Leo Alishan

Leo Alishan Poems

Whence dost thou come, O moon, so calmly and softly,
Spreading o'er mountain, valley, and plain thy light,
...

The radiant type of maidenhood,
Crown of Armenia's pride!
...

FORTH welling from the breast of sapphire lakes,
Oh, tell my jocund heart why from their shore
...

WHY art thou troubled, wandering heart ?
Why dost thou sigh with pain?
From whom do all thy sufferings come?
Of whom dost thou complain ?
...

WHY art thou troubled, wandering heart ?
Why dost thou sigh with pain?
From whom do all thy sufferings come?
Of whom dost thou complain ?
...

WE are the sons of valiant men, Armenians great and free;
Our grandsires were descended from a hero-ancestry ;
...

FATHER of light, we praise thee !
Thy Son is risen again.
Spirit of love, we praise thee!
He shares thy glorious reign.
...

O moon, fair lamp divinely lit!
God set you in the sky
To lead night's hosts, for darkness blind
And for my heart an eye.
...

ALAS, ye poor Armenians !
In undeserved distress
Ye wander forth to slavery,
In want and wretchedness.
...

The Best Poem Of Leo Alishan

The Nightingale Of Avarayr

Whence dost thou come, O moon, so calmly and softly,
Spreading o'er mountain, valley, and plain thy light,
And over me the Patriarch, wandering sadly,
With wandering thoughts, in Avarayr to-night?

Here where our matchless, brave Armenian fathers
Fell as giants, as angels rise anew,
Com'st thou to spread o'er the bones of the saints a cover
Of golden thread, from thy cloud of snowy hue?

O dost thou think, though thy brow be bright already,
Adornment of heroes' blood would become it well?
Or dost thou still, in silence and secret, wonder
To think how the great and terrible Vartan fell,

Giving his enemies' lives to the shades of darkness,
And giving his spirit into the hands of God?
And thou, O River Dghmood, thou flowest lamenting
Amid thy reeds, sad river bestained with blood.

And thou, O wind from Mankuran's upland blowing,
Or Ararat's sacred summit, gray-haired and hoar,
Thou, too, like me, uncertain and trembling movest,
On faint wings passing the mountains and valleys o'er.

From forest to forest, from leaf to leaf, lamenting,
Thou comest upon the plains, in pale moonshine,
To carry unto Armenian hearts the echo
Of the last sighs of this worn heart of mine.

Nightingale, voice of the night, little soul of the roses,
Friend of all mournful hearts that with sorrow are sighing!
Sing, little nightingale, sing me a song from that hillock,
Sing with my soul of Armenia's heroes undying!

Thy voice in the cloister of Thaddeus reached me and thrilled me;
My heart, that was close to the cross, in a reverie grave,
Suddenly bounded and throbbed; from the cross I hastened to seek thee -
Came forth and found thee here, on the field of Vartan the brave.

Nightingale, this is the tale that of thee our fathers have told us:
That Avarayr's nightingale, singing so sweetly at daylight's dim close,
Is not a bird, but a soul, - it is Yeghishe's sweet-voiced spirit,
That sees the image of Vartan for aye in the red-blooming rose.

In winter he walks alone, and mourns in the midst of the desert;
In spring comes to Avarayr, to the bush with roses aflame,
To sing and call aloud, with Yeghishe's voice, upon Vartan,
To see whether Vartan perchance will answer when called by his name.

If like the voice of a nightingale faint and weary,
Songs of Togarmah, my voice shall reach your ears,-
Sons of the great, whose valiant and virtuous fathers
Filled plains, books, and the heavens, in former years,-

If one small drop of blood from Armenia's fountain,
The fount of Bahlav, flow into your bosoms' sea,-
If you would that your country's glories for you be written,
Come forth to Ardaz with your Patriarch, come with me!

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