International Review of Educational Cinematography (Jan-Dec 1930)

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TWARDOWSKI, THE POLISH FAUST. (From the French) Introduction. Among the national legends that embody the salient traits of Polish life in past times and that are most closely connected with historical recollections of a more or less credible kind, none is more widely known or more typical than that describ SIGISMVNDVS AVGVSTVS, DEI GRATIA REX POLONIAE, MAGNVS. DVX I. ITVANIAE. RV!SUE,Hn. S I AE. PO {AE «. A N I AE. 5 A MAC I Tl AE AC M * 5 O, . . V I At,' ETC DOMINVS ET HAERES. ANNO DOMINI AETATIS ANNO DOMINI M.O.L1I ing the marvellous adventures of Twardowski. It is a question whether this miracle-working doctor, alchemist and astrologer in one ever really existed in the flesh, and indeed it would be rash to vouch for it, notwithstanding the fact that the Twardowskis are a historical Polish family, whose descendents still live in Po