Waterloo. Lord Byron. Appreciation By P.S.Remesh Chandran.
Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum.
By PSRemeshChandra, 26th Apr 2011.
Spoon and fork laid down to take musket and pistol.
The war of English and the French enters Belgium in the dead of night.
Heavy cannon fire shatters the sound of midnight revelry.
Youth and Pleasure chase the night with flying feet.
Midnight carnival turns into carnelian carnage.
Love or lust or wine, the Scottish soldiers are duty-bound.
Squadrons and chariots swiftly forming in ranks of war.
The Ardennes Great Woods shed tear drops over the unreturning brave.
Morning noon and night, and morning day again.
___________________________
Pictures Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
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PSRemeshChandra
Editor of Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. Author of several books in English and in Malayalam. And also author of Swan : The Intelligent Picture Book.
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Editor, Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum.
By PSRemeshChandra, 26th Apr 2011.
Short URL http://nut.bz/3.ub8mva/
Posted in Wikinut Poetry
Political thought should be followed by political action.
Posted in Wikinut Poetry
The
maps of Europe were drawn and redrawn many times during the Eighteenth
and the Nineteenth centuries. Countries became nations and empires which
in no time were reverted back to nations and countries. It was not
uncommon for people of those times to lay down spoons and forks in the
dead of night and take muskets and pistols to brave war. Lord Byron in
his famous poem portrays such a scene from the European arena.
Political thought should be followed by political action.
Byron in Albanian dress. |
George
Gordon Noel Lord Byron was born in England in the Eighteenth century
and lived through the Nineteenth century. He was a lame person and so he
could not take part in the active moments of his nation. Because of
this handicap, he possessed exceptional vigour, strength, courage and
force at least in his writings. He believed that political thought
should immediately be followed by political action. He had firm
political opinions which could not be uttered in his century which
naturally made him to turn himself into an irresistible revolutionary
poet. His name stands brilliant and great among the star line of English
poets. The Vision of Judgment, The Prisoner of Chillon and Childe
Harold’s Pilgrimage are his most famous poems.
Spoon and fork laid down to take musket and pistol.
Vast Belgian halls where the rich and the famous assembled. |
Childe
Harold means the child of Harrow University which was the poet himself.
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage is a long poem in which Byron describes his
European travels. There are perhaps only two other famous poems of the
like in English literature. They are Matthew Arnold’s ‘The
Scholar Gypsy’ and William Wordsworth’s ‘Tintern Abbey Revisited’. These
three constitute the University Trio in English poetry. Waterloo is a
famous section from Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage.
The war of English and the French enters Belgium in the dead of night.
A ball in Brussels in 1815. |
In
Belgium he attended a midnight ball of the rich and the famous in
Brussels, the capital city. It was at that time that the French and
English opened war which soon reached Belgium. The midnight revelry was
broke down by cannon fire but instead of the expected chaos, Byron could
not help but admire what he saw of the quickness with which the
Scottish soldiers there responded to the sudden attack. Due to graphic
descriptions of contradicting scenes before and after the outbreak of
sudden war, this part of the poem became memorably fine and specially
noted in the poem.
Heavy cannon fire shatters the sound of midnight revelry.
The battle in Brussels, formed in ranks of war. |
All
the brave and beautiful in Brussels were assembled in that ball room in
a large mansion to celebrate night. There were not less than a thousand
people gathered in that vast hall. Lamps shone bright everywhere and
soft music filled the atmosphere. It was not just opulence and
extravaganza of the rich and powerful. Belgians thought and did
everything great and magnificent. Electricity in the atmosphere could be
touched by hand. Loving eyes exchanged glances. All went merry as a
marriage bell until the deep sound of a cannon struck.
Youth and Pleasure chase the night with flying feet.
The Austro-Bavarian-French battery charge. |
In
the midst of the revelry, most of them did not recognize it to be sound
of French guns. Some said it was wind and some said it was chariot
passing through the stony street. The midnight revelry continued. People
had decided to sleep not till morn. Youth and Pleasure had decided to
chase the night with flying feet. Personification of Pleasure here is
delightful and apt, resembling Milton’s personification of Laughter in
his University poem L’Allegro. The aristocrats, government officers,
soldiers, students, lovers and lazy personages all reverted back to
merriment and carnal festivity. Then the heavy sound was heard once
again, this time nearer and louder. Now there was no doubt it was the
opening roar of cannons.
