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Oscar Milosz

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Cause of death
  
Heart Attack

Known for
  
Poet and Diplomat

Spouse(s)
  
None

Role
  
Poet

Nationality
  
Lithuanian / French

Religion
  
Catholic

Name
  
Oscar Milosz

Resting place
  
Fontainebleau


Born
  
May 28, 1877 (
1877-05-28
)
Careja (near Mogilev in present day Belarus)

Other names
  
Lithuanian: Oskaras Milasius

Died
  
March 2, 1939, Fontainebleau, France

Education
  
Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales

Books
  
The noble traveller, Amorous Initiation: A Novel of Sacred and Profane Love, Storge

Similar People
  
Czeslaw Milosz, David Gascoyne, Francis de Miomandre

pagal Oskarą Milašių ( Oscar Milosz ) - "Trys patarimai ir trisdešimt dukatų "


Oscar Vladislas de Lubicz Milosz (Lithuanian: Oskaras Milasius) (May 28, 1877—March 2, 1939) was a French-Lithuanian poet, playwright, essayist and representative of Lithuania at the League of Nations. His literary career — as manifested through his many poems, two novels and three plays — passed from its beginnings in the late symbolist movement of la Belle Epoque towards a highly personal and dense Christian cosmology comparable to that of Dante and Milton. A recluse and metaphysician, his poems were visionary and tormented, concerned with love and loneliness and full of alchemical imagery. Milosz also wrote essays. He was a distant cousin of Polish writer Czeslaw Milosz, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1980.

Contents

Oscar Milosz CHAMPAGNE ET LA NUIT DE NOEL JULIEN CHAMPAGNE

Life

I am a Lithuanian poet, writing in French

Oscar Milosz was born in Careja (near Mogilev in present day Belarus). Earlier these lands had belonged to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and later to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, but at the time was part of the Russian Empire. It was here that he spent his childhood. He was baptized on July 2, 1886, at St. Alexander's Church in Warsaw. His father, Vladislas de Lubicz Milosz, was a former officer in the Russian army and his mother, Marie Rosalie Rosenthal, was a Polish Jew from Warsaw. His parents did not marry until Oscar Milosz was 17. In 1889, Milosz's parents placed him at the Lycee Janson de Sailly in Paris. He began writing poems in 1894 and started to frequent artistic circles, meeting Oscar Wilde and Jean Moreas. After finishing at the Lycee, he enrolled at the Ecole des langues orientales, where he studied Syriac and Hebrew.

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His first book of verse, Le Poeme des Decadences, appeared in 1899. Milosz travelled widely in Europe and North Africa and explored many foreign literatures. He was an excellent linguist and was fluent in English, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Polish, as well as being able to read Latin and Hebrew. Later in life, he would learn Lithuanian and Basque too. He chose to write his works in French.

On December 14, 1914, following on an intensive reading of the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg, Milosz experienced an illumination, a divine vision that he described to one of his friends as "I have seen the spiritual sun." On the wake of this vision, his poetry became more hermetic and more mature. He began the study of alchemy, the Kabbalah, Jacob Boehme, Paracelsus, the history of secret esoteric orders. At the same time, he engaged in Catholic meditative practices.

In 1916, during World War I, Milosz was conscripted to the Russian division of the French army and was assigned to the press corps. Here he learned about the growing movement for Lithuanian independence. By the end of the war when both Lithuania and Poland were effectively independent again, Milosz chose to identify with Lithuania - even though he did not yet speak Lithuanian — because he believed that it had been the original homeland of his ancestors in the 13th century. After the Russian revolution of 1917, Milosz's estate at Careja came under Soviet control and was seized by the Bolsheviks. In 1920 when France recognized the independence of Lithuania, he was appointed officially as Charge d'Affaires for the new state. In 1931 he became a French citizen and was awarded the Legion d'honneur the same year.

Ill with cancer, he died of a heart attack at his house in Fontainebleau in 1939.

Works

Milosz collected Lithuanian folk tales, and wrote fiction, drama, and essays. Largely neglected during his lifetime, Milosz has increasingly come to be considered as an important figure in French poetry. ″He tried to integrate into Christian metaphysics the mystical writings of the Kabbalah, Neoplatonic tradition, and other Hermetic sciences. In this regard, Milosz considered himself the disciple and follower of Renaissance alchemists. In a letter of 1926 to James Chouvet, he confesses that "... studies taught me the only thing they could, namely, that the truth is one and that some respect and love are enough to discover it in the depths of our consciousness. "″.

Some of his works in French:

  • 1899 : Le Poeme des Decadences (poetry)
  • 1906 : Les Sept Solitudes (poetry)
  • 1910 : L'Amoureuse Initiation (novel)
  • 1911 : Les Elements (poetry)
  • 1913 : Miguel Manara. Mystere en six tableaux. (play)
  • 1915 : Poemes
  • 1917 : Epitre a Storge (first part of Ars Magna)
  • 1918 : Adramandoni (six poems)
  • 1919 : Mephisobeth (play)
  • 1922 : La Confession de Lemuel
  • 1924 : Ars Magna (philosophy)
  • 1926-27 : Les Arcanes (poetry)
  • 1930 : Contes et Fabliaux de la vieille Lithuanie (translation of folk tales)
  • 1932 : Origines iberiques du peuple juif (essay)
  • 1933 : Contes lithuaniens de ma Mere l'Oye (translation of folk tales)
  • 1936 : Les Origines de la nation lithuanienne (essay)
  • 1938 : La Clef de l'Apocalypse
  • Works translated into English:

  • 1928, a collection of 26 Lithuanian songs;
  • 1930, Lithuanian Tales and Stories;
  • 1933, Lithuanian Tales;
  • 1937, The origin of the Lithuanian Nation, in which he tried to persuade the reader that Lithuanians have the same origin as Jews from the Iberian Peninsula.
  • 1985, The Noble Traveller: The Life and Writings of Oskar Milosz, ed. Christopher Bamford (Lindisfarne Press).
  • 1993, Poems of Milosz, translated by David Gascoyne (Enitharmon Pamphlets, 1993); reprinted in Selected Verse Translations, David Gascoyne (Enitharmon Press, 1996).
  • Opera based on his poems:

  • 2004, Books of Silence, Composer - Latvian Andris Dzenitis
  • References

    Oscar Milosz Wikipedia


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