The article reviews the mythological picture of the world in V. Sosnora's collection "Thirty-seven". The article analyzes pagan Slavic, ancient, old Testament, and Christian cultural contexts, their contamination within the framework of individual poems and the entire collection as a compositionally complete unity intertwined by a series of common motifs, images, and subplots. The author studies the cycle "My dear!" consisting of six poems. Special attention is paid to the poetic plot created by Sosnora about the competition between Marsyas and Apollo for the love of the nymph Nikippa, its connection with the ancient foundations, and the significance of the author's changes made to the anthology material. The article also analyzes the chronotope of poems included in the collection "Thirty-seven", and concludes that it is close to the mythological and religious perception of space and time. A separate part of the work is devoted to the image of the loved one, which is the main theme in the collection of poems by Sosnora. The 54 author tries to determine the typological relationship of this image with the most significant female images in world culture. The article also considers Evangelical images and motifs, their reflection in the poems of the collection, and their influence on the genre system of the presented texts. In addition, the author seeks to understand the patterns of allusions and reminiscences from the Old Testament, their presence in the key poems of V. Sosnora's collection "Thirty-seven". The author's reference to the subject related to pagan Slavic beliefs and rituals is also significant. It is concluded that various cultural codes, intertwining with each other, create a complex mythological picture of the world in the collection of V. Sosnora "Thirty-seven".
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