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Three Bards

The Three Bards (Polish: trzej wieszcze, IPA: [ˈtʂɛj ˈvjɛʂt͡ʂɛ]) are the national poets of Polish Romantic literature. The term is almost exclusively used to denote Adam Mickiewicz (1798–1855), Juliusz Słowacki (1809–1849) and Zygmunt Krasiński (1812–1859). Of the three, Mickiewicz is considered the most influential and Krasiński the least.

The Three Bards of Polish Romantic literature

The Three Bards were thought not only to voice Polish national sentiments but to foresee their nation's future. They lived and worked in exile following the partitions of Poland, which had ended the existence of the independent Polish state. Their tragic poetical plays and epic poetry, written in the aftermath of the 1830 Uprising against Russian rule, revolved around the Polish struggle for independence from the three occupying foreign empires.

The concept of the "Three Bards" emerged in the second half of the 19th century and remains influential among scholars of Polish literature. At the same time, it has been criticized by some as anachronistic. As Krasiński's influence waned, some have suggested replacing him in the trinity with Cyprian Norwid, or adding Norwid or Stanisław Wyspiański as a fourth bard.

Meaning edit

The Polish term "wieszcz" (IPA: [/vjɛʂt͡ʂ/]) is often understood in the history of Polish literature as denoting a "poet-prophet" or "soothsayer".[1][2]: 8 [3] This term, often rendered in English as "bard" (in the "bard" sense of "a poet, especially an exalted national poet"[4]), was an approximation to the ancient Latin poeta vates ("poet-prophet") – the poet to whom the gods had granted the ability to see the future.[2]: 8 [3][5][6]

The term "Three Bards" (Polish: trzej wieszcze) is applied almost exclusively to Adam Mickiewicz (1798–1855), Juliusz Słowacki (1809–1849), and Zygmunt Krasiński (1812–1859),[1][7][8][5] the most celebrated Romantic poets of Poland.[9][10] Of the three, Mickiewicz is considered the most, Krasiński the least, influential.[1][7][8][5][11]: 183 

Of the trio, Mickiewicz – the master of the epic and lyric – has been called the poet of the present; Krasiński – the prophet and seer – the poet who foretells the future; Słowacki – the dramatist – the panegyrist of the past.[12] Another scheme portrays Mickiewicz as the "positive voice of history", Słowacki as "the voice of the 'demonic' dark side of the fate of the Polish nation", and Krasiński as "the voice of Polish Catholicism".[1]

History edit

Imported to Poland around the 16th century along with many other Sarmatisms, the term wieszcz was initially applied to poets generically, sometimes to foreign ones like Homer, and sometimes to native ones like Jan Kochanowski (sometimes called "the wieszcz of Czarnolas"[13]). However, with the 19th-century advent of Romanticism, the term began to be applied almost exclusively to the trio of Mickiewicz, Słowacki, and Krasiński.[3][8][5][6] Mickiewicz himself endorsed the use of the term, in 1842 calling himself a wieszcz.[3] Though the three poets did not form a particular poetic group or movement, they all began to be seen as spiritual leaders of a nation deprived of its political freedom (Poland ceased to exist as an independent state in 1795, following the partitions of Poland, and would not reestabilish full sovereignty until 1918).[1][3][14]: 63  They also often adverted to folklore which linked the expression wieszcz to folk sages, such as Wernyhora, of legend and folk tale.[3][6]

The portrayal of Mickiewicz, Słowacki, and Krasiński as the three most important poets in Polish history can be traced to the 1860 expanded edition of Lesław Łukaszewicz [pl]'s Rys dziejów literatury polskiej (Outline of the History of Polish Literature). This view was popularized in the Great Emigration period by other works on literary history, such as those by Julian Bartoszewicz and Włodzimierz Spasowicz; and by succeeding decades of Polish textbooks, contributing to the establishment of a Polish literary canon [pl].[1][3][15]

This idea has endured, though at times criticized by scholars (particularly, in the early 20th century, by Adolf Nowaczyński [pl] and Jan Nepomucen Miller [pl]) as anachronistic or otherwise incorrect. There has also been discussion concerning whether one of the Three Bards – particularly Krasiński – deserves to be one of the trio, and whether the trio should be expanded to include other poets.[3][5][6] Nonetheless, according to literary historian Kazimierz Wyka, since the mid-20th century the trio of Bards – Mickiewicz, Słowacki, Krasiński – has been recognized as historical and classic, and as such, immuatable, despite periodic criticisms and challenges.[3]

