, yevhen neshchuk, yes , everything is on the screen, you see, you know better than i do, it's just thatat context. in the context of the conversation, how vingranovsky can be connected with decolonization, with decommunization, and in this context i will tell an interesting fact from his biography, vingranovsky in his time, he entered the cohort of the sixties, by the way, my favorite poet, and this is me not just to praise him on the air, i've actually been reading him for many years, and he has a lot there was civic poetry, which was, well, quite protestant for those 60s, and it was. an interesting fact is that a group of pioneers came to his parents' house in bogopol, or in bogopol, as the locals say, this is the pervomaysk district, and there stood an old mat. and father, and they began chanting in unison, well, something like that, embarrassing about everything vingranovsky , i don't remember the specific words now, you can't read them, because he had some kind of speech and also some kind of poem, that's why he was called a formalist there, and he said there, i am a formalist, i a