Tudor Arghezi
Tudor Arghezi | |
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Symbolism Poporanism | |
Years active | 1896–1967 |
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Ion Nae Theodorescu (21 May 1880 – 14 July 1967[1]) was a Romanian writer who wrote under the pen name Tudor Arghezi (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈtudor arˈɡezi]. He is best known for his unique contribution to poetry and children's literature.
Biography
Early life
He graduated from Saint Sava High School in October 1896, started working to pay for his studies,[2] and made his debut in 1896, publishing verses in Alexandru Macedonski's magazine Liga Ortodoxă under the name Ion Theo. Soon after, Macedonski, the herald of Romanian Symbolism, publicized his praise for the young poet:
"This young man, at an age when I was still prattling verses, with an audacity that knows no boundaries, but not yet crowned by the most glittering success, parts with the entire old versification technique, with all banalities in images in ideas that have for long been judged, here and elsewhere, as a summit of poetry and art."[3]
He began stating his admiration for
After a four-year-long stint as an
Early 1910s
He returned to Romania in 1910, and published works in Viața Românească, Teatru, Rampa, and N. D. Cocea's Facla and Viața Socială, as well as editing the magazine Cronica in collaboration with Galaction; his output was prolific, and a flurry of lyrics, political pamphlets and polemical articles gained him a good measure of notoriety among the theatrical, political and literary circles of the day.[10] Cocea contributed to his early fame by publishing one of Arghezi's first influential poems, Rugă de seară ("Evening Prayer").[11]
During the period, Arghezi also became a prominent art critic, and engaged in the defense of Ștefan Luchian, a painter who was suffering from multiple sclerosis and was facing charges of fraud (based on the suspicion that he could no longer paint, and had allowed his name to be signed to other people's works).[12]
He became a regular presence at the Bucharest Kübler Café, where a Bohemian circle of artists and intellectuals was being formed — it included the writers Ion Minulescu, Liviu Rebreanu, Eugen Lovinescu, Victor Eftimiu, Mihail Sorbul and Corneliu Moldovanu, as well as the painters Iosif Iser, Alexandru Satmari, Jean Alexandru Steriadi, the composer Alfons Castaldi, and the art collector Krikor Zambaccian.[13] According to Zambaccian, Arghezi was more rarely seen at Bucharest's other major literary venue, Casa Capșa.[13] By that time, he was also an associate of the controversial political figure and art patron Alexandru Bogdan-Pitești, and, with Galaction, Cocea, Minulescu, Adrian Maniu and various visual artists, he regularly attended a circle hosted by Bogdan-Pitești on Știrbey-Vodă, nearby the Cișmigiu Gardens.[14] He authored a small poem in honor of Bogdan-Pitești.[14]
After the outbreak of
"A barbaric war. Once upon a time, we had pledged our duty to fight against the arming of civilized states. With every newborn baby, the quantity of explosive matter destined to suppress him was also being created. As progress and «rational outlook» were being viewed as calamities, arms and ammunitions factories were increasing the shell storages, were fabricating the artillery used in extermination."[16]
German occupation and Văcărești Prison
Eventually, he collaborated with the
Arrested along with eleven other newspapermen and writers, among them Slavici, he was accused of "collaboration with the enemy" for his anti-Entente activities.[19] According to Arghezi himself, the Royal Commissioner charged with investigation had initially kept the group secluded in a Bucharest hotel, arguing that they were an ongoing danger to Allied forces in Bucharest.[17]
Sentenced and detained in the
Interwar literature
In 1927, he published his first volume of collected poems, titled Cuvinte Potrivite ("Fitting Words" or "Suitable Words"), which made the Poporanist paper Viața Românească's Mihai Ralea hail Arghezi as "our greatest poet since Eminescu"[20] (while likening his "mixture of the sublime and the awkward"[21] to "nihilism").[22] The avant-garde magazine Integral celebrated Arghezi with a special issue in 1925 – in it, Benjamin Fondane wrote: "Arghezi is against all things: in his poetry, against eloquence, in favour of reinstating modesty, decency [...] [i]n his prose, against cowardice in expression, in favour of violence and indecency".[23]
Arghezi was in charge of the
In 1933–1934, he completed two satirical pieces, the dystopian novel Tablete din Țara de Kuty, povestiri swiftiene ("Tablets from the Land of Kuty. Swiftian Stories") and Cimitirul Buna-Vestire ("Buna-Vestire Cemetery" – a large-scale pamphlet described as an "apparent novel" by George Călinescu),[25] as well as a long novel on the topic of maternal love and filial devotion, Ochii Maicii Domnului ("Our Lord's Mother's Eyes").
