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Alexander Pushkin — poem “The Horse”

Russian Poetry

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Russian LiteratureRussian PoetryChildren’s booksAlexander PushkinPoemsObsolete Russian Words and their meaning
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The Horse

Why dost thou neigh, O spirited steed,
Why thy neck so low,
Why thy mane unshaken
Why thy bit not gnawed?
Do I then not fondle thee?
Thy grain to eat art thou not free?
Is not thy harness ornamented,
Is not thy rein of silk,
Is not thy shoe of silver,
Thy stirrup not of gold?

The steed in sorrow answer gives:
Hence am I quiet
Because the distant tramp I hear,
The trumpet’s blow and the arrow’s whizz
And hence I neigh, since in the field
No longer feed I shall,
Nor in beauty live and fondling,
Neither shine with harness bright.

For soon the stern enemy
My harness whole shall take
And the shoes of silver
Tear he shall from feet mine light.
Hence it is that grieves my spirit:
That in place of my chaprak
With thy skin shall cover he
My perspiring sides.

1833.

Pushkin's farewell to the sea. 1877 painted by Repin

Translated by Ivan Panin



< < < The Gypsies
The Nightingale > > >

Russian LiteratureRussian PoetryChildren’s booksAlexander PushkinPoemsObsolete Russian Words and their meaning


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