Wait for Me (poem)
Wait for Me (Жди меня), written by the Russian poet and playwright turned war correspondent Konstantin Simonov, is one of the best known Russian World War II poems. The poem was written by Simonov in July 1941 after he left his love Valentina Serova behind to take on his new duties of war correspondent on the battlefront. Wait for Me was published in Pravda on 14 January 1942, which first brought the poem to widespread attention.[1]
One of the most popular poems ever written in Russia, Wait for Me was especially popular with the frontoviks (front-line soldiers) in the Great Patriotic War, as Russians call World War II.[2] A number of servicemen cut out the poem from Pravda and mailed it to their girlfriends and wives, who in turn wrote poems declaring that they would wait for their men to return from the war.[1] The popularity of Wait for Me took the Soviet authorities by surprise, but once aware of the enthusiastic public response as countless demands for the poem came in, Wait for Me became an unofficial poetical anthem that symbolized the willingness to endure sacrifices and pain in the pursuit of victory.[1]
During the war, it was common for Soviet newspapers to publish after-poems (poems written in response to another poem) by various women who declared their willingness to wait for the return of their husbands or boyfriends.[1] Most frontoviks knew Wait for Me by heart, and it was very common for frontoviks to carry a locket with a picture of their wives or girlfriends in it, which a copy of Wait for Me was wrapped around, as a sign of their desire to return to their loved ones and to survive the war.[2] Many soldiers seemed to believe that this would somehow help them to survive the war, as if declaring their love by wrapping the poem around a picture of their loved ones, would protect them and ensure that they would get back home.[2]
A companion piece for Wait for Me was Kill Him!, a viscerally violent poem by Simonov that began with the line "Kill a German!/Kill him soon!", a poem that was popular at the time, but whose popularity faded after the war while the appeal of Wait for Me did not diminish after the war.[1] Much of the popularity of Wait for Me during the war was the sense of longing expressed by the soldier narrator of the poem who promises to return to his woman whose love allows him to endure any suffering along the promise of a return to normality once the war ended.[1]
In 1942 Aleksandr Lokshin composed a symphonic poem for mezzo-soprano and orchestra on the verses of Wait for me. Lokshin composed later a version of the same work for baritone, piano and flute-piccolo.[3] In 1943, the poem Wait for Me was turned into a film also entitled Wait for Me that was co-written by Simonov and starred Serova.
Books
- Grant, Bruce; Barker, Adele Marie (2010). The Russia Reader History, Culture, Politics. Lexington: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822346487.
- Merridale, Catherine (2005). Ivan's War The Red Army 1939-1945. London: Faber and Faber.
Notes
- Grant & Barker 2010, p. 508.
- Merridale 2005, p. 168.
- Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: A.L.Lokshin (1920 -1987), "Wait for me" (1942). YouTube.
External links
- Жди меня (in Russian)
- Wait for me (in English)
- Warte auf mich (in German)
- Wart auf mi (Bavarian)
- Excerpt from World at War at youtube.com Retrieved March 18, 2010
- Wait For Me short film