Czeslaw Milosz
![Czeslaw Milosz](/assets/img/authors/czeslaw-milosz.jpg)
Czeslaw Milosz
Czesław Miłosz; 30 June 1911 – 14 August 2004) was a Polish poet, prose writer, translator and diplomat. His World War II-era sequence The World is a collection of twenty "naïve" poems. Following the war, he served as Polish cultural attaché in Paris and Washington, D.C., then in 1951 defected to the West. His nonfiction book The Captive Mindbecame a classic of anti-Stalinism. From 1961 to 1998 he was a professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of...
ProfessionPoet
Date of Birth30 June 1911
CitySeteniai, Lithuania
In a room where people unanimously maintain a conspiracy of silence, one word of truth sounds like a pistol shot.
Consolation Calm down. Both your sins and your good deeds will be lost in oblivion.
Do not feel safe. The poet remembers. You can kill one, but another is born. The words are written down, the deed, the date.
We have become indifferent to content, and react, not even to form, but to technique, to technical efficiency itself.
Poetry is a dividend from what you know and what you are.
Irony is the glory of slaves.
Vulgarized knowledge characteristically gives birth to a feeling that everything is understandable and explained. It is like a system of bridges built over chasms. One can travel boldly ahead over these bridges, ignoring the chasms. It is forbidden to look down into them; but that, alas, does not alter the fact that they exist.