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Selected Polish Tales

By Hutchinson, Joshua

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Book Id: WPLBN0000634127
Format Type: PDF eBook
File Size: 372.07 KB
Reproduction Date: 2005

Title: Selected Polish Tales  
Author: Hutchinson, Joshua
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Literature, Literature & thought, Writing.
Collections: Blackmask Online Collection
Historic
Publication Date:
Publisher: Blackmask Online

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Hutchinson, J. (n.d.). Selected Polish Tales. Retrieved from http://self.gutenberg.org/


Description
Preface: My friend the late Miss Else C. M. Benecke left a number of Polish stories in rough translation, and I am carrying out her wishes in editing them and handing them over to English readers. In spite of failing health during the last years of her life, she worked hard at translations from this beautiful but difficult language, and the two volumes, Tales by Polish Authors and More Tales by Polish Authors, published by Mr. Basil Blackwell at Oxford, were among the first attempts to make modern Polish fiction known in this country. In both these volumes I collaborated with her. England is fortunate in counting Joseph Conrad among her own novelists; although a Pole by birth he is one of the greatest masters of English style. The Polish authors who have written in their own language have perhaps been most successful in the short story. Often it is so slight that it can hardly be called a story, but each of these sketches conveys a distinct atmosphere of the country and the people, and shows the individuality of each writer. The unhappy state of Poland for more than 150 years has placed political and social problems in the foreground of Polish literature. Writers are therefore judged and appraised by their fellow?countrymen as much by their patriotism as by their literary and artistic merits. Of the authors whose work is presented in this volume Prus (Aleksander Glowacki), the veteran of modern Polish novelists, is the one most loved by his own countrymen. His books are written partly with a moral object, as each deals with a social evil. But while he exposes the evil, his warm heart and strong sense of justice?combined with a sense of humour?make him fair and even generous to all.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents: Selected Polish Tales, 1 -- Various, 1 -- Preface, 2 -- THE OUTPOST. BY BOLESLAW PRUS, 3 -- Chapter I, 3 -- Chapter II, 6 -- Chapter III, 16 -- Chapter IV, 24 -- Chapter V, 34 -- Chapter VI, 43 -- Chapter VII, 62 -- Chapter VIII, 76 -- Chapter IX, 90 -- Chapter X, 106 -- Chapter XI, 122 -- A PINCH OF SALT. BY ADAM SZYMANSKI, 128 -- KOWALSKI THE CARPENTER. A SIBERIAN SKETCH BY ADAM SZYMINSKI, 133 -- FOREBODINGS. TWO SKETCHES BY STEFAN ZEROMSKI[1], 143 -- A POLISH SCENE. BY WLADYSLAW ST. REYMONT[1], 147 -- DEATH. BY WLADYSLAW ST. REYMONT, 153 -- THE SENTENCE. BY J. KADEN?BANDKOWSKI, 167 -- 'P.P.C.' (A LADY'S NARRATIVE). BY MME RYGIER?NALKOWSKA, 184 -- I, 185 -- II, 186

 
 



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