Viktor Dyk
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Viktor Dyk (IPA: [ˈvɪktor ˈdɪk]) (December 31, 1877, Pšovka u Mělníka – May 14, 1931, near the island of Lopud, Yugoslavia) was a well-known Czech poet, prose writer, playwright, politician, political writer and lawyer.
Viktor Dyk studied at a gymnasium in Prague (one of his teachers was Alois Jirásek) and than at the Faculty of Law of Charles University in Prague.
In 1911, he became involved in politics and joined the Státoprávně pokroková strana. During the First World War, he was imprisoned in Vienna for his resistance activities against Austria-Hungary. In 1918, he co-founded the Czechoslovak National Democratic Party (in Czech: Československá národní demokracie).
His political views were conservative and nationalist. In the times of the First Republic of Czechoslovakia, Viktor Dyk was one of the prominent intellectual opponents of the leftish president Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk.
Viktor Dyk died of a heart failure while swimming in the sea near the island of Lopud.
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[edit] Works
[edit] Poetry
- A porta inferi, 1897
- Síla života, 1898
- Marnosti, 1900
- Satiry a sarkasmy, 1905
- Milá sedmi loupežníků, 1906
- Pohádky z naší vesnice, 1910
- Giuseppe Moro, 1911
- Zápas Jiřího Macků, 1916
- Noci chiméry, 1917
- Devátá vlna 1930
- Lehké a těžké kroky 1915
- Anebo 1917
- Okno 1921
- Poslední rok 1922
[edit] Prose
- Stud, 1900
- Hučí jez a jiné prózy, 1903
- Konec Hackenschmidův, 1904
- Prosinec, 1906
- Prsty Habakukovy, 1906
- Píseň o vrbě, 1908
- Příhody, 1911
- Krysař, 1915
- Tajemná dobrodružství Alexeje Iványče Kozulinova, 1923
- Tichý dům, 1921
- Zlý vítr, 1922
- Prsty Habakukovy, 1925
- Můj přítel Čehona, 1925
- Dědivadelní hra, 1927
- Holoubek Kuzma, 1928
- Soykovy děti, 1929
[edit] Political literature
- Ad usum pana presidenta republiky (1929 – criticism of Edvard Beneš and Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk
- O národní stát (posthumously 1932–1938, 7 books od Dyk's political writing from 1917–1931)
[edit] Dramas
- Epizoda, 1906
- Posel, 1907
- Zmoudření Dona Quijota, 1913
- Veliký mág, 1914
- Zvěrstva, 1919
- Ondřej a drak, 1919
- Revoluční trilogie, 1921
- Napravený plukovník Švec, 1929 – support of Rudolf Medek
[edit] Memoirs
- Vzpomínky a komentáře, 1927