Mikhail Solomonovich Abramovich (Russian: Михаил Соломонович Абрамович, Yiddish: מאיר אבראמאוויטש; 1859–1940) was a Russian poet and translator. He was the son of Mendele Mocher Sforim.
His earliest poems appeared in Voskhod, Nedyelya, and other periodicals, on general and Jewish subjects. A collection of his poetry was published in book form in 1889. Soon after, Abramovich informally married the playwright Manefa de Fréville, daughter of the provincial secretary of the State Loan Bank in Riga. Years later, however, when their son Vsevolod was refused admission to school on the basis of the law on illegitimate children, Abramovich decided to be baptized so that they could legally marry. According to some sources, he returned to Judaism after their divorce.[2]
Abramovich's poetry does not appear to have won critical acclaim. In the Jewish Encyclopedia, Herman Rosenthal comments that "excepting those devoted to Judaism or that treat of Biblical subjects his poems do not exhibit much originality."[5] Literary critic Sophia Dubnow-Erlich [Wikidata] writes, "He was clearly imitating Frug, but the monotonous rhyming reflections lacked the lightness and melody that characterized the best of Frug's poems."[6]
Publications
Stikhotvoreniya [Poems]. Saint Petersburg: A. E. Landau. 1889.