Talk:Milutin Bojić
← Older revision
Revision as of 03:26, 26 March 2013
Line 1:
Line 1:
−
Milutin Bojic (18 May 1892 - 8 November 1917) was a poet, theatre critic and playwright, born in [[Belgrade]] and died prematurely in [[Thessaloniki]] in 1917. He was only 25.
+
Milutin Bojic (18 May 1892 - 8 November 1917) was a poet, theatre critic, playwright,and soldier, born in [[Belgrade]] and died prematurely in [[Thessaloniki]] in 1917. He was only 25.
Milutin Bojic is the most famous of the many Serbian writers, poets and painters to die in [[World War I]]. In his brief life he wrote works that reflect two major themes: the Serbs' powerful national pride and their agony during the disasterous war. Even more so than his plays and epics, the war lyrics in "Pesme bola i ponosa" (Poems of Pain and Pride), published in 1917 in Thessaloniki, made him a popular war poet. His personal suffering seemed to embody Serbian history at that juncture of greatness and disaster.
Milutin Bojic is the most famous of the many Serbian writers, poets and painters to die in [[World War I]]. In his brief life he wrote works that reflect two major themes: the Serbs' powerful national pride and their agony during the disasterous war. Even more so than his plays and epics, the war lyrics in "Pesme bola i ponosa" (Poems of Pain and Pride), published in 1917 in Thessaloniki, made him a popular war poet. His personal suffering seemed to embody Serbian history at that juncture of greatness and disaster.
−
Milutin Bojic was a military mail censor during the beginning of World War I, and one of the promising poets of Serbia, according to literary critic Jovan Skerlic, who described the generation: "With the war eating away the nation's youth, Serbian literature, like the Serbian nation, was bled almost to death." After the Serbian army's retreat through Albania (World War I) in winter of 1915-1916, the survivors who reached the Adriatic coast were transported to [[Corfu]] by French, Italian and other allied ships. Here and in the neighbouring island of [[Vido]] many of them died of diseases contracted while trecking across the treacherous, snow-covered, rocky mountains. They were buried at sea.
+
Milutin Bojic, a veteran of the Balkan wars, was a military mail censor during the beginning of World War I, and one of the promising poets of Serbia, according to literary critic Jovan Skerlic, who described the generation: "With the war eating away the nation's youth, Serbian literature, like the Serbian nation, was bled almost to death." After the Serbian army's retreat through Albania (World War I) in winter of 1915-1916, the survivors who reached the Adriatic coast were transported to [[Corfu]] by French, Italian and other allied ships. Here and in the neighbouring island of [[Vido]] many of them died of diseases contracted while trecking across the treacherous, snow-covered, rocky mountains. They were buried at sea.
Bojic survived the Serbian army's retreat through Montenegro and Albania and the desperation of Corfu, and yet in the end succumbed to tuberculosis in Salonika. "Our church bells toll dead instead of hours," he wrote of seeing his countrymen dying around him. At the time of the retreat Bojic had been working on an epic poem, ''"Cain"'', in which he compared Bulgaria's attack on Serbia to the biblical Cain's attack on his brother, Abel. The poem was one of the few things that he carried with him in his knapsack as he made his journey over the Albanian mountains. Upon arriving at the Adriatic seashore only to see his fellow Serbs being thrown out to the sea for burial, he penned one of the most moving war poems of his generation: Ode to a Blue Sea Tomb or better known as ''Plava Grobnica'' (simply translated Blue Graveyard).
Bojic survived the Serbian army's retreat through Montenegro and Albania and the desperation of Corfu, and yet in the end succumbed to tuberculosis in Salonika. "Our church bells toll dead instead of hours," he wrote of seeing his countrymen dying around him. At the time of the retreat Bojic had been working on an epic poem, ''"Cain"'', in which he compared Bulgaria's attack on Serbia to the biblical Cain's attack on his brother, Abel. The poem was one of the few things that he carried with him in his knapsack as he made his journey over the Albanian mountains. Upon arriving at the Adriatic seashore only to see his fellow Serbs being thrown out to the sea for burial, he penned one of the most moving war poems of his generation: Ode to a Blue Sea Tomb or better known as ''Plava Grobnica'' (simply translated Blue Graveyard).
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Milutin_Boji%C4%87&diff=93287670&oldid=93287165