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Antanas Vienažindys

Antanas Vienažindys (1841–1892), also known by his pen name Vienužis, was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic priest and poet. While only a handful of his poems survive, he is considered the most famous Lithuanian poet between Antanas Baranauskas (1850s) and Maironis (1890s).[1]

Antanas Vienažindys
Born(1841-09-26)26 September 1841
Anapolis [lt] Russian Empire
Died29 July 1892(1892-07-29) (aged 50)
Other namesVienužis (pen name)
Antanas Vienožinskis
Alma materVarniai Priest Seminary
Occupation(s)Catholic priest, poet

Born into a family of affluent Lithuanian peasants, Vienažindys was educated at the Panevėžys Gymnasium and Varniai Priest Seminary. Ordained as a priest in 1865, he was first assigned as a vicar to Šiaulėnai and Krinčinas. After a conflict with a local dean, he was reassigned to a poor parish in Vainutas and then to distant Braslaw. In 1876, he was reassigned to Laižuva where he rebuilt the parish church which burned down in 1884. It was an expensive red brick neo-Gothic church with two towers. Vienažindys died in Laižuva of stomach cancer in 1892.

Vienažindys wrote poems since he was a student at the priest seminary. He did not publish his poems and they spread by word of mouth by manuscripts distributed to friends and relatives. They became popular among the Lithuanian people and folklorists have recorded more than 3,000 folk variations of his poems. Many Lithuanian folk songs and other poems are attributed to him, but only 27 poems are verifiably known to have been written by him. His first poetry collection was published posthumously in the United States in 1894.

His poetry is described as popular Romanticism.[2] His earliest poems are joyful, light, and humorous. Later poems are increasingly sorrowful. They express grief and pain over losing a beloved after the Uprising of 1863, loneliness, and resignation. Influenced by Lithuanian folk songs and Polish and Russian sentimental romances, Vienažindys' poetry is valued as one of the first examples of intimate, personal, and subjective lyric poetry in Lithuanian poetry.[3] He is also frequently cited as the first Lithuanian poet to write about romantic love.[4][5]

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

Vienažindys was born on 26 September [O.S. 14 September] 1842 in Anapolis [lt] located about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) east of Rokiškis. He was the first out of five children born to a family of well-off Lithuanian peasants.[6] His grandfather was a free peasant and owned 12 dessiatins of land in Gipėnai [lt] on the Sartai lake. His father Justinas Vienažindys rented folwark in Anapolis from the Plater family. After the Uprising of 1831, the folwark was confiscated by the Tsarist authorities and Justinas Vienažindys managed to buy it out.[7] However, he died early and his widow remarried. As a result, the five children moved to live with their grandfather in Gipėnai.[6]

It is unclear where Vienažindys received primary education as there is no record of him attending a primary school.[6] In 1856, together with his brother Norbertas, he started high school education at the Panevėžys School for Nobles which was reorganized into the Panevėžys Gymnasium in 1858.[8] School administration Polonized Vienažindys' last name and therefore he is also known under Vienožinskis surname.[9] In 1861, both brothers decided to transfer to Varniai Priest Seminary.[10] After a year, Norbertas decided to pursue studies of mathematics at the Saint Petersburg University and left the seminary.[11] Antanas' studies were interrupted by the Uprising of 1863. Tsarist officials wanted to conscript him into the Imperial Russian Army, but he managed to bribe the officials.[12] When the uprising failed, Tsarist authorities implemented various Russification policies, including banning Lithuanian publications and moving the seminary from Varniai to Kaunas. Therefore, in February 1865, without having completed the full four years of studies, Vienožinskis was ordained as a priest.[13] The Tsarist authorities also deported Rožė Stauskaitė, Vienažindys' love interest, and her family to the Samara Governorate for participating in the uprising.[13]

Priesthood edit

In April 1865, Vienažindys was first assigned as a vicar to Šiaulėnai. After a year, he was reassigned to Krinčinas which was a seat of a deanery.[13] Vienažindys became active in cultural life. He continued to read and collected a small library of mainly philosophical and theological works. He was particularly interested in the relationship between religion and science and works of French astronomer Camille Flammarion.[14] He became known for his lively and emotional sermons. After 1868, the government strictly regulated who could deliver the sermons and their content. Thus, Vienažindys had to obtain a special permit.[14] He wrote poetry, organized a church choir, distributed illegal Lithuanian publications, etc. His poetry became popular among the people, but was viewed with suspicion by the clergy as he wrote about love.[15]

Pastor Tadas Lichodziejauskas from Paberžė was assigned as the new dean to Krinčinas in 1872.[14] The two men did not get along as they held different views of priesthood. Lichodziejauskas was dogmatic and conservative, while Vienažindys was more emotional, impulsive, and social. He also enjoyed drinking alcohol.[16][17] Lichodziejauskas began writing complaints to Bishop of Samogitia Motiejus Valančius. Vienažindys responded by writing an angry poem about Lichodziejauskas and Valančius.[17] The bishop responded by reassigning Vienažindys to a poor and neglected parish in Vainutas and then to distant Braslaw in present-day Belarus in fall 1873.[18] It was a large but mixed parish. There were constant conflicts and friction with the Eastern Orthodox priests over mixed marriages, baptisms, and funerals.[19]

