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mental disease. Józef
Czechowicz's mother, Małgorzata, née Sułek, was a good-natured person of a tiny posture. 10 years older than her husband, she died in 1936. The poet dedicated many of his poems to her. Apart from Józef, Paweł and Małgorzata had three more children: Janek, Katarzyna and Stanisław.
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In his approach to rhyme and metrics, Czechowicz was unorthodox. However, as Czesław Miłosz cogently points out, "all of his poetry is intrinsically linked to the so-called 'bourgeois lyricism' of the seventeenth century and to folk songs." He emphasised a striking harmonious musicality in his poetry
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Czesław Miłosz notes that the very voice of this poet, barely audible and murmuring, cannot be compared to any kind of
Western poetry, and it appears untranslatable in that it exploits concealed sonorities characteristic of one particular language. Still, some analogies can be suggested: "His lyrics
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Czechowicz is often described as a poet of the city, of small towns and provinces. The supernatural character of the worlds presented in his poetry is intensified by the use of personifications, including nature and landscape elements. His rejection of capital letters and punctuation also increases
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The museum was inaugurated on 9 September 1968, on the 29th anniversary of
Czechowicz's tragic death. Originally, it was situated at 10 Narutowicza St. Since 9 September 2002 the exhibitions of the museum are accessible to the public in an old tenement building at 3 Złota St. (in the Old Town).
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Józef
Czechowicz came from a poor family living in Lublin. He was born in a basement flat, which has not survived to these days, at 3 Kapucyńska Street. His father, Paweł Czechowicz, worked as a janitor and, later, as a meter leader in the Warsaw Bank in Lublin. In 1912, he died due to a severe
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and supported many of his writing friends, with both finances and publishing. He would take care of a group of poets who used to live at 9 Dobra St: Henryk Domiński, Wacław
Mrozowski and Bronisław Ludwik Michalski. While he was living in Warsaw, he developed friendships with poets such as
200:, Czechowicz left Warsaw and returned to his native Lublin. He was convinced that being outside the capital city would keep him safe. On 9 September 1939, between 9 and 10 a.m., he was at a barber's shop at 46 Krakowskie Przedmieście St. when the building was bombarded and he died.
104:. For this visionary poet, verse seemed to be a question of imagination; he would play with word consonances, dreamlike associations, musicality, and create picturesque visions. Czechowicz lived and worked in Lublin before moving to Warsaw; he also died in Lublin, a few days after
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The Józef
Czechowicz Literary Museum in Lublin is a department of the Lublin Province Museum. The main goal of the museum is to collect and share manuscripts and publications by or about Czechowicz, though not exclusively (other writers from the Lublin region are also included).
124:, in 1920, he volunteered to join the Polish Army but later came back home to continue his education. The poet attended the Teacher’s College, the Higher Teacher’s Course in Lublin and completed his education in 1929, graduating from the Institute of Special Pedagogy in Warsaw.
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by using onomatopoeia, phonetic instrumentation, and sonorous neologisms as well as selecting originally harmonious rare assonances and rhymes.
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Józef
Czechowicz was himself a homosexual. His sexual orientation significantly influenced his writing but it also led him to face repression.
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He also worked as a journalist and an editor of newspapers and magazines based in Lublin. He followed this occupation after he moved to
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In 1913 Czechowicz went to a
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poet. Known as a nostalgic, catastrophic author, he was also the leader of the literary avant-garde and bohemians in
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can be likened to chamber music made poignant by the counterpoint of dark philosophical and metaphysical problems."
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Some poems have been translated into
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Czechowicz envisioned himself being "struck by a bomb." Having heard about the outbreak of
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A page dedicated to
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A website of the Lublin Province Museum and Józef Czechowicz Literary Museum
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At first, he worked as a teacher in Brasława, Słobódka and Włodzimierz (
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Kowalczykowa, Alina (2004). "The Interwar Years – 1918-1939" in:
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the atmosphere of mystery and ambiguity that typify his works.
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Panorama der polnischen Literatur des 20. Jahrhunderts. Poesie
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Józef Czechowicz Literary Museum in Lublin, Złota Street
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the poetic prose story "Opowieść o papierowej koronie" (
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As Alina Kowalczykowa indicates, in the poetry volume
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