Kazimiera Zawistowska

Kazimiera Zawistowska de domo Jasieńska, pseudonym Ira, (1870–1902) was a Polish poet and translator.

Kazimiera Zawistowska

Zawistowska was an author of modernist erotic and landscape poems related with mysticism, symbolism and Parnassianism. She published her works in Kraków and Warsaw magazines – Życie, Krytyka and Chimera. Zawistowska translated poems of Belgian and French symbolists, including Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine, Albert Samain.

Biography

Kazimiera Zawistowska was born in 1870 in Rasztowce, Podolia. After education, she moved to Switzerland and Italy. After back to Poland, she married with Stanisław Jastrzębiec-Zawistowski and lived with him in Supranówka in Podolia.

She died on February 28, 1902 in Kraków. The cause of death was probably suicide.

Notable works

Collections of poems published posthumously
  • Poezje (1903) – with preface written by Zenon Przesmycki
  • Poezje (1923)
  • Utwory zebrane (1982)
gollark: People do work, because they can get money, and money can be exchanged for goods and services™.
gollark: > literal slavesThat is not accurate by any sane definition of "slaves".
gollark: Having everyone produce lots of things individually would be waaaaay less efficient and worse.
gollark: What, you expect everyone to individually produce their entire supply chain?
gollark: I mean, the existence of a bunch of products generally, but not particular versions of them.

References

  • "Zawistowska Kazimiera". Internetowa encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
  • "Zawistowska Kazimiera z Jasieńskich". WIEM Encyklopedia (in Polish). Retrieved 2007-12-12.
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