After Valančius' death in 1875, Vienažindys was returned to Lithuania and assigned as a parson to Laižuva in May 1876.[14][19] There he worked to improve and enlarge pastor's farm and, as an enterprising farmer, he soon accumulated wealth. He liked luxurious and expensive things (good carriage, elegant furniture, crystal dishes, etc.), but also cared about his parish.[20] He maintained contacts with various priests active in public life and participated in the distribution of the banned Lithuanian publications. Tsarist police became suspicious of his activities, Vienažindys avoided further troubles by bribing the policemen.[21] He organized repairs of the clergy house and the leaky roof of the church. In 1884, the wooden church burned down and Vienažindys decided to rebuild a brick church.[22] At the time, due to various Russification policies, the Tsarist government did not want to approve the construction of a new church but Vienažindys promised to finance the construction from personal funds and the permit was issued.[23] It was a red brick neo-Gothic church with two towers. Materials were imported and specialists were hired from Latvia and Poland. The construction cost about 30,000 silver rubles.[23] The church was consecrated in May 1892, but Vienažindys could not participate as he was terminally ill with stomach cancer. He became ill in fall 1891 and sought treatment in Riga, Tartu, Warsaw.[24] He died on 29 August [O.S. 17 August] 1892.[25] The church was destroyed by the Germans in 1944.[24] The current church in Laižuva uses the building of a primitive hospital (špitolė) built by Vienažindys.[26]

Works edit

 
Cover of a collection of poems published in the United States in 1916

Publications edit

Vienažindys started writing poetry as a student at the priest seminary, but his first poem was published only in 1873.[27] Polish ethnographer Edward Chłopicki [pl] in his article about his journey through Lithuania published in the weekly magazine Kłosy [pl] included a Polish translation of one poem by Vienažindys.[26] Several poems sometimes attributed to Vienažindys were published in Lithuanian periodicals Varpas, Ūkininkas, and Vienybė lietuvninkų in late 1891 to 1893. At the time, Vienažindys was already terminally ill and the poems were signed by pen name Žemaituks (Samogitian) which was used to sign other poems as well.[27] The first poetry collection was published in Plymouth, Pennsylvania, in 1894 by Juozapas Žebrys, vicar of Akmenė and Vienažindys' friend, who emigrated to the United States.[27] Since then, his poetry was included in many different collections, anthologies, chrestomathies.[28] One stanza in original Lithuanian was included in The Jungle, a 1906 novel by Upton Sinclair.[29] His poetry and surviving letters were published in Vilnius in 1978.[30]

Similar to Antanas Strazdas, poems by Vienažindys spread among the people by word of mouth and by manuscripts distributed to friends and relatives. Many poems and folk songs are attributed to Vienažindys but the true author is difficult to establish.[31] Vienažindys left a manuscript with a compilation of 26 poems titled Dainos lietuvininko Žemaičiuose (Song of a Lithuanian in Samogitia). The manuscript is kept at Vilnius University Library.[26] The poems are not titled; they are known by their first line.[32] Most of these poems were written in his youth and later edited and corrected when he lived in Laižuva.[31] One poem is known from a letter that he sent to a woman in Krinčinas. Another eight poems were collected from friends and relatives and are confirmed to be Vienažindys' texts by textological analysis.[31] Many other poems are believed to have been lost because Vienažindys' manuscripts were not preserved. Mečislovas Davainis-Silvestraitis claimed that after the funeral, a gymnasium teacher from Warsaw selected almost one hundred of poems and other material from Vienažindys' archives and promised to write his biography. However, nothing further is known about these poems or the biography.[25]

Themes edit

One of his muses and sources of inspiration was his love for Rožė Stauskaitė, a neighbor from Jaskoniškės [lt]. It appears that these feelings developed while Vienažindys was still a gymnasium student. The relationship ended when 17-year old Stauskaitė and her family were deported to the Samara Governorate in December 1863.[24] Based on vague hints in letters and memoirs, some researchers believe that Vienažindys was also interested in Liudvika Niūniavaitė, a sister of a pastor in Tverai, who later married Vienažindys' brother Vincentas.[16] Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas claimed that poems composed later in life were intentionally destroyed by Vincentas as unsuitable for a priest.[33]

Majority of the surviving poems were written in Vienažindys' youth. The earliest poems write about hopeful and joyful love, youthful beauty and energy.[3] These poems include a light flirt with a love interest and a comical paraphrasing of the academic song Gaudeamus igitur.[34] Only one of his love poems tries to reign in the feelings.[35] Another set of poems deals with Vienažindys' experiences as a priest. Some of these poems express delight and admiration. Perhaps his most popular song "Kaipgi gražus gražus rūtelių darželis" (How lovely lovey rue garden) depicts a young woman describing her beautiful flower garden where she is the queen. She takes pure but naïve pride in her garden and names fourteen different flowers that grow in it.[34] Others harshly criticize an alcoholic man, reflect on worries of a bride, or poke fun at a priest caught fraternizing with women.[36] Inspiration for several of these songs can be traced to Lithuanian folk songs published by Simonas Daukantas and in Tygodnik Wileński.[37]