Fourth Bard edit

Contenders to the title of Fourth Bard of Polish literature

The early-20th-century rediscovery of the writings of Cyprian Kamil Norwid (1821–1883) led some to call him a "fourth bard"[16][17]: 68  or to count him among the "four greated poets of Poland".[18]: 63  Unlike the writings of the Three Bards, Norwid's were not popular in his lifetime or for several decades thereafter. Consequently, according to Polish literary critics Przemysław Czapliński [pl], Tamara Trojanowska, and Joanna Niżyńska, his work "remained isolated [and] unnoticed", and was "overshadowed by the three earlier literary 'giants' [Mickiewicz, Słowacki, and Krasiński] long celebrated in exile and at home"; hence Norwid failed to influence or affect his contemporaries to the extent that did the Three Bards.[5][17]: 68 

Some literary critics, however, have been so skeptical of the value of Krasiński's work as to consider Norwid a third rather than a fourth bard.[3][19][20]: 276 [21]: 8 

Other critics have nominated Stanisław Wyspiański (1869–1907) as fourth bard.[22][23]: 147 [24]: 184  His 1901 play The Wedding is considered the last great classic of Polish drama, and Rochelle Heller Stone writes that it alone "earned him the title of fourth bard".[24]: 184 [25]: 14 

Literary historian Józef Ujejski [pl] named Joseph Conrad another bard.[26] Other 19th-century writers who have been called bards include Józef Bohdan Zaleski, Seweryn Goszczyński, Wincenty Pol, and Kornel Ujejski.[5] 20th-century poets who have been called Polish bards include Witold Gombrowicz and Nobel laureate Czesław Miłosz.[27]

In the visual arts, the term wieszcz (bard) has occasionally been applied to Jan Matejko and Artur Grottger as, respectively, the first and second Polish bards of painting, with either Józef Brandt or Henryk Siemiradzki oftenest named a third bard.[3][5]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Lanoux, Andrea (2001). "Canonizing the Wieszcz: The Subjective Turn in Polish Literary Biography in the 1860s". The Slavic and East European Journal. 45 (4): 624–640. doi:10.2307/3086125. ISSN 0037-6752. JSTOR 3086125.
  2. ^ a b Koropeckyj, Roman Robert. (1990). Re-creating the "wieszcz": Versions of the life of Adam Mickiewicz, 1828-1897. ProQuest 303837717 – via ProQuest.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Wyka, Kazimierz (1969). "wieszcz". Wielka Encyklopedia Powszechna (in Polish). Vol. 12. PWN. pp. 300–301.
  4. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary, Second College Edition, Boston Houghton Mifflin Company, 1982, p. 157.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Okoń, Waldemar (2019). "Henryk Siemiradzki i trzej wieszczowie" [Siemiradzki and the three bards]. Quart (in Polish). 54 (4): 3–81. English version
  6. ^ a b c d "wieszcz". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  7. ^ a b Winkler, Markus (31 August 2018). Barbarian: Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory, Literature, and the Arts: Vol. I: From the Enlightenment to the Turn of the Twentieth Century. Springer. p. 202. ISBN 978-3-476-04485-3.
  8. ^ a b c Inglot, Mieczysław (2001). "Norwid wobec koncepcji trzech wieszczów". Czasopismo Zakładu Narodowego Imienia Ossolińskich. 12.
  9. ^ Poland's Case for Independence: Being a Series of Essays Illustrating the Continuance of Her National Life. Polish information committee. 1916. p. 293. Slowacki , Krasinski , and especially Mickiewicz , the most celebrated poets of modern romanticism in Poland
  10. ^ World Literature Today. University of Oklahoma Press. 1978. p. 310. Poland's three most celebrated romantic poets
  11. ^ Wandycz, Piotr S. (1975-02-01). The Lands of Partitioned Poland, 1795-1918. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-80361-6.
  12. ^ Charles Dudley Warner; Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle; Hamilton Wright Mabie; George H. Warner (1902). Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern: A-Z. J. A. Hill & company. pp. 13508–13510. Retrieved 14 February 2011.
  13. ^ Much as England's William Shakespeare is sometimes referred to as "the Bard of Avon".
  14. ^ Król, Marcin (1998). Romantyzm: piekło i niebo Polaków (in Polish). Res Publica - Fundacja. ISBN 978-83-910975-1-9.
  15. ^ Zawodniak, Mariusz (2001). ""Reakcyjny kanon", czyli trójca wieszczów w klasowej wizji romantyzmu (kartka z dziejów recepcji)". In Owczarz, Ewa; Smulski, Jerzy (eds.). Mickiewicz, Słowacki, Krasiński: romantyczne uwarunkowania i współczesne konteksty (in Polish). Mazowiecka Wyższa Szkoła Humanistyczno-Pedagogiczna. ISBN 978-83-87222-20-8.
  16. ^ "'Underappreciated' poet Norwid honoured on his 200th birthday with events across the country". Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  17. ^ a b Trojanowska, Tamara; Niżyńska, Joanna; Czapliński, Przemysław (2018-01-01). Being Poland: A New History of Polish Literature and Culture since 1918. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-5018-3.
  18. ^ Salata, Kris (2013-05-07). The Unwritten Grotowski: Theory and Practice of the Encounter. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-15811-7.
  19. ^ Van Cant, Katrin (2009). "Historical Memory in Post-Communist Poland: Warsaw's Monuments after 1989". Studies in Slavic Cultures. 8: 90–119.
  20. ^ Brogan, Terry V. F. (2021-04-13). The Princeton Handbook of Multicultural Poetries. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-22821-1.
  21. ^ Rygielska, Małgorzata (2012). Przyboś czyta Norwida (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego. ISBN 978-83-226-2066-3.
  22. ^ Morawinska, Agnieszka (1987-01-01). "A View from the Window". Canadian-American Slavic Studies. 21 (2): 57–78. doi:10.1163/221023987X00178. ISSN 2210-2396.
  23. ^ Cavanaugh, Jan (2000). Out Looking in: Early Modern Polish Art, 1890-1918. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-21190-2.
  24. ^ a b Stephan, Halina (1984). Transcending the Absurd: Drama and Prose of Sławomir Mrożek. Rodopi. ISBN 978-90-420-0113-8.
  25. ^ Stone, Rochelle Heller (2018-09-04). Boleslaw Lesmian: The Poet and His Poetry. Univ of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-30326-3.
  26. ^ Zabierowski, Stefan (2014). "Polskie spory o Conrada w latach 1897–1945". Konteksty Kultury (in Polish). 11 (3): 256–268. ISSN 2083-7658.
  27. ^ Holmgren, Beth (1989). "Witold Gombrowicz within the Wieszcz Tradition". The Slavic and East European Journal. 33 (4): 556–570. doi:10.2307/308286. ISSN 0037-6752. JSTOR 308286.

