A moving, posthumous collection of elegies and eclogues that meditate
on nature, landscape, and history, by a great Hungarian poet.
Szilárd Borbély spent his childhood in a tiny impoverished village in
northeastern Hungary, where the archaic peasant world of Eastern Europe
coexisted with the collectivist ideology of a new Communist state. Close
to the Soviet border and far from any metropolitan center, the village
was a world apart: life was harsh, monotonous, and often brutal, and the
Borbélys, outsiders and "class enemies," were shunned. In a Bucolic
Land, Borbély's final, posthumously published book of poems, combines
autobiography, ethnography, classical mythology, and pastoral idyll in a
remarkable central poetic sequence about the starkly precarious and yet
strangely numinous liminal zone of his youth. This is framed by elegies
for a teacher in which the poet meditates on the nature of language and
speech and on the adequacy of words to speak of and for the dead.
Ottilie Mulzet's English translation conveys the full power of a writer
of whom László Krasznahorkai has said, "He was a poet--a great poet--who
shatters us."