He routinely visited art shows throughout the 1920s (accompanied by
Interwar polemic
In 1934, his lyrical works were virulently attacked by
Shortly before his death, Arghezi reflected upon his status in the interwar period, rendering a dramatic picture:
"[...] for a while, all the cultural institutions were associated against my writing: the
Gendarmerie and even the closest colleagues."[33]
His political attitudes at the time were more complex, and he continued collaboration with left-wing magazines such as Dimineața and Adevărul while expressing staunchly monarchist views and support for King Carol II.[27] According to some views, Arghezi developed a sympathy for the Iron Guard towards the end of the 1930 (his poem Făt-Frumos was contended to be a homage to the movement's leader, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, assassinated in late 1938).[34] This perspective, notably favored by essayist Alex Mihai Stoenescu,[27] was disputed by the literary critic Ion Simuț, who argued that evidence to support it was sporadic and contradictory.[27]
World War II
In 1939, Arghezi became suddenly and severely ill, being incapacitated by
During
"A flower blossomed in my garden, one like a plumped-up red bird, with a golden kernel. You blemished it. You set your paws on it and now it has dried up. My corn has shot into ears as big as
Barbary Doves and you tore them away. You took the fruits out of my orchard by the cartload and gone you were with them. You placed your nib with its tens of thousands of nostrils on the cliffs of my water sources and you quaffed them from their depths and you drained them. Morass and slobber is what you leave behind in the mountains and yellow drought in the flatlands — and out of all the birds with singing tongues you leave me with bevies of rooks."[36]
The authorities confiscated all issues, and the author was imprisoned without trial in a
Arghezi and the Communist regime
A controversial intellectual, Arghezi had a fluctuating relationship with the newly established

The writer had to retreat from public life, spending most of these years at the house he owned in Văcărești, Bucharest, the one he called Mărțișor (the name it still goes by today); his main source of income was provided by selling the yields of cherries the surrounding plot returned.[42]
However, as Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who was also an inmate in penitentiary camp near Târgu Jiu, consolidated his power over the state and Party post-1952, Arghezi was discovered as an asset to the new, more "national" tone of the regime — as several other censored cultural figures, he was paid a visit by Miron Constantinescu, the Communist activist overseeing the rehabilitation process.[43]
Once exonerated, he started being awarded numerous titles and prizes. Arghezi was elected a member of the Romanian Academy in 1955, and celebrated as national poet on his 80th and 85th birthdays. Although never turned-Socialist Realist,[44] he adapted his themes to the requirements – such as he did in Cântare Omului ("Ode to Mankind") and 1907.[45] In 1965, Arghezi also won recognition abroad, being the recipient of the Herder Prize.[7]
Arghezi's mysterious illness resurfaced with the same symptoms in 1955, and he was rapidly interned in the care of Ion Făgărășanu.[35] He was diagnosed with a chronic infection that had originated in surgery he had undergone in 1934, provoking an abscess in the area around his lumbar vertebrae; he was released soon completing a treatment which included streptomycin injections.[35]
He died and was buried in the garden of his house next to his wife Paraschiva in 1967 (she had died the previous year), with tremendous pomp and funeral festivities orchestrated by Communist Party officials. His home is now a museum. It was managed by his daughter, Mitzura until her death in 2015. Arghezi and Paraschiva also had a son, known as Baruțu, but actually called Iosif.[46]
Arghezi's work
Arghezi is perhaps the most striking figure of Romanian interwar literature, and one of the major poets of the 20th century. The freshness of his vocabulary represents a most original synthesis between the traditional styles and modernism. He has left behind a vast oeuvre, which includes poetry, novels, essays, journalism, translations and letters.
The impact of his writings on Romanian poetic language was revolutionary, through his creation of unusual
Arghezi re-established an
Despite his association with the Communist regime, Arghezi is widely acknowledged as a major literary figure. His work has traditionally been a staple of Romanian literature textbooks for decades.
