Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE BATTLE-FIELD OF RASZYN, by KAZIMIERZ BRODZINSKI First Line: A balmy air is up, the night is still Last Line: Clamoring for vengeance? Ah! We hear ye not. Alternate Author Name(s): Brodsinski, Casimir Subject(s): Poland; Russia; Soviet Union; Russians | ||||||||
A BALMY air is up, the night is still, The tired steeds graze upon the watery meads; The willows bend their branches o'er the rill That angrily breaks through the impeding weeds. The field is silent, -- but that echoes lone, Roused by the swain from the dark cells awake; The shifting clouds sweep o'er the steadfast moon, Who shoots her silver arrows o'er the lake. Sweet moon! now watching yon fair conclave o'er, Not brightly thus thy pure and pale lamp shone, When war's black smoke had veiled thee; and its roar Rolled through the neighboring woods the deathful groan. Then fled the villager his burning shed; The shrieking babes clung to their mothers' breast, Drums, clarions, cannon's thundering; and the dead And tortured dying. Now, 't is all at rest. Where the blood flowed, now gleams the falling dew; The green grass grows, the grateful balmy hay Is gathered in; -- the laboring ox anew Ploughs for fresh harvests on his wonted way. But all these mounds are tombs! the wild winds pass Mournfully, murmuring sorrow as they go; The cicades have left the close-mown grass To sing their songs of exile and of woe. Sad memory! the spirits of the dead Flit by me; shade is hurried after shade. Here mangled corses lift their ghastly head, There shadowy arms wave high the gleaming blade. But what dim shade is that, where sits the bird Of evening on the pensive alder-tree! O'er rustling piles of armor sure I heard Him stalk; the wind wakes his harp's harmony. Shades of the friends I loved! how long, how long Will ye in bloody garments haunt this spot; Around the tombs where sleep our fathers throng Clamoring for vengeance? Ah! we hear ye not. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OXOTA: A SHORT RUSSIAN NOVEL: CHAPTER 259 by LYN HEJINIAN A FOREIGN COUNTRY by JOSEPHINE MILES THE DIAMOND PERSONA by NORMAN DUBIE IN MEMORIAM: 1933 (7. RUSSIA: ANNO 1905) by CHARLES REZNIKOFF TAKE A LETTER TO DMITRI SHOSTAKOVITCH by CARL SANDBURG READING THE RUSSIANS by RUTH STONE THE SOVIET CIRCUS VISITS HAVANA, 1969 by VIRGIL SUAREZ A PROBLEM IN AESTHETICS by KAREN SWENSON |
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