Maria Konopnicka


Maria Konopnicka was a Polish poet, novelist, children's writer, translator, journalist, critic, and activist for women's rights and for Polish independence. She used pseudonyms, including Jan Sawa. She was one of the most important poets of Poland's Positivist period.

Life

Konopnicka was born in Suwałki on 23 May 1842. Her father, Józef Wasiłowski, was a lawyer. She was home-schooled and spent a year at a convent pension of the Sisters of Eucharistic Adoration in Warsaw.
, 1902
She made her debut as a writer in 1870 with the poem, "W zimowy poranek". She gained popularity after the 1876 publication of her poem, "W górach", which was praised by future Nobel laureate Henryk Sienkiewicz.
In 1862 she married Jarosław Konopnicki. They had six children. The marriage was not a happy one, as her husband disapproved of her writing career. In a letter to a friend, she described herself as "having no family" and as being "a bird locked in a cage". Eventually in 1878, in an unofficial separation, she left her husband and moved to Warsaw to pursue writing. She took her children with her. She would often travel in Europe; her first major trip was to Italy in 1883. She spent the years 1890–1903 living abroad in Europe.
Her life has been described as "turbulent", including extramarital romances, deaths, and mental illnesses in the family. She was a friend of a Polish woman poet of the Positivist period, Eliza Orzeszkowa, and of the painter and activist Maria Dulębianka. It has been speculated that she was bisexual or a lesbian, though this has not been properly researched, and the question is not usually mentioned in biographies of Konopnicka.
In addition to being an active writer, she was also a social activist, organizing and participating in protests against the repression of ethnic and religious minorities in Prussia. She was also involved in women's-rights activism.
Her literary work in the 1880s gained wide recognition in Poland. In 1884 she began writing children's literature, and in 1888 she debuted as an adult-prose writer with Cztery nowele. Due to the growing popularity of her writings, in 1902 a number of Polish activists decided to reward her by buying her a manor house. It was purchased with funds collected by a number of organizations and activists. As Poland was not an independent country at the time, and as her writings were politically uncongenial to the Prussian and Russian authorities, a location was chosen in the more tolerant Austrian partition of pre-Partition Poland. In 1903 she received a manor in Żarnowiec, where she arrived on 8 September. She would spend most springs and summers there, but she would still travel about Europe in fall and winter.
She died in Lwów on 8 October 1910. She was buried there in the Łyczakowski Cemetery.

Work

Konopnicka wrote prose as well as poems. One of her most characteristic styles were poems stylized as folk songs. She would try her hand at many genres of literature, such as reportage sketches, narrative memoirs, psychological portrait studies and others.
Common theme in her works included the oppression and poverty of the peasantry, the workers and the Polish Jews. Her works were also highly patriotic and nationalistic. Due to her sympathy for the Jewish people she was described as a philosemite.
One of her best known works is the long epic in six cantos, Mister Balcer in Brazil, on the Polish emigrants in Brazil. Another one was Rota which set to the music by Feliks Nowowiejski two years later became an unofficial anthem of Poland, particularly in the territories of the Prussian Partition. This patriotic poem was strongly critical of the Germanization policies and thus described as anti-German.
Her most famous children's literature work is the 1896 O krasonoludkach i sierotce Marysi. Her children literature works were well received, as compared to many other works of the period.
Maria Konopnicka also composed a poem about the execution of the Irish patriot, Robert Emmet. Emmet was executed by the British authorities in Dublin in 1803, but Konopnicka published her poem on the topic in 1908.
She was also a translator. Her translated works include Ada Negri's Fatalita and Tempeste, published in Poland in 1901.

Memorials

Poetry