In 1521, the young Polish diplomat Nicolaus Hussovianus was watching the
bullfights at a papal celebration in Rome. He remarked that the
spectacle reminded him of the bison hunts he had witnessed as a young
man in the Polish-Lithuanian woods, and his employer then asked
Hussovianus to write a poem about the bison hunts, to accompany the gift
of a stuffed bison for Pope Leo X, an avid hunter.Song of the Bison is
the first complete English translation of Hussovianus's Latin poem,
which is claimed as a national epic by Lithuania, Belarus, and Poland.
The exciting poem discusses not only Hussovianus's own experience in
hunting and observing the European bison, but also the political,
social, religious, and aesthetic developments of sixteenth-century
Europe, and ends with an urgent plea for unity among European states
threatened by foreign invasions.