Maironis

Lithuanian poet
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Also known as: Jonas Mačiulis
Quick Facts
Pseudonym of:
Jonas Mačiulis
Born:
Nov. 2, 1862, Pasandravys, Lithuania, Russian Empire
Died:
June 28, 1932, Kaunas (aged 69)
Also Known As:
Jonas Mačiulis

Maironis (born Nov. 2, 1862, Pasandravys, Lithuania, Russian Empire—died June 28, 1932, Kaunas) was a poet considered to be the bard of the Lithuanian national renaissance.

Maironis, a Roman Catholic priest, studied at the theological seminary in Kaunas and at the theological academy in St. Petersburg in 1888–92 and returned there as an inspector and professor of moral theology (1894–1909) after two more years at Kaunas. He then served as rector of the seminary in Kaunas until 1922, when he was elected professor of moral theology at the Lithuanian University.

In his poetry Maironis expressed the hopes and aspirations of the Lithuanian people at the time of their struggle for independence. He wrote of his love for his country: its past, countryside, language, and legends. He succeeded in replacing the traditional Lithuanian syllabic verse with accentual-syllabic verse, and his sonorous, melodic poetry achieved wide popularity in his lifetime.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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All of Maironis’ lyric poetry was published in the collection Pavasario balsai (1st ed., with 45 poems, 1895; 6th ed., with 131 poems, 1926; “Voices of Spring”). The first of three epic poems, Jaunoji Lietuva (1907; “Young Lithuania”), has passages of great lyric beauty. Maironis also wrote three historical dramas on the life of Vytautas the Great (1350–1430), grand duke of Lithuania.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.