Further reading edit

  • Markiewicz, Henryk (1984). Rodowód i losy mitu trzech wieszczów: pamięci Kazimierza Wyki [The origin and fate of the myth of the three bards: dedicated to the memory of Kazimierz Wyka] (in Polish). Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich.

three, bards, polish, trzej, wieszcze, ˈtʂɛj, ˈvjɛʂt, ʂɛ, national, poets, polish, romantic, literature, term, almost, exclusively, used, denote, adam, mickiewicz, 1798, 1855, juliusz, słowacki, 1809, 1849, zygmunt, krasiński, 1812, 1859, three, mickiewicz, co. The Three Bards Polish trzej wieszcze IPA ˈtʂɛj ˈvjɛʂt ʂɛ are the national poets of Polish Romantic literature The term is almost exclusively used to denote Adam Mickiewicz 1798 1855 Juliusz Slowacki 1809 1849 and Zygmunt Krasinski 1812 1859 Of the three Mickiewicz is considered the most influential and Krasinski the least Adam MickiewiczJuliusz SlowackiZygmunt KrasinskiThe Three Bards of Polish Romantic literature The Three Bards were thought not only to voice Polish national sentiments but to foresee their nation s future They lived and worked in exile following the partitions of Poland which had ended the existence of the independent Polish state Their tragic poetical plays and epic poetry written in the aftermath of the 1830 Uprising against Russian rule revolved around the Polish struggle for independence from the three occupying foreign empires The concept of the Three Bards emerged in the second half of the 19th century and remains influential among scholars of Polish literature At the same time it has been criticized by some as anachronistic As Krasinski s influence waned some have suggested replacing him in the trinity with Cyprian Norwid or adding Norwid or Stanislaw Wyspianski as a fourth bard Contents 1 Meaning 2 History 3 Fourth Bard 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Further readingMeaning editThe Polish term wieszcz IPA vjɛʂt ʂ is often understood in the history of Polish literature as denoting a poet prophet or soothsayer 1 2 8 3 This term often rendered in English as bard in the bard sense of a poet especially an exalted national poet 4 was an approximation to the ancient Latin poeta vates poet prophet the poet to whom the gods had granted the ability to see the future 2 8 3 5 6 The term Three Bards Polish trzej wieszcze is applied almost exclusively to Adam Mickiewicz 1798 1855 Juliusz Slowacki 1809 1849 and Zygmunt Krasinski 1812 1859 1 7 8 5 the most celebrated Romantic poets of Poland 9 10 Of the three Mickiewicz is considered the most Krasinski the least influential 1 7 8 5 11 183 Of the trio Mickiewicz the master of the epic and lyric has been called the poet of the present Krasinski the prophet and seer the poet who foretells the future Slowacki the dramatist the panegyrist of the past 12 Another scheme portrays Mickiewicz as the positive voice of history Slowacki as the voice of the demonic dark side of the fate of the Polish nation and Krasinski as the voice of Polish Catholicism 1 History editImported to Poland around the 16th century along with many other Sarmatisms the term wieszcz was initially applied to poets generically sometimes to foreign ones like Homer and sometimes to native ones like Jan Kochanowski sometimes called the wieszcz of Czarnolas 13 However with the 19th century advent of Romanticism the term began to be applied almost exclusively to the trio of Mickiewicz Slowacki and Krasinski 3 8 5 6 Mickiewicz himself endorsed the use of the term in 1842 calling himself a wieszcz 3 Though the three poets did not form a particular poetic group or movement they all began to be seen as spiritual leaders of a nation deprived of its political freedom Poland ceased to exist as an independent state in 1795 following the partitions of Poland and would not reestabilish full sovereignty until 1918 1 3 14 63 They also often