Midnight carnival turns into carnelian carnage.
The Scotts riding to battle. |
The
noble Duke of Brunswick was sitting in a niche in the festivity hall,
passively nursing his drinks. He was fighting on the part of the English
and had anger towards the French for taking away his power and
authority. He was a soldier head to heel, was always alert and was the
first to recognize the sound as a cannon’s roar. When he said it and
said it was near, the others laughed. But he knew the sound too well
which had stretched his father, a great Chieftain, on a bed of blood
years ago. His desire for long awaited vengeance was immediately roused;
he rushed into the field outside and fell fighting foremost as a hero.
The Duke of Brunswick’s reaction to the sound of cannon heard in the
distance was a forewarning to the massacre and carnelian carnage that
was to follow. War was at their door step. Byron’s description of the
reverberating din of merriment in the hall and the heart-rending rush to
his death by the Duke of Brunswick are equally classical.
Love or lust or wine, the Scottish soldiers are duty-bound.
Lord Byron abroad. His reception at Missolonghi. |
It
is interesting to note how this sudden crisis affected the Scottish
soldiers present. Death of the Duke of Brunswick confirmed that it was
not a joke but actual war. No one had thought such awful a morn could
rise upon such sweet a night. Dancing stopped and partners parted. Some
wept, some trembled, some sighed and all were pale. Many doubted whether
they would ever meet again. The civilians all were dumb struck and
silent, but the Scottish soldiers in the assembling were the first to
recover. Love or lust or wine, they proved once more that they were
duty-bound.
Squadrons and chariots swiftly forming in ranks of war.
Re-enactment of the Battle of Waterloo of 1815 for a film. |
They
soon began to prepare for the war. There were hurried movements
everywhere. Horses were quickly mounted; squadrons and chariots rode out
with impetuous speed and all swiftly formed in ranks of war. Horns and
trumpets were sounded which roused all soldiers into action. Famous
Scottish war songs trumpeted through Scottish bagpipes resounded through
the columns and ranks of the armies and thrilled even the enemies. The
famous song, ‘Cameron’s Gathering’ rose high and wild and echoing
through the Albion’s Hills, and reached the Anglo-Saxons as well as the
French. In no time the soldiers were marching away to the battle field.
The Ardennes Great Woods shed tear drops over the unreturning brave.
The Ardennes Great Woods shed tears over the unreturning brave. |
Byron
stood apart and watched the soldiers marching away to Waterloo. This
last part of this portion of the poem is his reflections on the soldiers
marching away to their death and glory. It is not possible that many of
them may return alive to their land. As the English army marched away
through the Ardennes Great Woods, trees waved their branches and shed
tear drops over the unreturning brave. It was nature’s send-off and
lamentation for her dearest of sons.
Morning noon and night, and morning day again.
The artificial hill raised on the spot of the Battle of Waterloo. |
This
lamentation of the woods is a fine and memorable scene in the poem, an
achievement of Byron’s poetical diction and imagination. The brave
soldiers who are now treading the grass might be dead and lying cold and
low beneath the same grass before evening. The descriptions go through
the calendar of activities of the day: Morning, evening, midnight,
morning and day again; how quick and unexpected was the transformation
from the peak of happiness to the depth of distress! But death would
show no distinctions to man or beast. When the thunder clouds of the war
clear away, the Earth would be uniformly covered with dead soldiers
from both sides. Nature shows her kindness and justice by allowing the
rider and horse and friend and foe to share and enjoy the same red
burial ground which is grand and majestic after a war.
___________________________
Pictures Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons
___________________________
Tags
Appreciations, British Poets, Childe Harolds Pilgrimage, English Language And Literature, English Literature, English Poems, English Songs, Gordon Lord Byron, Literary Criticism, P S Remesh Chandran, Poems, Poetry Reviews, Sahyadri Books And Bloom Books Trivandrum, Songs, Waterloo
Tags
Appreciations, British Poets, Childe Harolds Pilgrimage, English Language And Literature, English Literature, English Poems, English Songs, Gordon Lord Byron, Literary Criticism, P S Remesh Chandran, Poems, Poetry Reviews, Sahyadri Books And Bloom Books Trivandrum, Songs, Waterloo
PSRemeshChandra
Editor of Sahyadri Books & Bloom Books, Trivandrum. Author of several books in English and in Malayalam. And also author of Swan : The Intelligent Picture Book.
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