Do prostego człowieka (English: To the Simple Man) is a poem by Julian Tuwim, first published in the October 27, 1929 edition of Robotnik daily.[1] The poem gained immediate popularity due to its strong pacifist anti-war message; its mockery of militarism, jingoistic fervour and hysteria; and its placement of blame upon those in power who profit by starting wars to be fought by commoners.[2][3]
The poem was commonly read as expressing the poet's disillusionment with Józef Pilsudski's regime and increasingly militant rhetoric.[4][5]
At the same time it was openly criticised by both left and right-wing journalists. The rightists went as far as to suggest Tuwim be hanged for allegedly promoting desertion among Polish soldiers.[5] Tuwim was defending himself by saying that his poem is against offensive wars, not defensive ones.[6] Despite criticism, the poem became immediately popular in Poland.
In recent years the poem was translated to English by Marcel Weyland.[7] It also gained new popularity due to numerous rock bands performing it on their concerts. One of the best-known such interpretations is by a Polish rock group Akurat.[8]
^(in English and Polish)"To the simple man". Seria Poetycka; Polish Poetry. VIII (1836). ISSN1176-7545. Archived from the original on 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2009-10-19. Weyland's translation contains one distorted passage as it is based on a faulty version of the text in common circulation in which a typo led to the substitution of the "lords" ("panami", instrumental grammatical case) by "maidens" ("pannami"), the result being rather ludicrous and far from intended by the poem's author.