In later life, Zhukovsky made a second great contribution to Russian culture as an educator and a patron of the arts. In
1826, he was appointed tutor to the
tsarevich, the future
Tsar Alexander II. His progressive program of education had such a powerful influence on Alexander that the liberal reforms of the
1860s are sometimes attributed to it. The poet also used his high station at court to take up the cudgels for such free-thinking writers as
Mikhail Lermontov, Alexander Herzen, Taras Shevchenko, and the
Decembrists.
On Pushkin's death in
1837, Zhukovsky stepped in as his literary executor, not only rescuing his work (including several unpublished masterpieces) from a hostile
censorship, but also diligently collecting and preparing it for publication. Throughout the
1830s and
1840s, he nurtured the genius and promoted the career of
Nikolay Gogol, another close personal friend. In this sense, he acted behind-the-scenes as a kind of impresario for the Romantic Movement that he founded.
Following the example of his mentor Karamzin, Zhukovsky travelled extensively in Europe throughout his life, meeting and corresponding with world-class cultural figures like
Goethe or the landscape painter
Caspar David Friedrich. One of his early acquaintances was the popular German writer
Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué, whose prose novella
Undine was a European best-seller. In the late 1830s, Zhukovsky published a highly-original verse translation of
Undine that reestablished his place in the poetic avant-garde. Written in a waltzing hexameter, the work became the basis for a classic Russian
ballet.
In
1841, Zhukovsky retired from court and settled in
Germany, where he married Elizabeth Reitern, the 18 year old daughter of an artist friend. The couple had two children, including
Alexandra, who married
Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich. The aged poet devoted much of his remaining life to a hexameter translation of
Homer's Odyssey, which he finally published in
1849.
Although the translation was far from accurate, it became a classic in its own right and occupies a notable place in the history of
Russian poetry. Some scholars argue that both his
Odyssey and
Undina -- as long narrative works -- made an important, though oblique contribution to the development of the Russian
novel.
Zhukovsky died in Germany in
1852, aged 69, and is buried in the
Alexander Nevsky Lavra cemetery in St. Petersburg.