In cultural reference
Aside from various sketches Arghezi had drawn of himself, his portrait was drawn by various artists he met or befriended. Around 1910, he was included in group portraits by
Tudor Arghezi was several times portrayed in Romanian film: in 1958, Grigore Vasiliu Birlic played a major part in Arghezi's Doi Vecini (a character loosely based on the author); an eponymous film based on the life of Ștefan Luchian was released in 1981, starring Florin Călinescu as Arghezi.
Presence in English language anthologies
- Testament – Anthology of Modern Romanian Verse / Testament – Antologie de Poezie Română Modernă – Bilingual Edition English & Romanian – ISBN 978-973-21-1006-5
- Testament – Anthology of Romanian Verse – American Edition - monolingual English language edition – ISBN 978-0-9953502-0-5
- Born in Utopia – An anthology of Modern and Contemporary Romanian Poetry - Carmen Firan and Paul Doru Mugur (editors) with Edward Foster – Talisman House Publishers – 2006 – ISBN 1-58498-050-8
Notes
- ISBN 9781317475934. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
- ^ Kuiper, p.67; Willhardt et al., p.15
- ^ Macedonski, 1896, in Vianu, p.477
- ^ Arghezi, Vers și poezie, 1904, in Din presa... (1900–1918), pp. 125–139
- ^ Vianu, p.478; Zalis, p.VII
- ^ a b Zalis, p.VII
- ^ a b Willhardt et al., p.15
- ^ Arghezi, Acum patruzeci și nouă de ani, 1956, in Scrieri, p.772
- ^ Arghezi, Acum patruzeci și nouă de ani, 1956, in Scrieri, p.773
- ^ Vianu, p.479–482
- ^ Vianu, p.479–480
- ^ Arghezi, Din zilele lui Luchian, in Scrieri, pp. 617, 620–621
- ^ a b c Zambaccian, Chapter VII
- ^ a b c Zambaccian, Chapter VIII
- ^ Zbuchea
- ^ Arghezi, "Barbarie", 1915, in Scrieri, p.110
- ^ a b c d e f g Hâncu
- ^ Boia, p.256
- ^ Hâncu; Willhardt et al., p.15
- ^ Ralea, T. Arghezi, 1927, in Din presa... (1918–1944), p. 58
- ^ Ralea, T. Arghezi, 1927, in Din presa... (1918–1944), p. 46
- ^ Ralea, T. Arghezi, 1927, in Din presa... (1918–1944), p. 48
- ^ Fondane, Omagiu lui Tudor Arghezi, in Din presa... (1918–1944), 1927, p. 131
- ^ Willhardt et al., p.16
- ^ Călinescu, p.324
- ^ Zambaccian, Chapter II, Chapter XII
- ^ a b c d Simuț
- ^ N. Iorga, 1934, in Ornea, p.445
- ^ Vintilă Horia, 1937, in Ornea, p. 447
- ^ Gândirea, 1937, in Ornea, p.448
- ^ Victor Puiu Gârcineanu, T. Arghezi și spiritul iudaic, 1937, in Ornea, p.448
- ^ Arghezi, Meșterul Nichifor, 1937, in Ornea, p.448
- ^ Arghezi, Un recital, in Scrieri, p.780
- ^ Pop, p.47
- ^ a b c d e f g Zeletin
- ^ Arghezi, Baroane, 1943, in Vianu, p.483
- ^ Deletant, p.27; Willhardt et al., p.15
- ^ Frunză, p.372
- ^ Roman, Toma. "Cu sinceritate despre Arghezi:"Domnu' Dej, vreau niște cegă!"" (in Romanian). jurnalul.ro. Archived from the original on 4 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ Tismăneanu, p.110, 310
- ^ Sorin Toma, Poezia Putrefacţiei..., 1948, in Frunză, p.372
- ^ Frunză, p.373; Ţoiu
- ^ Tismăneanu, p.151, 183, 304
- ^ a b Kuiper, p.67
- ^ Olivotto
- ^ "A murit fiul scriitorului Tudor Arghezi" (in Romanian). Libertatea. 25 August 2010. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
- ^ Vianu, p.482
- ^ Vianu, pp. 482–483
- ^ Călinescu, pp. 323–324
- ^ Călinescu, p.322
- ^ Kuiper, p.67; Willhardt et al., p.16
- ^ Vianu, p.485
- ^ Zambaccian, Chapter XV
References
- Tudor Arghezi, Scrieri. Proze ("Writings. Prose"), Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1985
