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EN
Stanisław Maykowski (1880-1961) a poet, theatre critic, teacher, co-author (with Juliusz Balicki) of popular textbooks for learning Polish, is hardly ever associated with Przemyśl. It was first of all Lvov, though also Poznań and Cracow, that were the major stops on his way and to those cities he was most attached. And though Maykowski was most famous as an author, one should not forget he was a gimnazjum teacher by profession. This fragment of his Pamiętnik (Memoir) describes his memories of the year-long stay in Przemyśl (January 1917 – January 1918). In them he refers to the realities of everyday life in the town (the legions, Gimnazjum no. 1 where he worked, artistic life).
PL
Opracowanie jest rekonstrukcją zdarzeń wywołanych przez publikację w lwowskiej „Gazecie Wieczornej” blasfemicznego wiersza „Ojcze nasz”. Jego autorem był popularny poeta, a zarazem nauczyciel gimnazjalny Stanisław Maykowski (1880–1961), późniejszy twórca cenionych czytanek do nauki języka polskiego. Historia konfiskaty numeru pisma, zwolnienia autora z pracy i postawienia go w stan oskarżenia przed sądem karnym we Lwowie została odnotowana w kilku źródłach historycznoliterackich. Na podstawie rękopisów Maykowskiego, wzmianek w książkach pamiętnikarskich, a przede wszystkim wielu tekstów prasowych autor artykułu prezentuje epizod z 1914 roku jako element życia literackiego i zdarzenie odsłaniające splot zjawisk społeczno-politycznych powtarzalnych w różnych czasach, szerokościach geograficznych i formacjach kulturowych. Artykuł kończy się pełnym tekstem wiersza „Ojcze nasz”.
EN
The paper is a reconstruction of events caused by a publication of a blasphemous poem “Ojcze nasz” (“The Lord’s Prayer”) in a Lvov “Gazeta Wieczorna” (“Evening Newspaper”). Its creator was a popular poet and middle school teacher Stanisław Maykowski (1880–1961), later an author of highly valued readings used to teach Polish. A few literary historical sources include mentions about the history of the newspaper’s confiscation, the author’s dismissal from work and charging him in the Lvov Criminal Court of Justice. Based on Maykowski’s handwritings, on remarks placed in memoir books, but primarily on numerous press articles, Jan A. Choroszy presents this 1914 issue as an element of literary life and an incident that reveals a chain of socio-political phenomena repeatable in various times, regions, and cultural formations. In its coda, the article contains the full text of “The Lord’s Prayer”.
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