpopular with the Soviet authorities, Mandelstam found it  increasingly difficult to publish his poetry, though an edition of  collected poems did come out in 1928. In 1934, after reading a poem  denouncing Stalin to friends, Mandelstam was arrested and sent into  exile. He produced many new poems during these years, and his wife,  Nadezhda, memorized his work in case his notebooks were destroyed or  lost. (Her extraordinary memoirs of life with her husband, Hope Against Hope and Hope Abandoned,  published in the 1970s, later helped to bring Mandelstam a worldwide  audience.) In 1937, Mandelstam’s exile ended and he returned to Moscow,  but he was arrested again almost immediately. This time he was sentenced  to hard labor in Siberia. He was last seen in a transit camp near  Vladivostok.
Andrew Davis is a poet,  cabinetmaker, and visual artist. His current project is the long poem  IMPLUVIUM. He divides his time between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the  north coast of Spain.