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As the first of its publications the Millennium of Christian Poland Celebration Committee in Canada presented an English translation of Pan Tadeusz, a land-mark in Polish literature. Pan Tadeusz or The Last Foray in Lithuania is the greatest epic poem of Poland's greatest poet, Adam Mickiewicz (1798-1855). It was written in exile and published in Paris in 1833, during the author's long absence from his native country because of his patriotic sympathies. The scene of the poem is Lithuania on show more the eve of Napoleon's expedition into Russia in 1812 and its subject is a family feud among the country gentry; Mickiewicz gives vivid pictures of the life of the old Polish nobility and gentry, their manners and past times, their patriotic enthusiasms and his descriptions of the Lithuanian landscape especially have kept his poem in the hearts of generations of readers. The poem ends in the spirit of hope caused in the heart of every Pole by the French onslaught on Russia. The original poem is in rhymed Alexandrine couplets, and the translation in the English heroic couplet; this is the first translation in rhymed English verse to be published. Watson Kirckconnell's gifts as translator and poet are well known, and this publication is a splendid opportunity to become acquainted with one of the world's great epics. Dr. William J. Rose provides a helpful historical introduction. show less

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As Pushkin is to Russia, and Shevchenko is to Ukraine, so Mickiewicz is to Poland, its national poet. The English translation of this book is not easy to find even in Poland, but I was lucky enough to get my hands on this brilliant modern translation from Bill Johnston in the Pan Tadeusz Museum in Wrocław. I have to say that after reading it, it’s criminal to me that it isn’t better known or more highly regarded outside of Poland.

It’s an epic story told in verse, complete with literary references to classic literature, but if that sounds intimidating or dry, nothing could be further from the truth. The book is highly approachable and engaging from beginning to end. The all-too-human characters are cleverly developed, and the show more story is told with both restraint and concision. There is humor, romance, merriment, and feuding amongst landowners. The rural setting is beautifully evoked throughout the book by Mickiewicz, who had clearly spent time in nature.

Mickiewicz wrote the book from France in 1834 when Poland’s uprisings against its partitioning had failed, but he makes the setting 1811-12, at a time when there was hope that in siding with Napoleon, who had carved out the short-lived Duchy of Warsaw, that they would regain the full independence of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and their former glory days. Readers at the time knew how tragically that would turn out, and this combined with Mickiewicz’s childhood memories of a time that was slipping past make the book incredibly poignant. Readers today also know of how partitioning and subjugation in the 18th and 19th centuries would segue to an eerily similar invasion from both Germany and the Soviet Union in the 20th, with outrageous atrocities that are still hard to fathom. It all makes for a very stirring read, particularly at the end with his epilogue, when he laments the fate of his country, as well as cherishes his childhood memories.

This should be required reading for anyone travelling to Poland, and I can’t recommend this edition highly enough. The introduction from Johnston, thoughtful translation, and helpful notes all enhance what is a great book. As he points out with such insight, “Perhaps one of the reasons Pan Tadeusz is so popular is precisely that it beautifully melds two impossible longings – for a future free and independent Poland, and for the lost Poland of the past. The interplay between these two unslaked desires provides a mighty emotional tension at the heart of the poem.”

Just this quote on Poland, which reverberated within me as I toured the country, getting greater insight into such a sad history, and wondering how one could even go on afterwards:

“The blood, though, spilled in Poland lately,
The tears that flood the land completely,
The glory that still echoes quietly –
We had no strength to think of these!
For nations can face such agonies
That, gazing upon their misery,
Even Courage stands helplessly.”
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Lithuania! My homeland! You are health alone.
Your worth can only ever be known by one
Who’s lost you. Today I see and tell anew
Your lovely beauty, as I long for you.

