Bolesà Âaw Leà Âmian (; 22 January 1877 – 5 November 1937) was a Polish poet, artist, and member of the Polish Academy of Literature, one of the first poets to introduce Symbolism and Expressionism to Polish verse.
Though largely a marginal figure in his lifetime, Leà Âmian is now considered one of Poland's greatest poets. He is, however, little known outside Poland, mostly on account of his neologism-rich idiosyncratic style, dubbed "almost untranslatable" by Czesà Âaw Mià Âosz and "the ultimate and overwhelming proof for the untranslatability of poetry" by noted Polish Shakespearean translator, Stanisà Âaw Baraà Âczak.
Bolesà Âaw Leà Âmian was born on 22 January 1877 in Warsaw, Congress Poland, Russian Empire, to a Polonized Jewish family. He spent his childhood and youth in Kiev, where he graduated from the law faculty of Saint Vladimir University. In 1901 he returned to Warsaw. From there, he visited various European cities, including Munich and Paris, where he married painter Zofia Chylià Âska. Heavily influenced by French modernists, Leà Âmian returned to Warsaw, where he became cofounder of an experimental Artistic Theatre. There he also met one of his closest friends, Zenon Przesmycki, with whom he became involved in the publication of Chimera, an art newspaper.
Although he made his debut in 1895 (a series of poems published in WÃÂdrowiec magazine), his works initially went unnoticed. To sound "more Polish", Leà Âmian adopted a slightly modified version of his surname which included typically Polish sounds (previously it had been Lesman). According to various conflicting sources, the author of the pen-name which eventually became his official surname was either the known poet and poet's uncle Antoni Lange, or a renowned bon-vivant of Warsaw, Franc Fiszer. The first booklet issued in Warsaw in 1912 (Sad Rozstajny) did not bring him much publicity either, and in 1912 Leà Âmian moved back to France. He returned in 1914.
From 1918 until 1934, he worked as a notary of large landed estates in Hrubieszów and then as a lawyer in Zamoà ÂÃÂ. At the same time he published the best known of his books: à Âàka (The Meadow, 1920) and Napój cienisty (Shadowy Drink, 1936). In 1933, he was accepted as a permanent member of the Polish Academy of Literature. In 1935, he moved back to Warsaw, where he died two years later. He is buried in Powàzki Cemetery, in the Alley of the Meritorious, among other notable Polish writers, politicians and military men.
Leà Âmian and Chylià Âska had two daughters, one of who, Wanda "Dunia" Leà Âmianówna, would later marry British adventurer and traveller Denis Hills. Actress and singer Gillian Hills - famous for her brief appearances in Antonioni's Blowup and Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange in two similar scenes - was born of this marriage in 1944. Leà Âmian was nephew of the famous poet and writer of the Young Poland movement, Antoni Lange, and the cousin of another notable poet of the epoch, Jan Brzechwa.
Leà Âmian's style is unique and easily recognizable, intuitively accessible despite its idiosyncrasy. In his poems, in a fantastical, mythical environmentâÂÂoften inhabited with creatures taken from Polish folklore and traditionsâÂÂLeà Âmian expounds his life philosophy, revolving around his personal fascinations with God and death. The protagonists of his works are usually "handicapped humans," struggling between Culture and Nature, unable to accept their in-between existence. Leà Âmian describes the only ones who are able to live with both Culture and Nature simultaneously are poets, the last examples of "the primitive mankind."
Relying heavily on "the vertiginous word-formation potential of Polish," Leà Âmian's style is especially notable for its numerous neologisms, many of which are still in use in everyday Polish language (as opposed to, say, Cyprian Norwid's similar experiments). Referred to as "leà Âmianisms" by subsequent scholars, these neologisms are usually the product of the versatile "prefix+verb/noun(+suffix)" formula natural to most Slavic languages, but peculiar to many other languages, rendering Leà Âmian's poetry "almost untranslatable" into English.
Some of Leà Âmian's favourite prefixes include those who imply a lack of certain qualities (like bez- or nie-, loosely, "without," or "non-"), leading certain scholars to dub him "the Dante of non-being." Considered by many one of the greatest Polish poets in history, Leà Âmian is certainly one of the most interesting artists of the interwar period, creator of a uniquely stylised Polish folk ballad and profoundly personal â and, nevertheless, popular â metaphysical lyrics. In addition, he is frequently mentioned as the most notable poet of erotic verses in the history of the Polish language.
A tombeau for Lesmian was written by Roman Turovsky.