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Poems by Speranza

Chapter 452: CONSTANCY
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About This Book

The collection gathers lyrical and narrative poems that blend political passion, religious reflection, and romantic and mythic storytelling. Many pieces mourn famine and social injustice, portray martyrdom and national aspiration, and offer exhortations and supplications on behalf of the homeland. Other poems translate or adapt European sagas, medieval romances, and devotional hymns, while shorter lyrics record love, loss, memory, and spiritual longing. The volume alternates rousing public verse with intimate personal pieces, moving between direct civic address, elegiac lament, narrative ballad, and contemplative lyric, unified by moral intensity and rhetorical richness.


FROM THE RUSSIAN.


I.

A RAVEN on a branch is sitting;
By him comes another flitting—
Brother, where so quickly flying?
Hast thou scented dead or dying?


II.

Food and plenty sent to cheer us,
Croaks the other, we have near us.
Yonder there, amid the gorse,
Lies the murdered Baron's corse.


III.

Who slew him? Wherefore? Woe the day!
Did the Baron's falcon say?
Or the Baron's steed so wild—
Or the Baron's wife so mild?


IV.

Her flight far off the falcon's winging:
On the steed a slave is springing;
And she?—by the pale moonlight hath fled
With the living from the dead.