Later, after experiences in 1863, the poems reflect painful longing, disappointment, and loneliness.[3] Most vividly, he expresses sorrows about the separation from his deported beloved, but also writes about the separation from his family.[38] Poems that are generally dated to the period when he lived in Braslaw are especially pessimistic and bleak. They describe past wounds, desperate desire to escape the misery, and thoughts that only death can bring peace.[39] The lyrical subject seeks comfort in religion and the idea of soul's journey to heaven.[39][40] In the last poem of the 26-poem collection (though it is likely written earlier than some other poems), the lyrical subject has resigned and lost all hope; it repeatedly states "It is the same to me" ("Man vis tiek pat").[3][41] The 26-poem manuscript was signed under the pen name Vienužis (meaning "vienišius" or "alone, solitary person").[3][42]

Analysis edit

In his memoir, Vienažindys wrote that while he was a student at the priest seminary, he would lock himself in a closet, let himself experience intense emotions, and would come out with a new poem.[24] Many of his poems express a sudden burst of intense emotion.[43] The poems also express Vienažindys' concept of poetry: suffering produces poetry and song that provide comfort and solace.[31] In another poem, Vienažindys refers to poems as his soul and asks them to cheer up not only the distant beloved but also rivers, forests, birds.[44] As such, his poetry reflects experiences and emotions of an individual which makes it distinct from other popular poetry of the period.[3] Most other poems had clear societal goals to propagate the ideas of the Lithuanian National Revival or encourage antigovernment sentiments. While Vienažindys' poems mention social inequality as well as injustices and hardships inflicted by the government,[45] the poems express individual's pain and grief, and are not meant to incite public outrage.[3] Vienažindys also wrote about love for his homeland, but these patriotic feelings are not grand and majestic declarations; they are personal and intimate adorations.[46] As such, the poetry of Vienažindys is one of the first examples of personal lyrical poetry in Lithuania.[3]

Vienažindys borrowed many lyrical elements from the Lithuanian folk songs, including repeating lines and using anaphora, drawing parallels between humans and animals or between human life and the cycles in the nature, using plentiful diminutives and personifications.[47][3] It is likely that his poems were intended to be sung (he frequently referred to his poems as songs).[3] As such, they became popular among the Lithuanian people. Folklorists have recorded more than 3,000 folk variations of his poems.[48] However, Vienažindys was well educated and influenced by Polish and Russian sentimental romances. Specific similarities can be traced to works of Taras Shevchenko, Władysław Syrokomla, Aleksey Koltsov.[49][50] As such, his poetry often features more complex compositions or rhymes. He more widely masculine endings (stress on the last syllable), iambic metre, varied stanzas with modifications to refrains.[51] He wrote both in the traditional syllabic and the new accentual-syllabic verse which was perfected by Maironis.[52] His rhyme and metre were not perfect; these imperfections were masked by the melody when singing.[49] Vienažindys did not have formal musical education, but he was musically inclined – he could play a garmon and organized a church choir. Therefore, it is possible that he composed at least some of the melodies for his poems.[5]

Legacy edit

During his lifetime, Vienažindys was virtually unknown and unpublished. Only after World War I, Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas collected material for his biography and published it together with other lectures on Lithuanian literature.[53] A dedicated biography was published by Teresė Bikinaitė in 1989 and expanded, revised edition in 1996.[28]

His grandparents' house in Gipėnai where Vienažindys grew up was turned into a small memorial museum in 1971. It is a private museum run and maintained by Vienažindys' relatives.[54] A poetic play about Vienažindys Rožės pražydėjimas tamsoj (The Blooming of the Rose in Darkness) by Romualdas Granauskas was first staged in 1978 by the Lithuanian State Youth Theatre [lt].[55] A marble monument to Vienažindys by sculptor Gediminas Jokūbonis [lt] was erected in Mažeikiai in 1987.[30]

The middle school in Laižuva was renamed after Vienažindys in 1997.[56] At the same time, the school established a small museum dedicated to Vienažindys and local history. The school and the town organize annual events to commemorate his memory.[56] Laižuva also treasures two objects reportedly related to Vienažindys: a large stone where he used to contemplate and an old linden tree under which ill Vienažindys fell down during the consecration of the newly built church in May 1872.[56][57]

Vienažindys' memory is also commemorated in Krinčinas. In 1990 and 1991 (his 150th birth anniversary), about 300 birch trees were planted in town's park. The church has memorial plaque, stone, and traditional wood-carved column shrine erected in 1991–1992. In 2001, the primary school in Krinčinas was named after Vienažindys.[58]

