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Orphan Girl

A Lament on a Life’s Misfortunes

Edited and Translated by Barry Keane

A long-lost seventeenth-century poetic text exemplifying women’s writing in the early modern period.

Written in 1685, Orphan Girl traces the life of the Polish noblewoman Anna Stanisławska (1651–1700) as she writes candidly and unsparingly about the course of her life, from her infancy to the time of her second widowhood, and ultimately her withdrawal from a world of which she no longer wants any part. Stanisławska was an incomparable memoirist, revealing the tumultuous course of her three marriages. Described as one of the nine female Polish writers you need to read before you die, she is a writer whose stridency and directness of authorial voice would not be matched until modern times.


358 pages | 5 color plates | 6 x 9 | © 2026

The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series

History: European History, History of Ideas

Women's Studies:


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Table of Contents

Foreword

Acknowledgments

Illustrations

Introduction

Orphan Girl
—The Aesop Episode
——Preface
——Threnodies 1–29 (Stanzas 1–273)
——Commentary

—The Olesnicki Episode
——Preface
——Threnodies 29–52 (Stanzas 274–465)
——Commentary

—The Zbaski Episode
——Preface
——Threnodies 53–77 (Stanzas 466–745)
——Commentary

Chronology

Bibliography

Index

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