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Thursday 25 August 2016

Poet of the Month 038: EWA LIPSKA

 


EWA LIPSKA
May 2006







 
CHILDREN


 
 
Children meet at nostalgic dinner-parties.
Children meet in executive sessions.
Children are experienced.
Some of them cannot recognize a swan.
 

Children have identity papers.  Birth certificates.
Health records.  Certificates of death.
Children choose their leaders who
make speeches praising rocking horses.
 

Children hijack planes and kidnap ministers.
Children emigrate to the ends of earth.
Children submit reports about their parents.
Children fight for the rights of wooden dolls.
Children sit in astrakhan fur coats.
Pink cakes fly through the air.
Children recall the fallen Roman Empire
and nod their little heads.
In the huge kindergarten of nations
children play ball and
spit cherry stones at each other.
They switch on an artificial sun
that rises like a mitigating circumstance.
Then children put aside their toys
and start to produce some new children.
 


 
 
 
date unspecified



 
 
 
 
 
Translated by
  
SUSAN BASSNETT 
 
and  
 
PIOTR KUHIWCZAK



 
 
 
 
The following biographical statement written by Ad van Rijsewijk and translated from Dutch by Michele Hutchison appears on the Poetry International Rotterdam website.  [It is re-posted here for information purposes only and, like the poem re-posted above, remains its author's exclusive copyright-protected intellectual property.]
 

Ewa Lipska is one of the most important Polish poets of her generation.  She studied painting at the Academy for Fine Arts in Krakow, and from 1970 to 1980 she worked as an editor at the Krakow publishing house Wydawnictwo Literackie.  In the 1990s she lived for seven years in Vienna, where she was assistant manager of the Polish Cultural Foundation.

 

She debuted as a poet in 1967 with the collection Wiersze [Poems], and from then until 1978 she published four more collections, from Drugi zbior wierszy [The Second Poetry Collection] up to Piaty zbior wierszy [The Fifth Poetry Collection].  She has now published more than twenty poetry collections and several anthologies.  Her most recent poetry collection PomaraƄca Newtona [Newton’s Orange] was published in 2007, and her first novel, Sefer, in 2009.

 

Lipska’s work has been awarded various literary prizes and her books have been translated into fifteen languages, including English, German, French, Spanish, Swedish and Hebrew.  Two of her collections have appeared in the Netherlands: Mensen voor beginners [Human Beginners] (De Geus, 2000) and Splinter (De Geus, 2007).

 

Although Lipska is sometimes considered as part of the 'New Wave' group of the 1970s, she distances herself from such associations, preferring to operate autonomously.  Over the years, her mistrust of the language of her daily surroundings, for her a language of masks and lies, has grown.  In response, Lipska has developed an inverted language, which is confrontational and frequently ominous.  Her poems are lucid, and in few words, she puts forth her own reality with gentle irony.  Fascinated by human behaviour, she strips away the false meaning of words, proving that we’re still merely 'Human Beginners'.                      
  
 
 
Text © 2010 Ad van Rijsewijk


 

 

 

Use the links below to read more poems by Polish poet EWA LIPSKA and learn more about her life and work:

 

 

http://www.wordswithoutborders.org/contributor/ewa-lipska

 

 

https://culture.pl/en/search/ewa%20lipska

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Poet of the Month 027: ADAM ZAGAJEWSKI

 

 

 
Poet of the Month 003: WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA

 

 

 
Poet of the Month 009: JULIAN TUWIM

 

 

 

 

Last updated 13 April 2021

 

Thursday 18 August 2016

Think About It 016: LOUISE BOGAN


What we suffer, what we endure, what we muff, what we kill, what we miss, what we are guilty of, is done by us, as individuals, in private. –– I wanted to kill a few interns this morning, and I shall want to kill some nurses tonight, and I know that it is a lousy system that keeps the poor, indigent old from dying as they should…To hell with the crowd.  To hell with the meetings, and the public speeches.  Life and death occur, as they must, but they are all bound up with love and hatred, in the individual bosom, and it is a sin and a shame to try to organize or dictate them.

Letter to Rolfe Humphries [23 December 1936]


 

Use the link below to read a short post about What The Woman Lived: The Selected Letters of Louise Bogan 1920–1970 (1973):

 

http://neglectedbooks.com/?p=3796

  

LOUISE BOGAN (1897–1970) was a North American poet whose work was admired by, among others, WH AUDEN.  She also served as Poetry Critic for The New York Times from 1921 until her retirement in 1969.

 

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Think About It 005: SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR

 
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Think About It 027: MARION WOODMAN 

Thursday 4 August 2016

The Write Advice 084: EDITH WHARTON


None of my relations ever spoke to me of my books, either to praise or to blame –– they simply ignored them; and among the immense tribe of my New York cousins, though it included many with whom I was on terms of affectionate intimacy, the subject was avoided as though it were a kind of family disgrace, which might be condoned but could not be forgotten.  Only one eccentric widowed cousin, living a life of lonely invalidism, turned to my novels for occasional distraction, and had the courage to tell me so.
      At first I felt this indifference acutely; but now I no longer cared, for my recognition as a writer had transformed my life.  I had made my own friends, and my books were beginning to serve as an introduction to my fellow writers.  But it was amusing to think that, whereas in London even my modest achievements would have opened many doors, in my native New York they were felt only as a drawback and an embarrassment.

A Backward Glance (1934)


 

Use the link below to visit the website of THE EDITH WHARTON SOCIETY:


https://edithwhartonsociety.wordpress.com/

 

Special thanks to Rhonda Thwaite for 
sending me this quote.


 

 

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Ethan Frome (1911) by EDITH WHARTON

 
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