References edit

  1. ^ Aleksynas 1978, p. 20.
  2. ^ Bikinaitė 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Kučinskienė 2014.
  4. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 49.
  5. ^ a b Krikštaponis 2011.
  6. ^ a b c Bikinaitė 1989, p. 10.
  7. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 9.
  8. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 11.
  9. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 383.
  10. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 14.
  11. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 15.
  12. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 16.
  13. ^ a b c Bikinaitė 1989, p. 18.
  14. ^ a b c d Subačius 2001, p. 384.
  15. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 20.
  16. ^ a b Subačius 2001, pp. 385–386.
  17. ^ a b Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 20–21.
  18. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 21–22.
  19. ^ a b Bikinaitė 1989, p. 22.
  20. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 22–24.
  21. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 24–25.
  22. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 23.
  23. ^ a b Bikinaitė 1989, p. 25.
  24. ^ a b c d Subačius 2001, p. 385.
  25. ^ a b Bikinaitė 1989, p. 26.
  26. ^ a b c Račkauskaitė 2012.
  27. ^ a b c Subačius 2001, p. 3.
  28. ^ a b "Vienažindys Antanas" (PDF). Kraštiečiai (in Lithuanian). Rokiškio rajono savivaldybės Juozo Keliuočio viešoji biblioteka. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  29. ^ Šešplaukis 1977.
  30. ^ a b "Antanas Vienažindys". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos centras. 28 September 2021 [2018].
  31. ^ a b c d Subačius 2001, p. 386.
  32. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 392.
  33. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 7.
  34. ^ a b Subačius 2001, p. 391.
  35. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 53.
  36. ^ Subačius 2001, pp. 391–392.
  37. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 98–100.
  38. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 387.
  39. ^ a b Aleksynas 1978, p. 17.
  40. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 390.
  41. ^ Aleksynas 1978, p. 16.
  42. ^ Rumbinaitė 2000, pp. 38–39.
  43. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 71.
  44. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 388.
  45. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, pp. 42–43.
  46. ^ Subačius 2001, p. 389.
  47. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 84.
  48. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 103.
  49. ^ a b Aleksynas 1978, p. 19.
  50. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 102.
  51. ^ Subačius 2001, pp. 392–393.
  52. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 74.
  53. ^ Aleksynas 1978, p. 5.
  54. ^ Čepėnienė 2021.
  55. ^ Bikinaitė 1989, p. 110.
  56. ^ a b c Malūkas 2016.
  57. ^ "Vienužio liepa". Mažeikių krašto kultūrinis lobynas (in Lithuanian). Mažeikių rajono savivaldybės viešoji biblioteka. 24 July 2020. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  58. ^ "Atminimo paminklai kunigui poetui Antanui Vienažindžiui Krinčine". Pasvalia (in Lithuanian). Pasvalio Mariaus Katiliškio viešoji biblioteka. Retrieved 3 April 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Aleksynas, Kostas (1978). "Antanas Vienažindys" (PDF). Kaipgi gražus gražus. By Vienažindys, Antanas (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vaga. pp. 5–20. OCLC 838415277.
  • Bikinaitė, Teresė (1989). Antanas Vienažindys. Gyvenimas ir kūryba (in Lithuanian). Kaunas: Šviesa. ISBN 5-430-00155-4.
  • Bikinaitė, Teresė (2017). "Summary" (PDF). Dainos lietuvininko Žemaičiuose. By Vienažindys, Antanas. Gyvoji poezija. Vilnius: Lietuvių literatūros ir tautosakos institutas. ISBN 978-609-425-226-6.
  • Čepėnienė, Daiva (9 June 2021). "Antanas Vienažindys – kunigas, nepaisęs luomo nuostatų ir apie meilę kalbėjęs eilėmis" (in Lithuanian). Utenos apskrities žinios. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  • Krikštaponis, Vilmantas (14 October 2011). "Liaudies dainiaus gyvenimo ir kūrybos takais… Kunigo ir poeto Antano Vienažindžio 170-osioms gimimo metinėms". XXI amžius (in Lithuanian). 74 (1954). ISSN 2029-1299.
  • Kučinskienė, Aistė (2014). "Vienažindys". šaltiniai.info (in Lithuanian). Lietuvių literatūros ir tautosakos institutas, Vilniaus universiteto Filologijos ir Istorijos fakultetai. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  • Malūkas, Vytautas (7 May 2016). "Antanas Vienažindys tebegyvena tarp laižuviškių" (in Lithuanian). Santarvė. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  • Račkauskaitė, Vilma (2 March 2012). "A. Vienažindžio biografija". Žymūs Lietuvos žmonės: biobibliografinė duomenų bazė (in Lithuanian). Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  • Rumbinaitė, Raimonda (2000). "Apie slapyvardį, jo kilmę ir reikšmę" (PDF). Gimtasis žodis (in Lithuanian). 1. ISSN 0235-7151.
  • Šešplaukis, Alfonsas (Summer 1977). "Lithuanians in Upton Sinclair's 'The Jungle'". Lituanus. 23 (2). ISSN 0024-5089.
  • Subačius, Paulius (2001). "Antanas Vienažindys (1841–1892)" (PDF). In Girdzijauskas, Juozas (ed.). Lietuvių literatūros istorija: XIX amžius (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Lietuvių literatūros ir tautosakos institutas. pp. 383–393. ISBN 9986513693.

