The village belonged to Count Wladyslaw Wielogłowski, who was keenly interested in paranormal activities, occultism and clairvoyance.
A few years later, after the Count's death, the house was inherited by his relative Aleksander Wielogłowski, who decided to remodel the complex and found an archive, with words of the prophecy.
In the following years, the prophecy was forgotten, but this changed on March 27, 1939, a few months before the German and Soviet invasion of Poland.
[1] Thousands of readers got to know the composition, and it became extremely popular during the war, when Poland was occupied by the two powers - Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.
In the Ilustrowany Kurier Codzienny, it was signed from an anonymous medium, while the 1912 Gazeta Narodowa wrote that it was written by a ghost of Adam Mickiewicz, which appeared in the house of Count Wielogłowski in 1893.