Cyprian Norwid (born September 24, 1821, Laskowo-Głuchy, near Warsaw, Poland, Russian Empire [now in Poland]—died May 23, 1883, Paris, France) was a Polish poet, playwright, painter, and sculptor who was one of the most original representatives of late Romanticism.
An orphan early in life, Norwid was brought up by relatives and was largely self-taught. He found life in Poland difficult after the suppression of the Polish insurrection against Russia of 1830–31, and from 1842 he lived for some time in Italy, where he studied painting and sculpture. In 1849 he went to Paris and in 1852 to the United States, but in 1854 he returned via England to Paris, where he led a life of penury and obscurity until his death.
One of the most original and innovative poets of the late Romantic period, Norwid was misunderstood by his contemporaries, for whom his poetry was apparently too sophisticated and too different from the current poetic idiom. His literary failure in his own day resulted from his idiosyncratic and difficult literary style. He wrote poems (Poezye, 1863), plays (Krakus, 1863; Wanda, 1901; Kleopatra, 1904), and a treatise on aesthetics, in prose and verse, included in Poezye. His poetry is essentially philosophical. Norwid’s work was restored to posterity by Zenon Przesmycki (pseudonym Miriam)—an early Polish modernist and the country’s first translator of Arthur Rimbaud—who began publishing Norwid’s works in 1901.
Norwid’s poetry was rediscovered for the second time after World War II, when a group of Polish scholars and editors issued collected editions of his work. Numerous analytic studies followed, resulting in a revival of interest in his poetry and prose (short stories, essays, and philosophical treatises). Subsequently, he was considered an author of lasting importance. Selections of his poems were published in a bilingual edition, Poems (1986).