External links edit

  • Selected poems of Vienažindys (in Lithuanian)

antanas, vienažindys, 1841, 1892, also, known, name, vienužis, lithuanian, roman, catholic, priest, poet, while, only, handful, poems, survive, considered, most, famous, lithuanian, poet, between, antanas, baranauskas, 1850s, maironis, 1890s, born, 1841, septe. Antanas Vienazindys 1841 1892 also known by his pen name Vienuzis was a Lithuanian Roman Catholic priest and poet While only a handful of his poems survive he is considered the most famous Lithuanian poet between Antanas Baranauskas 1850s and Maironis 1890s 1 Antanas VienazindysBorn 1841 09 26 26 September 1841Anapolis lt Russian EmpireDied29 July 1892 1892 07 29 aged 50 Laizuva Russian EmpireOther namesVienuzis pen name Antanas VienozinskisAlma materVarniai Priest SeminaryOccupation s Catholic priest poet Born into a family of affluent Lithuanian peasants Vienazindys was educated at the Panevezys Gymnasium and Varniai Priest Seminary Ordained as a priest in 1865 he was first assigned as a vicar to Siaulenai and Krincinas After a conflict with a local dean he was reassigned to a poor parish in Vainutas and then to distant Braslaw In 1876 he was reassigned to Laizuva where he rebuilt the parish church which burned down in 1884 It was an expensive red brick neo Gothic church with two towers Vienazindys died in Laizuva of stomach cancer in 1892 Vienazindys wrote poems since he was a student at the priest seminary He did not publish his poems and they spread by word of mouth by manuscripts distributed to friends and relatives They became popular among the Lithuanian people and folklorists have recorded more than 3 000 folk variations of his poems Many Lithuanian folk songs and other poems are attributed to him but only 27 poems are verifiably known to have been written by him His first poetry collection was published posthumously in the United States in 1894 His poetry is described as popular Romanticism 2 His earliest poems are joyful light and humorous Later poems are increasingly sorrowful They express grief and pain over losing a beloved after the Uprising of 1863 loneliness and resignation Influenced by Lithuanian folk songs and Polish and Russian sentimental romances Vienazindys poetry is valued as one of the first examples of intimate personal and subjective lyric poetry in Lithuanian poetry 3 He is also frequently cited as the first Lithuanian poet to write about romantic love 4 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Priesthood 2 Works 2 1 Publications 2 2 Themes 2 3 Analysis 3 Legacy 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksBiography editEarly life and education edit Vienazindys was born on 26 September O S 14 September 1842 in Anapolis lt located about 5 kilometres 3 1 mi east of Rokiskis He was the first out of five children born to a family of well off Lithuanian peasants 6 His grandfather was a free peasant and owned 12 dessiatins of land in Gipenai lt on the Sartai lake His father Justinas Vienazindys rented folwark in Anapolis from the Plater family After the Uprising of 1831 the folwark was confiscated by the Tsarist authorities and Justinas Vienazindys managed to buy it out 7 However he died early and his widow remarried As a result the five children moved to live with their grandfather in Gipenai 6 It is unclear where Vienazindys received primary education as there is no record of him attending a primary school 6 In 1856 together with his brother Norbertas he started high school education at the Panevezys School for Nobles which was reorganized into the Panevezys Gymnasium in 1858 8 School administration Polonized Vienazindys last name and therefore he is also known under Vienozinskis surname 9 In 1861 both brothers decided to transfer to Varniai Priest Seminary 10 After a year Norbertas decided to pursue studies of mathematics at the Saint Petersburg University and left the seminary 11 Antanas studies were interrupted by the Uprising of 1863 Tsarist officials wanted to conscript him into the Imperial Russian Army but he managed to bribe the officials 12 When the uprising failed Tsarist authorities implemented various Russification policies including banning Lithuanian publications and moving the seminary from Varniai to Kaunas Therefore in February 1865 without having completed the full four years of studies Vienozinskis was ordained as a priest 13 The Tsarist authorities also deported Roze Stauskaite Vienazindys love interest and her family to the Samara Governorate for participating in the uprising 13 Priesthood edit In April 1865 Vienazindys was first assigned as a vicar to Siaulenai After a year he was reassigned to Krincinas which was a seat of a deanery 13 Vienazindys became active in cultural life He continued to read and collected a small library of mainly philosophical and theological works He was particularly interested in the relationship between religion and science and works of French astronomer Camille Flammarion 14 He became known for his lively and emotional sermons After 1868 the government strictly regulated who could deliver the sermons and their content Thus Vienazindys had to obtain a special permit 14 He