Groza władzy. O Królu Popielu
Abstract
King Popiel opens Miłosz’s first poetry book that was published entirely overseas,
after the author’s emigration. The book opens a new stage of his artistic career. It
records a reflection on the nature of power. Various languages — mythic, magic and
scientific - collide in the book. Points of reference include: Slavic mythology, Romantic
historiosophy and the twentieth-century idea of progress. None of these ways of
seeing is sufficient for a full description of power. Each of them is undermined by
irony. This interpretation is also confirmed in Miłosz’s opinions expressed in essays
about history of the first half of the 20th century, which the author knew from firsthand
experience and in Miłosz’s criticism of Polish messianism and his distanced
attitude to scientism. Power, when described in metaphysical categories and as
a component of what the poet calls człowieczość [humanness], turns out to be a domain
of evil that defies description and understanding.
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