Zbigniew Herbert The poet and essayist,
author of plays and radio dramas, was born in 1924. He was a
writer of great accomplishment and an exceptional artistic and
moral authority whose biography was tragically enmeshed in the
history of the twentieth century. Herbert was born in Lwow.
During the war, he began studying Polish literature at the
clandestine Jan Kazimierz University. He also came into contact
with the Home Army resistance movement. In 1944, in Cracow he
began studying in the Fine Arts Academy. He also studied law and
philosophy. Herbert moved to Warsaw in 1950. His first book of
poetry, String of Light, came out only in 1956. For many years,
he was a regular contributor to Tygodnik Powszechny, while also
publishing in many other domestic and emigré journals. In
December, 1975, he was a signatory of the "Protest of 59"
against the planned changes in the Polish constitution. He
joined the editorial staff of the illegal magazine Zapis in
1981, and went to France, where he lived for several years
afterwards, in 1986. After returning to Poland, he lived in
Warsaw until his death in 1998.
Herbert won many Polish and foreign literary awards, including
the Koscielski Prize(1963), the Austrian Nikolaus Lenau Preis
(1965), the Herder Prize (1973), and the Jerusalem Prize (1990).
He is one of the most frequently translated Polish writers.
Reviewers have identified the keys to an understanding of
Herbert's poetry as disinheritance, irony and faithfulness. His
verse is an attempt at renewing tradition as a fundamental value
for the life of the individual. His lyrical tales contrast the
moral sterility and disorientation of contemporary man to the
ethical code of the heroes of Mediterranean culture, the
"defenders of kingdoms without end and cities of ashes". Pan
Cogito, the hero of a famous 1974 cycle and of many later works,
personifies the disparity between the feeling of reality and the
yearning for fame. "He is a gray man, a reader of newspapers and
habitué of dirty peripheral districts, and yet on the other hand
he is the reflection of the popular consciousness without
submitting to it; he seeks support in the lost heritage of
mankind," wrote Stanislaw Baranczak in his 1984 study of
Herbert, Fugitive from Utopia.
Irony complicates the apparent simplicity and unambiguity of
Herbert's verse. This irony is also an artistic device and an
attitude towards existence. The objects of ironic exposure are
the appearances that masquerade as the essence of things (as in
The Return of Pan Cogito), the appearances of truth that
masquerade as truth itself (The Ornamenters), the conceit of
cunning and strength (The Power of Taste), and the attachment to
false concepts (Considerations of the Problem of the Nation.
Irony turns out to be a form of solidarity, since it offers
people liberation from the authority of the community, helping
them to understand the world and to live in dignity.
Herbert's essays, on the other hand, seem to be mere "reports on
journeys" to the places where European culture was born and
flourished. The Barbarian in the Garden offers "accounts" of
trips to France and Italy, and Still Life with Horse-Bit is an
account of a trip to seventeenth-century Holland, swept with a
passion for collecting paintings. "From prehistoric cave
paintings through Greek temples and Gothic cathedrals, to the
landscapes, interiors and still lifes of seventeenth-century
Holland, Herbert constructs a lecture on the way that art
becomes human nature," writes Ewa Wiegandt. In Still Life with
Horse-Bit, Herbert amazes us with his depiction of how naturally
art functioned in the society that produced Rembrandt, Vermeer,
and hundreds of other lesser-or better-known artists.
This is how Herbert concluded one of his sketches: We are the
ones who are poor, very poor. The great majority of contemporary
art comes out in favor of chaos, gesticulating in vacuity or
recounting the history of its own sterile spirit. All the Old
Masters, without exception, could say with Racine: 'We work in
order to please the public', which means that they believed in
the sense of their work, and in the possibility of interhuman
understanding... Praise be to such naiveté