wrote poetry organized a church choir distributed illegal Lithuanian publications etc His poetry became popular among the people but was viewed with suspicion by the clergy as he wrote about love 15 Pastor Tadas Lichodziejauskas from Paberze was assigned as the new dean to Krincinas in 1872 14 The two men did not get along as they held different views of priesthood Lichodziejauskas was dogmatic and conservative while Vienazindys was more emotional impulsive and social He also enjoyed drinking alcohol 16 17 Lichodziejauskas began writing complaints to Bishop of Samogitia Motiejus Valancius Vienazindys responded by writing an angry poem about Lichodziejauskas and Valancius 17 The bishop responded by reassigning Vienazindys to a poor and neglected parish in Vainutas and then to distant Braslaw in present day Belarus in fall 1873 18 It was a large but mixed parish There were constant conflicts and friction with the Eastern Orthodox priests over mixed marriages baptisms and funerals 19 After Valancius death in 1875 Vienazindys was returned to Lithuania and assigned as a parson to Laizuva in May 1876 14 19 There he worked to improve and enlarge pastor s farm and as an enterprising farmer he soon accumulated wealth He liked luxurious and expensive things good carriage elegant furniture crystal dishes etc but also cared about his parish 20 He maintained contacts with various priests active in public life and participated in the distribution of the banned Lithuanian publications Tsarist police became suspicious of his activities Vienazindys avoided further troubles by bribing the policemen 21 He organized repairs of the clergy house and the leaky roof of the church In 1884 the wooden church burned down and Vienazindys decided to rebuild a brick church 22 At the time due to various Russification policies the Tsarist government did not want to approve the construction of a new church but Vienazindys promised to finance the construction from personal funds and the permit was issued 23 It was a red brick neo Gothic church with two towers Materials were imported and specialists were hired from Latvia and Poland The construction cost about 30 000 silver rubles 23 The church was consecrated in May 1892 but Vienazindys could not participate as he was terminally ill with stomach cancer He became ill in fall 1891 and sought treatment in Riga Tartu Warsaw 24 He died on 29 August O S 17 August 1892 25 The church was destroyed by the Germans in 1944 24 The current church in Laizuva uses the building of a primitive hospital spitole built by Vienazindys 26 Works edit nbsp Cover of a collection of poems published in the United States in 1916 Publications edit Vienazindys started writing poetry as a student at the priest seminary but his first poem was published only in 1873 27 Polish ethnographer Edward Chlopicki pl in his article about his journey through Lithuania published in the weekly magazine Klosy pl included a Polish translation of one poem by Vienazindys 26 Several poems sometimes attributed to Vienazindys were published in Lithuanian periodicals Varpas ukininkas and Vienybe lietuvninku in late 1891 to 1893 At the time Vienazindys was already terminally ill and the poems were signed by pen name Zemaituks Samogitian which was used to sign other poems as well 27 The first poetry collection was published in Plymouth Pennsylvania in 1894 by Juozapas Zebrys vicar of Akmene and Vienazindys friend who emigrated to the United States 27 Since then his poetry was included in many different collections anthologies chrestomathies 28 One stanza in original Lithuanian was included in The Jungle a 1906 novel by Upton Sinclair 29 His poetry and surviving letters were published in Vilnius in 1978 30 Similar to Antanas Strazdas poems by Vienazindys spread among the people by word of mouth and by manuscripts distributed to friends and relatives Many poems and folk songs are attributed to Vienazindys but the true author is difficult to establish 31 Vienazindys left a manuscript with a compilation of 26 poems titled Dainos lietuvininko Zemaiciuose Song of a Lithuanian in Samogitia The manuscript is kept at Vilnius University Library 26 The poems are not titled they are known by their first line 32 Most of these poems were written in his youth and later edited and corrected when he lived in Laizuva 31 One poem is known from a letter that he sent to a woman in Krincinas Another eight poems were collected from friends and relatives and are confirmed to be Vienazindys texts by textological analysis 31 Many other poems are believed to have been lost because Vienazindys manuscripts were not preserved Mecislovas Davainis Silvestraitis claimed that after the funeral a gymnasium teacher from Warsaw selected almost one hundred of poems and other material from Vienazindys archives and promised to write his biography However nothing further is known about these poems or the biography 25 Themes edit One of his muses and sources of inspiration was his love for Roze Stauskaite a neighbor from Jaskoniskes lt It appears that these feelings developed while Vienazindys was still a gymnasium student The relationship ended when 17 year old Stauskaite and