Pan Tadeusz: The Last Forray Into Lithuania by Adam Mickiewicz and the new translation by Bill Johnston is an epic poem about the divided Poland and Lithuania. Mickiewicz was a Polish poet, dramatist, essayist, publicist, translator, professor of Slavic literature, and political activist. He is regarded as the national poet in Poland, Lithuania, and Belarus. Johnston is a prolific Polish language literary translator and Professor of comparative literature at Indiana University. His work has helped to expose English-speaking readers to classic and contemporary Polish poetry show more and fiction.

Pan Tadeusz is a poem for those interested in Polish/Lithuanian history or heritage. Most Americans would know little of Polish history except for the opening of World War II. Those who remember the Cold War will recall, despite Gerald Ford's assertion, that Poland was under Communist control and the US does not recognize the incorporation of Lithuania into the USSR. Poland has lived a rather quiet history as a nation for those living today. Poland was a historically a cultural and military territory. Part of the problem also comes with what is Poland. Its size has varied, and it ceased to exist as a nation more than once. My great grandmother's immigration papers said she was born in Russian occupied Poland claiming Polish as her nationality. With borders that changed so often, it is not hard to imagine how one person could be the national poet of three different countries.

Pan Tadeusz is a rather long poem covering five days in 1811 and two days in 1812. It contains a bit of a Shakespeare theme (Romeo and Juliet) and a bit of Les Miserables' to the barricades. Johnston provides a detailed introduction which helps clarify regional realities of the time and a translation that remains true to the original intent including the humor. The verse flows well, and much of the rhyme remains in place, not every line rhymes, but there is enough to keep the read locked into the rhythm of the poetry. There does not seem to be any forced wording in the translation; it is easily readable.

Johnston's translation of Pan Tadeusz brings the Polish classic in an enjoyable form to the English language readers without losing the original intention and form. Both the author and translator include notes characters, locations, as well as translations where words don't seem to have a word for word replacement. An exceptionally well done original work and rendering.
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Perhaps the translation doesnt render the poetry well, but I still found it enjoyable to read. Like the introduction says it's a cross between Don Quixote and Iliad with some nice pastoral work thrown in.
Adam Bernard Mickiewicz, född 24 december 1798 i Zaosie nära Nowogródek, då i Ryska imperiet, nu i Vitryssland, död 26 november 1855 vid Konstantinopel, polsk författare, ofta ansedd som Polens nationalskald. Mickiewicz är den polska romantiska poesins främste representant.

1834 utgav han i Paris sitt litterära storverk, verseposet Pan Tadeusz czyli Ostatni zajazd na Litwie (Herr Tadeusz eller Sista fejden i Litauen). Denna verkligt klassiska hjältedikt i homerisk stil återspeglar förträffligt det borttynande polska adelssamhällets inre och yttre liv i början av 1800-talet, då Napoleons tåg till östra Europa väckte nya förhoppningar i de polska sinnena. Många av de tecknade personerna är återgivna efter naturen, show more stundtals i komisk belysning, men med en djup underström av patriotisk sympati. show less
Nic dodać, nic ująć.