- Central European University Press, 2001
- George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române. Compendiu ("The History of Romanian Literature. Compendium"), Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1983
- ISBN 1-85065-386-0
- Victor Frunză, Istoria stalinismului în România ("The History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990
- (in Romanian) Dumitru Hâncu, "Tudor Arghezi. Scrisori din închisoare (II)" ("Letters from Prison (II)"), in Ziarul Financiar, 30 October 2002
- Kathleen Kuiper, Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature, ISBN 0-87779-042-6
- Eugen Marinescu (ed.), Din presa literară românească (1918–1944) ("From the Romanian Literary Press (1918–1944)"), Editura Albatros, Bucharest, 1986
- D. Murăraşu, Din presa literară românească (1900–1918) ("From the Romanian Literary Press (1900–1918)"), Editura Albatros, Bucharest, 1970
- (in Romanian) Alexandra Olivotto, "Cele mai nocive cărți din cultura românească" ("The Most Noxious Books in Romanian Culture"), in Cotidianul, 18 October 2005
- Editura Fundației Culturale Române, Bucharest, 1995
- Grigore Traian Pop, "Cînd dissidența se pedepseşte cu moartea. Un asasinat ritual: Mihail Stelescu" ("When Dissidence Is Punished with Death. A Ritual Assassination: Mihail Stelescu"), in Dosarele Istoriei, 6/IV (1999)
- (in Romanian) Ion Simuţ, "Putea fi Arghezi legionar?" ("Could Arghezi Have Been a Legionary?"), in România Literară, nr.5, 9 February 2007; available through România Culturală, "Polemici" ("Polemics") page
- ISBN 0-520-23747-1
- (in Romanian) Constantin Ţoiu, "Amintiri cu poeți" ("Memoirs of Poets"), at Memoria.ro; retrieved 16 July 2007
- Tudor Vianu, Scriitori români ("Romanian Writers"), Vol. III, Ed. Minerva, Bucharest, 1971
- Mark Willhardt, Alan Michael Parker (ed.), Who's Who in 20th Century World Poetry. ISBN 0-415-16355-2
- (in Romanian) Gheorghe Zbuchea, Despre problema basarabeană în politica externă a României în anii 1912–1916 ("On the Bessarabian Issue in Romanian Foreign Policy in the Years 1912–1916"), at the University of Bucharest; retrieved 16 July 2007
- Henri Zalis, introduction to Lucia Demetrius, Album de familie. Nuvele alese (1935–1965) ("Family Album. Selected Short Stories (1935–1965)"), Editura pentru literatură, Bucharest, 1967, pp. V–XXXI
- (in Romanian) Krikor Zambaccian, Însemnările unui amator de artă ("The Recordings of an Art Aficionado"), published and hosted by LiterNet; retrieved 16 July 2007
- (in Romanian) C. D. Zeletin, "Cu George Emil Palade, la San Diego, despre boala lui Tudor Arghezi" ("With George Emil Palade, in San Diego, on the Topic of Tudor Arghezi's Disease"), at Memoria.ro; retrieved 16 July 2007
- Auf einem Buch, Gedichte (Pe o carte), Christian W. Schenk, in memoriam, ISBN 9798353740667, Dionysos – Boppard am Rhein
External links
- Membrii Academiei Române din 1866 până în prezent – A
- (in Romanian) Poems by Arghezi
- (in Romanian) Romanian Poetry – Tudor Arghezi
- (in Romanian) Essays by Arghezi, published in Jurnalul Naţional:
- Repaosul duminical/Metehnele realităţilor româneşti (1912), 5 March 2006
- Poliția, femeia, prostituția (1912), 12 March 2006
- Viile Domnului (1912), 9 April 2006
- Piticul cel norocos (1930)[permanent dead link ], 21 April 2006
- Doi Vecini and Ștefan Luchian at the Internet Movie Database