Poet in the new world Poems, 1946-1953

Czesław Miłosz

Book - 2025

"A new collection of work from Nobel laureate Czeslaw Milosz that includes previously untranslated poems written during his time in Washington, D.C. and his years in Europe before and after"--

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Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Poésie
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2025]
Language
English
Polish
Main Author
Czesław Miłosz (author)
Other Authors
Robert Hass (translator), David A. Frick
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Translated from the Polish.
Physical Description
xvi, 143 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780063422995
  • Introduction
  • 1945, Warsaw
  • In Warsaw
  • 1946, New York and Washington, DC
  • Child of Europe
  • Two Men in Rome
  • 1947, Washington, DC
  • To Jonathan Swift
  • Song on Porcelain
  • On the Song of a Bird on the Banks of the Potomac
  • The Spirit of the Laws
  • A Reminder
  • Birth
  • A Family
  • Ocean
  • Day and Night
  • Reflections
  • Treatise on Morals
  • 1948, Washington, DC
  • Summer Movies in Central Park
  • Untitled
  • The People's Graphic Workshop (El Taller de Gráfica Popular)
  • A Concert
  • The Journey
  • The Palace of My Muses
  • To Tadeusz Rózewicz; Poet
  • To Albert Einstein (fragments)
  • 1949, Washington, DC
  • My Mother's Grave
  • A Legend
  • To Laura
  • Siegfried and Erika
  • A Thought About Asia
  • A Little Negro Girl Playing Chopin
  • He Has No Sight
  • Earth
  • Carolers
  • Antigone
  • 1950, Washington, DC
  • To Myself, for an Album, New Year's 1950
  • In Memory of Teresa Zarnower
  • Marsh (Zulawy)
  • Three Choruses from an Unwritten Drama "Hiroshima"
  • Notebook: Pennsylvania
  • You Who Wronged
  • 1951, Europe
  • Entombed in Their Ancestors
  • Paris, 1951
  • Mittelbergheim
  • 1952-1953: Europeh
  • The Faust of Warsaw
  • Notebook: Europe
  • Notebook: Dordogne
  • Notebook: Bons by Lake Leman
  • Notes
  • A Note on the Translation
  • Further Readings
  • Index of Translators
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

As editors and translators Hass and Frick explain in the introduction, this stunning volume from Nobel laureate Miłosz (The Last Poems) presents poems written between 1946 and 1950, "when he served as diplomatic official for the newly formed government of Poland at the consulate in New York City for six months, and then as cultural attaché to the embassy in Washington, D.C., for four years." It's a striking document of the poet transplanted to a new milieu, one in which he was "ideologically totally alien." The poems themselves are bruised and lyrical, suffused with wry wisdom, cutting insights, and addresses to the self: "You swore never to be/ A ritual mourner." Aphoristic phrases ("we live in the age of victorious justice"; "Enough about books. It is people who are important") brush shoulders with extended narratives and elliptical explorations of violence witnessed and endured. Powerful, graceful, and thoughtfully contextualized, these poems offer rare insight into Miłosz the man and the artist. (Feb.)

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