Lőrinc Szabó
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Lőrinc Szabó (Miskolc, March 31, 1900 – Budapest, October 3, 1957) was a Hungarian poet and literary translator.
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[edit] Biography
He was born in Miskolc as the son of an engine driver, Lőrinc Szabó sr., and Ilona Panyiczky. The family moved to Balassagyarmat when he was 3 years old. He attended school in Balassagyarmat and Debrecen. He studied at the ELTE in Budapest where he befriended Mihály Babits. He didn't finish his studies; instead he began to work for the literary periodical Az Est in 1921, shortly after he married Klára Mikes, the daughter of Lajos Mikes. He worked there until 1944. Between 1927 and 1928 he was a founder and editor of the periodical Pandora.
His first published poems appeared in the 1920s in the Nyugat ("The West"). His first book of poetry was published in 1922 under the title Föld, erdő, Isten ("Earth, Forest, God") and received considerable success. He got the Baumgarten Award in 1932, 1937 and 1943. As a translator, he translated several works of Shakespeare (Timon of Athens in 1935, As You Like It in 1938, Macbeth in 1939, Troilus and Cressida in 1948); Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal (together with Babits and Árpád Tóth); François Villon's Grand Testament, Molière's L'École des femmes , Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther, and works of Verlaine, Tyutchev, Pushkin and Krylov.
He fought in World War II, met Gyula Gömbös and on a literary congress at Lillafüred he emphasized the beauty of war poetry. This led to him being considered right-wing, and because of this, after the war he was left out of cultural life and could publish only translations, not his own works. His importance was recognised only shortly before his death, when he received the Kossuth Award. He died of a heart attack.
[edit] Poetry
Several of his poems were written to his children Lóci and Klári, while in other poems he remembers his own childhood.
In 1950 his long-time girlfriend Erzsébet Korzáti committed suicide. His sonnet cycle The 26th Year was written in her memory. it was published in 1957.
[edit] Books of poetry
- Föld, erdő, Isten (Earth, Forest, God, 1922)
- Kalibán (Caliban, 1923)
- Fény, fény, fény (Light, Light, Light, 1926)
- A Sátán műremekei (Masterpieces of Satan, 1926)
- Te meg a világ (You and the World, 1932)
- Különbéke (Separate Peace, 1936)
- Harc az ünnepért (Fight for the Holiday, 1938)
- Régen és most (Then and Now, 1943)
- Tücsökzene (Cricket Song, 1947)
- A huszonhatodik év (The 26th Year, 1957)
[edit] Sources
see Hungarian Wikipedia
Early sources | Old Hungarian 'Lamentations of Mary' | Gesta Hungarorum | Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum | Chronicon Pictum | Endre Ady |
10-17th century | Bálint Balassi | József Kármán | Sebestyén Tinódi Lantos | Janus Pannonius | Miklós Zrínyi | |
17-20th century | Zoltán Ambrus | János Arany | János Batsányi | Dániel Berzsenyi | Sándor Bródy | Mihály Csokonai Vitéz | József Eötvös | András Fáy | Mihály Fazekas | Géza Gárdonyi | Mór Jókai | Ferenc Kazinczy | Zsigmond Kemény | Ferenc Kölcsey | Kálmán Mikszáth | Zsigmond Móricz | Sándor Petőfi | István Széchenyi | Mihály Vörösmarty | |
20-21st century | Endre Ady | György Faludy | István Fekete | Miksa Fenyő | Attila József | Imre Kertész | Dezső Kosztolányi | Sándor Márai | Ferenc Molnár | Ferenc Móra | Miklós Radnóti | Lőrinc Szabó | Magda Szabó | Antal Szerb | Árpád Tóth | Albert Wass | Sándor Weöres | |
List more... |