David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • LENIN AND THE BOURBAKI PANORAMA

    Lenin, to leaven his exile in Zurich,

    would sometimes weekend in Luzern and,

    after kalberwurst with onions and gravy

    at the Wilden-Mann on Bahnhofstrasse,

    would always visit the Panorama

    in the Löwenplatz – or so it is said.

     

    Panoramas were popular before

    the illusion of photography,

    still or moving, became reality.

    They were cycloramas painted in oil,

    typically fifteen metres high, one hundred

    metres in circumference – often

    with a three dimensional aspect:

    in this case, for example, an empty

    railway wagon – Huit chevaux, Quarantes hommes.

     

    General Bourbaki’s beaten L’Armée de L’Est

    in Bismarck’s Franco-Prussian War

    sought asylum with the nascent Red Cross

    of the now united cantons. In deep snow

    eighty seven thousand men, twelve thousand

    horses, crossed the border that January.

     

    An escapee from a school trip to the town

    in the year of Hungary and Suez,

    I wandered in by chance. The custodian

    that day knew no English. My schoolboy French

    struggled with his German-accent. But

    I still remember the images

    of the aftermath of some great battle

    my history lessons had not mentioned.

     

    Imagine if Lenin had learned from this –

    the stumbling soldiers; the dead horses; the piles

    of discarded, expensive rifles;

    the woman with her basket waiting to help

    whoever it might be lying in the cold.

     

    He certainly learned from the railways.

    Disguised as a worker, he returned

    to Russia via the Finland Station.

    But maybe he also learned from William Tell –

    marksman and anti-imperialist –

    or, rather, the apple.

     

     

     


    One response to “LENIN AND THE BOURBAKI PANORAMA”


    1. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      Just when I thought the lesson in forgotten [or never-known-before] history was more than ample reward for reading this fine piece of poetic personal history and meditation, comes the stunning last half line. Such brilliant suggestiveness!

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