Mikhail Lermontov (1814-1841)

   
I have just returned from a conference in Montreal after defending my dissertation, and have just finished moving to a new apartment to stop my job at Ohio Wesleyan so I have not written for a while. But I have just finished reading a nice little book A Hero of Our Time by Mikhail Lermontov, a Russian poet and near contemporary of Pushkin. It is a short novel set in the Caucasus like the picture above. Composed of various narratives concerning an unfeeling Russian dandy. However, Lermontov like Pushkin died in a duel. Here is an eerily prescient poem he wrote shortly before dying:
The Dream
 
    In noon's heat, in a dale of Dagestan
    With lead inside my breast, stirless I lay;
    The deep wound still smoked on; my blood
    Kept trickling drop by drop away.
    On the dale's sand alone I lay. The cliffs
    Crowded around in ledges steep,
    And the sun scorched their tawny tops
    And scorched me -- but I slept death's sleep.
    And in a dream I saw an evening feast
    That in my native land with bright lights shone;
    Among young women crowned with flowers,
    A merry talk concerning me went on.
 
    But in the merry talk not joining,
    One of them sat there lost in thought,
    And in a melancholy dream
    Her young soul was immersed -- God knows by what
 
    And of a dale in Dagestan she dreamt;
    In that dale lay the corpse of one she knew;
    Within his breast a smoking wound shewed black,
    And blood coursed in a stream that colder grew.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