her family were deported to the Samara Governorate in December 1863 24 Based on vague hints in letters and memoirs some researchers believe that Vienazindys was also interested in Liudvika Niuniavaite a sister of a pastor in Tverai who later married Vienazindys brother Vincentas 16 Juozas Tumas Vaizgantas claimed that poems composed later in life were intentionally destroyed by Vincentas as unsuitable for a priest 33 Majority of the surviving poems were written in Vienazindys youth The earliest poems write about hopeful and joyful love youthful beauty and energy 3 These poems include a light flirt with a love interest and a comical paraphrasing of the academic song Gaudeamus igitur 34 Only one of his love poems tries to reign in the feelings 35 Another set of poems deals with Vienazindys experiences as a priest Some of these poems express delight and admiration Perhaps his most popular song Kaipgi grazus grazus ruteliu darzelis How lovely lovey rue garden depicts a young woman describing her beautiful flower garden where she is the queen She takes pure but naive pride in her garden and names fourteen different flowers that grow in it 34 Others harshly criticize an alcoholic man reflect on worries of a bride or poke fun at a priest caught fraternizing with women 36 Inspiration for several of these songs can be traced to Lithuanian folk songs published by Simonas Daukantas and in Tygodnik Wilenski 37 Later after experiences in 1863 the poems reflect painful longing disappointment and loneliness 3 Most vividly he expresses sorrows about the separation from his deported beloved but also writes about the separation from his family 38 Poems that are generally dated to the period when he lived in Braslaw are especially pessimistic and bleak They describe past wounds desperate desire to escape the misery and thoughts that only death can bring peace 39 The lyrical subject seeks comfort in religion and the idea of soul s journey to heaven 39 40 In the last poem of the 26 poem collection though it is likely written earlier than some other poems the lyrical subject has resigned and lost all hope it repeatedly states It is the same to me Man vis tiek pat 3 41 The 26 poem manuscript was signed under the pen name Vienuzis meaning vienisius or alone solitary person 3 42 Analysis edit In his memoir Vienazindys wrote that while he was a student at the priest seminary he would lock himself in a closet let himself experience intense emotions and would come out with a new poem 24 Many of his poems express a sudden burst of intense emotion 43 The poems also express Vienazindys concept of poetry suffering produces poetry and song that provide comfort and solace 31 In another poem Vienazindys refers to poems as his soul and asks them to cheer up not only the distant beloved but also rivers forests birds 44 As such his poetry reflects experiences and emotions of an individual which makes it distinct from other popular poetry of the period 3 Most other poems had clear societal goals to propagate the ideas of the Lithuanian National Revival or encourage antigovernment sentiments While Vienazindys poems mention social inequality as well as injustices and hardships inflicted by the government 45 the poems express individual s pain and grief and are not meant to incite public outrage 3 Vienazindys also wrote about love for his homeland but these patriotic feelings are not grand and majestic declarations they are personal and intimate adorations 46 As such the poetry of Vienazindys is one of the first examples of personal lyrical poetry in Lithuania 3 Vienazindys borrowed many lyrical elements from the Lithuanian folk songs including repeating lines and using anaphora drawing parallels between humans and animals or between human life and the cycles in the nature using plentiful diminutives and personifications 47 3 It is likely that his poems were intended to be sung he frequently referred to his poems as songs 3 As such they became popular among the Lithuanian people Folklorists have recorded more than 3 000 folk variations of his poems 48 However Vienazindys was well educated and influenced by Polish and Russian sentimental romances Specific similarities can be traced to works of Taras Shevchenko Wladyslaw Syrokomla Aleksey Koltsov 49 50 As such his poetry often features more complex compositions or rhymes He more widely masculine endings stress on the last syllable iambic metre varied stanzas with modifications to refrains 51 He wrote both in the traditional syllabic and the new accentual syllabic verse which was perfected by Maironis 52 His rhyme and metre were not perfect these imperfections were masked by the melody when singing 49 Vienazindys did not have formal musical education but he was musically inclined he could play a garmon and organized a church choir Therefore it is possible that he composed at least some of the melodies for his poems 5 Legacy editDuring his lifetime Vienazindys was virtually unknown and unpublished Only after World War I Juozas Tumas Vaizgantas collected material for his biography and published it together with other lectures on Lithuanian literature 53 A dedicated biography was published by