biography donald rayfield
Witness to a Century
Miłosz: A Biography By Andrzej Franaszek
(Edited & translated by Aleksandra & Michael Parker)
(Harvard University Press 526pp £30)
Miłosz: looking to God
Any single decade of Czesław Miłosz’s life was eventful enough to provide ample material for a volume of biography on its own. He lived to the age of ninety-three and his collected poems form a volume of 1,400 pages, so this 500-page study of his life and work is a miracle of compression. Only the physical strength of a bear and the patience of St Simeon Stylites, plus a degree of luck, could have enabled Miłosz to survive the many catastrophes and disappointments he experienced before finally receiving, aged almost seventy, the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1980.
His childhood was scarred by the devastation wrought on his native land, the Lithuanian-, Polish- and Jewish-populated area around Vilnius (then Wilno), during the First World War by the German and Russian armies, a period when his family had to flee to survive. This conflict was followed by the Polish–Soviet War and skirmishes between Poland and Lithuania. Miłosz’s turbulent student days in Vilnius required him to negotiate a way between fiercely antagonistic groups of left-wing radicals and Polish reactionaries, to whom, as a Lithuanian, he was a figure of suspicion. As an adult living in Poland he endured both the German and the Soviet invasions of that country. He spent much of the Second World War in Warsaw, one of Europe’s most devastated cities, and was a witness to the Warsaw Ghetto’s uprising and its suppression. He bravely aided the resistance and helped to maintain, against all the odds, Polish cultural life, saving the university’s library from the Germans and even publishing books using almost unobtainable paper and machinery.
Following the communist takeover, Miłosz tried to reconcile his hatred of living under totalitarianism with his desire to continue battling for cultural freedom. He accepted an appointment to the Polish embassy in Washington, DC, soon becoming cultural attaché. Recalled to Warsaw in 1950 by the communist regime, which had grown alarmed at his pronouncements, he was subsequently sent to France, ostensibly as a diplomat, but in fact to allow him to defect in a manner that would not cause the Polish government to lose face. His wife stayed in the USA, too afraid of abduction to return to Europe; Miłosz, slandered by Polish émigrés in the USA and feared by McCarthyites to be a communist tool, was stuck in France. In this miserable state he produced his finest prose and poems. In the 1960s, after finally emigrating to the USA, he became the doyen of Slavic studies there and it was in 1980, after receiving the Nobel Prize his wife had been predicting for forty years, that he emerged onto the international stage. In the 1980s, together with Pope John Paul II and Lech Wałęsa, Miłosz forced the Polish regime to pay attention to demands for reform, in the process helping to initiate the collapse of communism in eastern Europe.
Miłosz’s poetry is never loud or formally innovative, and rarely indignant. When it is intimate, the reader is politely shut out from the details of that intimacy. He recalls moving or horrifying scenes in tranquillity and spurns verbal fireworks, preferring a subtle build-up of images and
Literary Review | april 2017 6