adverted to folklore which linked the expression wieszcz to folk sages such as Wernyhora of legend and folk tale 3 6 The portrayal of Mickiewicz Slowacki and Krasinski as the three most important poets in Polish history can be traced to the 1860 expanded edition of Leslaw Lukaszewicz pl s Rys dziejow literatury polskiej Outline of the History of Polish Literature This view was popularized in the Great Emigration period by other works on literary history such as those by Julian Bartoszewicz and Wlodzimierz Spasowicz and by succeeding decades of Polish textbooks contributing to the establishment of a Polish literary canon pl 1 3 15 This idea has endured though at times criticized by scholars particularly in the early 20th century by Adolf Nowaczynski pl and Jan Nepomucen Miller pl as anachronistic or otherwise incorrect There has also been discussion concerning whether one of the Three Bards particularly Krasinski deserves to be one of the trio and whether the trio should be expanded to include other poets 3 5 6 Nonetheless according to literary historian Kazimierz Wyka since the mid 20th century the trio of Bards Mickiewicz Slowacki Krasinski has been recognized as historical and classic and as such immuatable despite periodic criticisms and challenges 3 Fourth Bard edit nbsp Cyprian Norwid nbsp Stanislaw WyspianskiContenders to the title of Fourth Bard of Polish literature The early 20th century rediscovery of the writings of Cyprian Kamil Norwid 1821 1883 led some to call him a fourth bard 16 17 68 or to count him among the four greated poets of Poland 18 63 Unlike the writings of the Three Bards Norwid s were not popular in his lifetime or for several decades thereafter Consequently according to Polish literary critics Przemyslaw Czaplinski pl Tamara Trojanowska and Joanna Nizynska his work remained isolated and unnoticed and was overshadowed by the three earlier literary giants Mickiewicz Slowacki and Krasinski long celebrated in exile and at home hence Norwid failed to influence or affect his contemporaries to the extent that did the Three Bards 5 17 68 Some literary critics however have been so skeptical of the value of Krasinski s work as to consider Norwid a third rather than a fourth bard 3 19 20 276 21 8 Other critics have nominated Stanislaw Wyspianski 1869 1907 as fourth bard 22 23 147 24 184 His 1901 play The Wedding is considered the last great classic of Polish drama and Rochelle Heller Stone writes that it alone earned him the title of fourth bard 24 184 25 14 Literary historian Jozef Ujejski pl named Joseph Conrad another bard 26 Other 19th century writers who have been called bards include Jozef Bohdan Zaleski Seweryn Goszczynski Wincenty Pol and Kornel Ujejski 5 20th century poets who have been called Polish bards include Witold Gombrowicz and Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz 27 In the visual arts the term wieszcz bard has occasionally been applied to Jan Matejko and Artur Grottger as respectively the first and second Polish bards of painting with either Jozef Brandt or Henryk Siemiradzki oftenest named a third bard 3 5 See also editNational poets Polish Messianism Romanticism in Poland Tymon Zaborowski also known as Wieszcz Miodoboru the Bard of the Honey Harvest Notes and references edit a b c d e f Lanoux Andrea 2001 Canonizing the Wieszcz The Subjective Turn in Polish Literary Biography in the 1860s The Slavic and East European Journal 45 4 624 640 doi 10 2307 3086125 ISSN 0037 6752 JSTOR 3086125 a b Koropeckyj Roman Robert 1990 Re creating the wieszcz Versions of the life of Adam Mickiewicz 1828 1897 ProQuest 303837717 via ProQuest a b c d e f g h i j k Wyka Kazimierz 1969 wieszcz Wielka Encyklopedia Powszechna in Polish Vol 12 PWN pp 300 301 The American Heritage Dictionary Second College Edition Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1982 p 157 a b c