Karel Havlíček Borovský
Karel Havlíček Borovský (born Oct. 31, 1821, Borová, Bohemia, Austrian Empire [now in Czech Republic]—died July 29, 1856, Prague) was a Czech author and political journalist, a master prose stylist and epigrammatist who reacted against Romanticism and through his writings gave the Czech language a more modern character.
A student at Prague, Havlíček first became a tutor in Russia, but in the 1840s he became active as a Czech politician and journalist. He wrote numerous articles advocating constitutional reform and national rights, mainly in his own Národní noviny (“National News”), and in 1851 he was arrested, tried, and banished to Brixen until 1855. While in exile he wrote three brilliant satirical poems that could be published only posthumously: “Tyrolské elegie” (1861; “Tyrolese Elegies”), “Král Lávra” (1870; “King Lávra”), and “Křest svatého Vladimíra” (1876; “The Conversion of St. Vladimir”). Křest svatého Vladimíra (1876; The Conversion of St. Vladimir) is a collection of his satirical poems.