The directory «Plots»
Brzechwa Jan
(1900—1966)
Tales
Jan Brzechwa, real name Jan Lesman was a Polish poet and author, mostly known for his contribution to children's literature. He was also a famous translator of Russian literature, translating mostly works by Aleksandr Pushkin, Sergey Yesienin and Vladimir Mayakovskiy. He was never married and had no children.
Jan Brzechwa was born in Żmerynka in Podolia in a Polish-Jewish family. Soon he moved to Warsaw, where he graduated from the Law Faculty of the Warsaw University. His debut took place in 1920 in various comical magazines. In 1926 he published Oblicza zmyślone, his first book of poems. His first set of poems for children (Tańcowała igła z nitką) was published in 1937. Brzechwa was also working as a lawyer and attorney of the Polish Society of Authors and Composers (ZAIKS). From 1924 he was one of the most notable Polish specialists in copyright. Brzechwa died in Warsaw in 1966 and is buried at the Powązki cemetery.
Among his works is the Chrząszcz (a beetle, chafer), a poem famous for being one of the hardest to pronounce texts in Polish literature, even for adult, native Polish speakers. Its first line “W Szczebrzeszynie chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie” (In [the town of] Szczebrzeszyn a beetle buzzes in the reed) is the most popular Polish tongue-twister, in which almost all of the consonants make some kind of buzzing noises.
Jan Brzechwa and Julian Tuwim are two most famous authors of children's poems in Poland.
Czechoslovakia, 1981, Mr. Blot's Academy
Poland, 1996, On Bergamoty islands
Poland, 1996, Waiters
Poland, 1996, At the Market Stall
Poland, 1996, Wacky Duck
Poland, 1996, The Fibber
Poland, 1996, Red Fox
Poland, 1996.05.31, Warsaw. Girl