d e f g h Okon Waldemar 2019 Henryk Siemiradzki i trzej wieszczowie Siemiradzki and the three bards Quart in Polish 54 4 3 81 English version a b c d wieszcz Encyklopedia PWN in Polish Retrieved 2023 05 01 a b Winkler Markus 31 August 2018 Barbarian Explorations of a Western Concept in Theory Literature and the Arts Vol I From the Enlightenment to the Turn of the Twentieth Century Springer p 202 ISBN 978 3 476 04485 3 a b c Inglot Mieczyslaw 2001 Norwid wobec koncepcji trzech wieszczow Czasopismo Zakladu Narodowego Imienia Ossolinskich 12 Poland s Case for Independence Being a Series of Essays Illustrating the Continuance of Her National Life Polish information committee 1916 p 293 Slowacki Krasinski and especially Mickiewicz the most celebrated poets of modern romanticism in Poland World Literature Today University of Oklahoma Press 1978 p 310 Poland s three most celebrated romantic poets Wandycz Piotr S 1975 02 01 The Lands of Partitioned Poland 1795 1918 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 80361 6 Charles Dudley Warner Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle Hamilton Wright Mabie George H Warner 1902 Library of the World s Best Literature Ancient and Modern A Z J A Hill amp company pp 13508 13510 Retrieved 14 February 2011 Much as England s William Shakespeare is sometimes referred to as the Bard of Avon Krol Marcin 1998 Romantyzm pieklo i niebo Polakow in Polish Res Publica Fundacja ISBN 978 83 910975 1 9 Zawodniak Mariusz 2001 Reakcyjny kanon czyli trojca wieszczow w klasowej wizji romantyzmu kartka z dziejow recepcji In Owczarz Ewa Smulski Jerzy eds Mickiewicz Slowacki Krasinski romantyczne uwarunkowania i wspolczesne konteksty in Polish Mazowiecka Wyzsza Szkola Humanistyczno Pedagogiczna ISBN 978 83 87222 20 8 Underappreciated poet Norwid honoured on his 200th birthday with events across the country Retrieved 24 September 2021 a b Trojanowska Tamara Nizynska Joanna Czaplinski Przemyslaw 2018 01 01 Being Poland A New History of Polish Literature and Culture since 1918 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1 4426 5018 3 Salata Kris 2013 05 07 The Unwritten Grotowski Theory and Practice of the Encounter Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 15811 7 Van Cant Katrin 2009 Historical Memory in Post Communist Poland Warsaw s Monuments after 1989 Studies in Slavic Cultures 8 90 119 Brogan Terry V F 2021 04 13 The Princeton Handbook of Multicultural Poetries Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 22821 1 Rygielska Malgorzata 2012 Przybos czyta Norwida in Polish Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Slaskiego ISBN 978 83 226 2066 3 Morawinska Agnieszka 1987 01 01 A View from the Window Canadian American Slavic Studies 21 2 57 78 doi 10 1163 221023987X00178 ISSN 2210 2396 Cavanaugh Jan 2000 Out Looking in Early Modern Polish Art 1890 1918 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 21190 2 a b Stephan Halina 1984 Transcending the Absurd Drama and Prose of Slawomir Mrozek Rodopi ISBN 978 90 420 0113 8 Stone Rochelle Heller 2018 09 04 Boleslaw Lesmian The Poet and His Poetry Univ of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 30326 3 Zabierowski Stefan 2014 Polskie spory o Conrada w latach 1897 1945 Konteksty Kultury in Polish 11 3 256 268 ISSN 2083 7658 Holmgren Beth 1989 Witold Gombrowicz within the Wieszcz Tradition The Slavic and East European Journal 33 4 556 570 doi 10 2307 308286 ISSN 0037 6752 JSTOR 308286 Further reading editMarkiewicz Henryk 1984 Rodowod i losy mitu trzech wieszczow pamieci Kazimierza Wyki The origin and fate of the myth of the three bards dedicated to the memory of Kazimierz Wyka in Polish Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Three Bards amp oldid 1210450207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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