Teréz Ferenczy
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Teréz Ferenczy (17 December 1823 – 22 May 1853) was a Hungarian poet. She came to wider public prominence as a result of her shocking suicide, and most of her poems were published only posthumously. By the final part of the nineteenth century her work had been largely forgotten. It has undergone a revival since the 1970s, however.


Life

Teréz Ferenczy was born in
Rimavská Sobota Rimavská Sobota (; , ) is a town in southern Slovakia, in the Banská Bystrica Region, on the Rimava river. It has approximately 24,000 inhabitants. The town is a historical capital of Gömör és Kishont County (from 1850 to 1922). Geography ...
, a mid-sized market town which at that time was in
Hungary Hungary is a landlocked country in Central Europe. Spanning much of the Pannonian Basin, Carpathian Basin, it is bordered by Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Romania to the east and southeast, Serbia to the south, Croatia and ...
, which in turn was part of the
Austrian Empire The Austrian Empire, officially known as the Empire of Austria, was a Multinational state, multinational European Great Powers, great power from 1804 to 1867, created by proclamation out of the Habsburg monarchy, realms of the Habsburgs. Duri ...
. (Today, following frontier changes, Rimavská Sobota is in southern
Slovakia Slovakia, officially the Slovak Republic, is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It is bordered by Poland to the north, Ukraine to the east, Hungary to the south, Austria to the west, and the Czech Republic to the northwest. Slovakia's m ...
.) While she was still very small the family relocated to
Szécsény Szécsény is a town in Nógrád county, Hungary. Etymology The name comes from the Slavic ''sečь'': cutting (''Sečany''). 1219/1550 ''Scecen''. History The valley of the Ipoly and especially the area of that around Szécsény was inhabite ...
at the edge of the Hungarian plain to the north of
Budapest Budapest is the Capital city, capital and List of cities and towns of Hungary, most populous city of Hungary. It is the List of cities in the European Union by population within city limits, tenth-largest city in the European Union by popul ...
. The move seems to have come about in connection with her father's work. Sámuel Ferenczy descended from various prominent and aristocratic families. Teréz Ferenczy's mother, born Teréz Ballay, was the daughter of a minor landlord in the area. The sculptor
István Ferenczy István Ferenczy (February 24, 1792 – July 4, 1856) was a Hungarian sculptor. Career Ferenczy made a number of exerted attempts to establish a school of sculpture in Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867), Hungary and it was his mission to est ...
(1792–1856) was a cousin. There is no sign of much wealth having passed down to Sámuel Ferenczy: sources indicate that Teréz Ferenczy and her siblings grew up in conditions of some material hardship. The otherwise dilapidated little town of
Szécsény Szécsény is a town in Nógrád county, Hungary. Etymology The name comes from the Slavic ''sečь'': cutting (''Sečany''). 1219/1550 ''Scecen''. History The valley of the Ipoly and especially the area of that around Szécsény was inhabite ...
was dominated by the baroque manor house of the Forgách family, and it was for the Forgách family estate that Sámuel Ferenczy worked, initially and briefly as a bookbinder, and later as manager of the distillery. In 1846 the Forgáchs succumbed to their growing indebtedness and sold the estate at
Szécsény Szécsény is a town in Nógrád county, Hungary. Etymology The name comes from the Slavic ''sečь'': cutting (''Sečany''). 1219/1550 ''Scecen''. History The valley of the Ipoly and especially the area of that around Szécsény was inhabite ...
to the politician-writer
Ferenc Pulszky Ferenc Aurél Emánuel Pulszky de Cselfalva et Lubócz (; 17 September 1814 – 9 September 1897) was a Hungarian politician, writer and nobleman. After fleeing Hungary in 1849 and being condemned to death in his absence, he was able to return a ...
. It is not clear what impact this had on Teréz Ferenczy who by now was a young adult, but she would continue to live in
Szécsény Szécsény is a town in Nógrád county, Hungary. Etymology The name comes from the Slavic ''sečь'': cutting (''Sečany''). 1219/1550 ''Scecen''. History The valley of the Ipoly and especially the area of that around Szécsény was inhabite ...
for the rest of her life. Because of the family's modest circumstances, Ferenczy's literary development is believed to have been in large measure the result of self-education. Her father's work as a book binder ensured ample access to books. Her mother died while she was still young, leaving Teréz and her three siblings as semi-orphans. She acquired an awareness and then a love of poetry from an early age. As a young woman she spent time in Pest where she met some of the literary celebrities of the day, including the poet Kálmán Lisznyai Damó and Károly Bulcsú, possibly at the home of her kinsman, the sculptor
István Ferenczy István Ferenczy (February 24, 1792 – July 4, 1856) was a Hungarian sculptor. Career Ferenczy made a number of exerted attempts to establish a school of sculpture in Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867), Hungary and it was his mission to est ...
. Her poems are undated which means that sequencing them chronologically presents a challenge. They deal with the trials and storms of love, and are tempered with an underlying strand of melancholy which appears to have intensified over time. Her first piece of published prose writing appeared in the Pest fashion magazine "Esküszegő" and was a semi-autobiographical piece concerning a love tragedy (''"...saját szerelmi tragédiáját"''). Lajos Ferenczy, a trainee priest, seems to have been the sibling to whom Teréz was closest. One source describes him as "her confidant, comforter and support in her disappointments and loneliness" (''"...a bizalmasa, csalódásaiban, magányosságában vigasztalója, segítője"''). Lajos, however, took up arms in the freedom struggle and was killed on 20 June 1849. His memory is preserved in his sister's poem "Ó ne kérdjétek" (''loosely, "Do not ask"''). The loss exacerbated Teréz Ferenczy's tendency to melancholy. It was only in 1853, which would be the year of her death, that her poems began to appear in newspapers and journals. At least one source notes that suicide already ran in the Ferenczy family, and on 22 May 1853 driven, it is reported, by disappointment in love and continuing grieving over her brother's death, Teréz Ferenczy shot herself in the heart. As the pathologist's report points out without sentiment, she narrowly avoided the main chambers of her heart, but nevertheless succeeded in killing herself. Reports of her death led to a surge of interest in her poetry, with the first of several collections published in 1854.Téli csillagok; Ferenczy Teréz hagyományaiból összeszedte Bulcsú Károly; Müller Gyula, Pest 1854


Published collections / anthologies (selection)

* Téli csillagok; Ferenczy Teréz hagyományaiból összeszedte Bulcsú Károly; Müller Gyula, Pest 1854 * Ferenczy Teréz minden versei; Nógrád Megyei Múzeumok Igazgatósága, Salgótarján, 1983 (Nógrádi irodalmi ritkaságok) * Téli csillagok. Ferenczy Teréz hagyományaiból. Hasonmás; összeszedte Búlcsú Károly, bev. Galcsik Zsolt; Múzeumbaráti Kör, Szécsény, 1993 (Szécsényi honismereti kiskönyvtár)


Notes


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ferenczy, Teréz People from Rimavská Sobota People from Szécsény Hungarian women poets 19th-century Hungarian poets 1823 births 1853 deaths 1850s suicides Suicides in Hungary Poets from the Austrian Empire