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Author
188+ Works 1,106 Members
Mickiewicz was born in Lithuania to the family of a landless lawyer. He received a solid classical education at Wilno University, then the best in Poland. Arrested in 1823 for suspected revolutionary activities, he was exiled to Russia in 1825. His four and a half years there were a period of poetical and social success. He became a friend of show more Aleksandr Pushkin and a welcome figure in aristocratic salons. In 1829, Mickiewicz left Russia. During the 1831 uprising, he appeared briefly in Prussian Poland and subsequently joined the Great Emigration in Paris, where he was viewed as the spiritual leader of the exiles. During the early 1840's, Mickiewicz became a follower of the Lithuanian mystic Towianski, a move that finished him as a poet and made him unpopular with most of his fellow exiles. After the outbreak of the Crimean War, his anti-Russian activities brought the poet to Turkey, where he died in late 1855. His remains were transferred to a crypt in Wawel Castle in Cracow in 1890. Although his education in classical literature left a perceptible trace on his poetic diction, Mickiewicz was both the initiator of the romantic movement and one of its great figures. His literary position was established in 1822 with the publication of a short but striking anthology of poems. His subsequent ballads and historical poems were even finer; however, he reached special heights in his dramatic cycle "Forefathers' Eve" (1823). Mickiewicz's Russian period is distinguished by the creation of sonnets (especially the Crimean Sonnets cycle) and of the poem "Konrad Wallenrod" (1826--27). A period of relative poetic sterility, that began after "Konrad Wallenrod," ended in 1832 when Mickiewicz published his Books of the Polish Nation, a work in biblical prose that aspired to be the gospel of emigres and is the clearest example of Polish national messianism. In 1832, Mickiewicz also wrote "Forefathers' Eve, Part III" which he loosely connected with the earlier dramatic cycle, and in which he considered Poland's relationship with Russia through the prism of an intense personal vision. Mickiewicz's last masterpiece is "Pan Tadeusz" (1834) which continues the traditions of the epic and, to a degree, represents a turning away on the poet's part from romanticism. The poem deals with life in Lithuania from 1811 to 1812. A large number of characters, all of whom are basically good, and a wealth of lovingly described details of nature and the country society, combine to make "Pan Tadeusz" an extraordinary, if idealized, canvas of everyday life. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Grabowski, Antoni (Translator)
Johnston, Bill (Translator)
Lipiner, Siegfried (Translator)
Lippiner, Siegfried (Translator)
Moore, Andrew (Editor)
Wankowicz, Walenty (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Pan Tadeusz
Original title
Pan Tadeusz, czyli ostatni zajazd na Litwie. Historia szlachecka z roku 1811 i 1812 we dwunastu księgach wierszem; Pan Tadeusz czyli ostatnizajazd na Litwie
Alternate titles*
Pan Tadeusz oder Die letzte Fehde in Litauen
Original publication date
1834; 1834 (Paris) (Paris); 1882 (deutsch, in Poetische Werke, Bd. 1, Lepzig, Breitkopf und Härtel) (deutsch, in Poetische Werke, Bd. 1, Lepzig, Breitkopf und Härtel)
People/Characters
Tadeusz Soplica; Jacek Soplica; Sędzia Soplica; Telimena; Gerwazy Rębajło; Protazy Brzechalski (show all 27); Jankiel; Zosia Horeszkówna; Wojski Hreczecha; Rejent; Asesor; Hrabia Horeszko; Maciej Dobrzyński; Bartek Prusak; Maciek Chrzciciel; Bartek Brzytewka; Maciej Konewka; Podkomorzy; Stolnik Horeszko; Jenerał Kniaziewicz; Jenerał Dąbrowski Jan Henryk; Ryków Nikita Nikitycz Kapitan; Płut Major; Sak Dobrzyński; Tekla Hreszczanka; Róża Podkomorzanka; Anna Podkomorzanka
Important places
Soplicowo; Zaścianek Dobrzyńskich; Zamek Horeszków
Important events
Zajazd na Soplicowo; Bitwa z Moskalami; Spowiedź Jacka Soplicy
Related movies*
Pan Tadeusz (1928 | IMDb); Pan Tadeusz (1999 | IMDb); Pan Tadeusz, czyli Matecznik (1998 | IMDb)
First words
"O Lithuania, my country, thou
Art like good health; I never knew till now
How precious, till I lost thee. Now I see
The beauty whole, because I yearn for thee."
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I ja tam z gośćmi byłem, miód i wino piłem,
A com widział i słyszał, w księgi umieściłem."
Original language
Polish
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Poetry, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
891.8516Literature & rhetoricLiteratures of other languagesEast Indo-European and Celtic literaturesWest and South Slavic languages (Bulgarian, Slovene, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Serbo-Croatian, and Macedonian)PolishPolish poetry1795–1919
LCC
PG7158 .M5 .P312Language and LiteratureSlavic languages and literatures. Baltic languages. Albanian languageSlavic. Baltic. AlbanianSlavicPolish
BISAC

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