The text is an attempt to prove that the descent to the underworld that the poem depicts (written after Carol’s death) led the Old Poet-Orpheus to absolute, completely objective and maximally interiorized knowledge of loss. The knowledge is of certain weight to the author, who only a few years earlier wrote a dramatic poem entitled ‘It’ (‘To’) and made it the first text of his poetic book under the same title. Unlike the case of the ancient Orpheus, or other later Orpheuses, that knowledge is not, however, the character’s final destination. The ending of the poem allows the reader to assume that — typically of Miłosz — it is an opening to the grand epiphany of existence
The paper is divided into two parts. The first part offers a close reading of Marina Tsvetaevas 1923...
“Fishes leapt out from the blue water because of his sweet music”. Music, poetry and soul in Orpheus...
Orpheus sings the loss of Eurydice. He sings her absence, and the voice of that absence stirs the sh...
The article is a proposal for a new interpretation of Czesław Miłosz’s poem. The author presents tha...
Although absent from early Archaic sources by the sixth century BCE Orpheus the poet had become syno...
poet Ibykos in our earliest literary source on this mysterious figure, whose most famous accomplishm...
ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD IMAGE Unfinished Sketch Orpheus in the Underworld image addresses the issu...
The Papyrus found in 1962 contains a commentary on an Orphic Theogony including the quotations of mo...
The paper presents an analysis and interpretation of the poem by Miłosz, which elaborate the contex...
ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD IMAGE (Unfinished Sketch) Orpheus in the Underworld image addresses the is...
Ovid’s representation of Orpheus is strictly related to Virgil’s texts. A wide range of studies have...
The article is devoted to examine the compound understanding of the poet's destiny and his mission o...
The essay examines the references of Orpheus and Eurydice by Czesław Miłosz to earlier literary inca...
The subject deliberated upon in the present paper is the motive of death as presented in Żale Orfeus...
he most important context for many 20th century references to the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice remai...
The paper is divided into two parts. The first part offers a close reading of Marina Tsvetaevas 1923...
“Fishes leapt out from the blue water because of his sweet music”. Music, poetry and soul in Orpheus...
Orpheus sings the loss of Eurydice. He sings her absence, and the voice of that absence stirs the sh...
The article is a proposal for a new interpretation of Czesław Miłosz’s poem. The author presents tha...
Although absent from early Archaic sources by the sixth century BCE Orpheus the poet had become syno...
poet Ibykos in our earliest literary source on this mysterious figure, whose most famous accomplishm...
ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD IMAGE Unfinished Sketch Orpheus in the Underworld image addresses the issu...
The Papyrus found in 1962 contains a commentary on an Orphic Theogony including the quotations of mo...
The paper presents an analysis and interpretation of the poem by Miłosz, which elaborate the contex...
ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD IMAGE (Unfinished Sketch) Orpheus in the Underworld image addresses the is...
Ovid’s representation of Orpheus is strictly related to Virgil’s texts. A wide range of studies have...
The article is devoted to examine the compound understanding of the poet's destiny and his mission o...
The essay examines the references of Orpheus and Eurydice by Czesław Miłosz to earlier literary inca...
The subject deliberated upon in the present paper is the motive of death as presented in Żale Orfeus...
he most important context for many 20th century references to the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice remai...
The paper is divided into two parts. The first part offers a close reading of Marina Tsvetaevas 1923...
“Fishes leapt out from the blue water because of his sweet music”. Music, poetry and soul in Orpheus...
Orpheus sings the loss of Eurydice. He sings her absence, and the voice of that absence stirs the sh...