Wieslaw (idyll)


Wieslaw - an idyll of Kazimierz Brodziński published in 1820 in "The Warsaw Diaries".

The piece was a realization of the assumptions presented by Brodziński in his dissertation on classicism and romance. The resumption was slightly different from the first issue. Wiesław deviated from the previously formed idyll. The action took place in the countryside, but instead of the stereotypical world of shepherds a presentation of a particular rural community appeared.

The idyll presents the love story of Wieslaw and Halina, shown against the background of the Kościuszko insurrection and the village of the early nineteenth century. The characters find happiness in the family and neighboring environment, in contact with nature, in the direction of their feelings and moral virtues. The idealized world in which they live is characterized by order and harmony, represents the unspoilt soul of the Polish nation. But the piece also presents the contemporary customs and folklore (description of swats and weddings, folk songs), which makes the world invented by the author mixed with realistic descriptions.

In the time of the Partitions, Brodziński's work was very popular and he consolidated his attachment to his native tradition. Adam Mickiewicz in the epilogue of Pan Tadeusz mentions that Wieslaw was frequently read ("In my days at a village funeral / Reads under a lime in the grass / Song of Justyna, a novel about Wieslaw"). Bibliography

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