The poem ‘The hanging of Vasil Levski’ by Hristo Botev (another titan in the revolutionary movement during the Bulgarian revival, poet and writer, and the closest friend of Levski for the short period from the moment they first had met to the time of Botev’s death on peak Vola in Vratza Balkan), expressively depicts the deep grief and dark hopelessness after the death of Levski.
THE HANGING OF VASIL LEVSKI
O my Mother, dear Motherland
Why weep you so mournfully, so plaintively?
And you, raven, cursed bird –
On whose grave croak you with such a dread?
Ah, I know – I know you’re weeping, Mother
Because you are a dismal slave,
Because your holy voice, Mother
Is a helpless voice – a voice in the wilderness.
Weep! There, near the edge of Sofia town
Stretches – I saw it – a dismal gallows
And one of your sons, Bulgaria
Hangs from it with a terrible power.
The raven croaks dreadfully, ominously
Dogs and wolves howl in the fields,
Old people pray to God with fervour
Women weep, children, cry.
Winter croons its evil song,
Gales sweep thistle across the field
And cold and frost and hopeless weeping
Heep sorrow on your heart.
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Levski’s beliefs are applicable even today. They are:
- Look after the national affairs more than anything else, respect them more than yourself.
- To be equal to the other European nations depends on our own united strength.
- If I win – the entire nation wins; if I lose – I lose only myself.
- What more can I want when I see my homeland free? My predestination is for my homeland, is it not? Not to see myself in a high rank, but to die…
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Published: Feb 10, 2018
Latest Revision: Feb 11, 2018
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