Terese Bikinaite in 1989 and expanded revised edition in 1996 28 His grandparents house in Gipenai where Vienazindys grew up was turned into a small memorial museum in 1971 It is a private museum run and maintained by Vienazindys relatives 54 A poetic play about Vienazindys Rozes prazydejimas tamsoj The Blooming of the Rose in Darkness by Romualdas Granauskas was first staged in 1978 by the Lithuanian State Youth Theatre lt 55 A marble monument to Vienazindys by sculptor Gediminas Jokubonis lt was erected in Mazeikiai in 1987 30 The middle school in Laizuva was renamed after Vienazindys in 1997 56 At the same time the school established a small museum dedicated to Vienazindys and local history The school and the town organize annual events to commemorate his memory 56 Laizuva also treasures two objects reportedly related to Vienazindys a large stone where he used to contemplate and an old linden tree under which ill Vienazindys fell down during the consecration of the newly built church in May 1872 56 57 Vienazindys memory is also commemorated in Krincinas In 1990 and 1991 his 150th birth anniversary about 300 birch trees were planted in town s park The church has memorial plaque stone and traditional wood carved column shrine erected in 1991 1992 In 2001 the primary school in Krincinas was named after Vienazindys 58 References edit Aleksynas 1978 p 20 Bikinaite 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Kucinskiene 2014 Bikinaite 1989 p 49 a b Krikstaponis 2011 a b c Bikinaite 1989 p 10 Bikinaite 1989 p 9 Bikinaite 1989 p 11 Subacius 2001 p 383 Bikinaite 1989 p 14 Bikinaite 1989 p 15 Bikinaite 1989 p 16 a b c Bikinaite 1989 p 18 a b c d Subacius 2001 p 384 Bikinaite 1989 p 20 a b Subacius 2001 pp 385 386 a b Bikinaite 1989 pp 20 21 Bikinaite 1989 pp 21 22 a b Bikinaite 1989 p 22 Bikinaite 1989 pp 22 24 Bikinaite 1989 pp 24 25 Bikinaite 1989 p 23 a b Bikinaite 1989 p 25 a b c d Subacius 2001 p 385 a b Bikinaite 1989 p 26 a b c Rackauskaite 2012 a b c Subacius 2001 p 3 a b Vienazindys Antanas PDF Krastieciai in Lithuanian Rokiskio rajono savivaldybes Juozo Keliuocio viesoji biblioteka pp 1 2 Retrieved 3 April 2022 Sesplaukis 1977 a b Antanas Vienazindys Visuotine lietuviu enciklopedija in Lithuanian Mokslo ir enciklopediju leidybos centras 28 September 2021 2018 a b c d Subacius 2001 p 386 Subacius 2001 p 392 Bikinaite 1989 p 7 a b Subacius 2001 p 391 Bikinaite 1989 p 53 Subacius 2001 pp 391 392 Bikinaite 1989 pp 98 100 Subacius 2001 p 387 a b Aleksynas 1978 p 17 Subacius 2001 p 390 Aleksynas 1978 p 16 Rumbinaite 2000 pp 38 39 Bikinaite 1989 p 71 Subacius 2001 p 388 Bikinaite 1989 pp 42 43 Subacius 2001 p 389 Bikinaite 1989 p 84 Bikinaite 1989 p 103 a b Aleksynas 1978 p 19 Bikinaite 1989 p 102 Subacius 2001 pp 392 393 Bikinaite 1989 p 74 Aleksynas 1978 p 5 Cepeniene 2021 Bikinaite 1989 p 110 a b c Malukas 2016 Vienuzio liepa Mazeikiu krasto kulturinis lobynas in Lithuanian Mazeikiu rajono savivaldybes viesoji biblioteka 24 July 2020 Retrieved 3 April 2022 Atminimo paminklai kunigui poetui Antanui Vienazindziui Krincine Pasvalia in Lithuanian Pasvalio Mariaus Katiliskio viesoji biblioteka Retrieved 3 April 2022 Bibliography editAleksynas Kostas 1978 Antanas Vienazindys PDF Kaipgi grazus grazus By Vienazindys Antanas in Lithuanian Vilnius Vaga pp 5 20 OCLC 838415277 Bikinaite Terese 1989 Antanas Vienazindys Gyvenimas ir kuryba in Lithuanian Kaunas Sviesa ISBN 5 430 00155 4 Bikinaite Terese 2017 Summary PDF Dainos lietuvininko Zemaiciuose By Vienazindys Antanas Gyvoji poezija Vilnius Lietuviu literaturos ir tautosakos institutas ISBN 978 609 425 226 6 Cepeniene Daiva 9 June 2021 Antanas Vienazindys kunigas nepaises luomo nuostatu ir apie meile kalbejes eilemis in Lithuanian Utenos apskrities zinios Retrieved 3 April 2022 Krikstaponis Vilmantas 14 October 2011 Liaudies dainiaus gyvenimo ir kurybos takais Kunigo ir poeto Antano Vienazindzio 170 osioms gimimo metinems XXI amzius in Lithuanian 74 1954 ISSN 2029 1299 Kucinskiene Aiste 2014 Vienazindys saltiniai info in Lithuanian Lietuviu literaturos ir tautosakos institutas Vilniaus universiteto Filologijos ir Istorijos fakultetai Retrieved 3 April 2022 Malukas Vytautas 7 May 2016 Antanas Vienazindys tebegyvena tarp laizuviskiu in Lithuanian Santarve Retrieved 3 April 2022 Rackauskaite Vilma 2 March 2012 A Vienazindzio biografija Zymus Lietuvos zmones biobibliografine duomenu baze in Lithuanian Martynas Mazvydas National Library of Lithuania Retrieved 3 April 2022 Rumbinaite Raimonda 2000 Apie slapyvardį jo kilme ir reiksme PDF Gimtasis zodis in Lithuanian 1 ISSN 0235 7151 Sesplaukis Alfonsas Summer 1977 Lithuanians in Upton Sinclair s The Jungle Lituanus 23 2 ISSN 0024 5089 Subacius Paulius 2001 Antanas Vienazindys 1841 1892 PDF In Girdzijauskas Juozas ed Lietuviu literaturos istorija XIX amzius in Lithuanian Vilnius Lietuviu literaturos ir tautosakos institutas pp 383 393 ISBN 9986513693 External links editSelected poems of Vienazindys in Lithuanian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antanas Vienazindys amp oldid 1220305436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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