Nad Tatrou sa blýska
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| Nad Tatrou sa blýska English: Lightning Over the Tatras |
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The first printed version of Nad Tatrou sa blýska.
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| National Anthem of | |
| Lyrics | Janko Matúška, 1844 |
| Music | folk tune |
| Adopted | 13 December 1918 1 January 1993 |
Nad Tatrou sa blýska — "Lightning Over the Tatras" is the national anthem of Slovakia. The origins of the anthem are in the Central European activism of the 19th century. Its main themes are a storm over the Tatra mountains that symbolized danger to the Slovaks, and a desire for a resolution of the threat. It used to be particularly popular during the 1848-1849 insurgencies.
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[edit] Origin
[edit] Circumstances
23-year-old Janko Matúška wrote the lyrics of "Lightning Over the Tatras" ("Nad Tatrou sa blýska") in January-February 1844. The tune came from the folk song "She dug a well" ("Kopala studienku") suggested to him by his fellow student Jozef Podhradský[1] (1823-1915), a future religious and Pan-Slavic activist, and high-school professor.[2] Shortly afterwards, Matúška and about two dozen other students left their prestigious Bratislava Lutheran Lýceum (preparatory high school and college) in protest over the removal of Ľudovít Štúr from his teaching position by the Lutheran Church under pressure from the kingdom's authorities, who objected to his pro-Slovak activism
"Lightning Over the Tatras" was written during the weeks when the students were agitated about the repeated denials of their and others' appeals to the school board to reverse Štúr's dismissal. About a dozen of the defecting students transferred to the Levoča Lutheran Gymnázium.[3] When one of the students, the 18-year old budding journalist and writer Viliam Pauliny-Tóth (1826-1877), wrote down the oldest known record of the poem in his school notebook in 1844, he gave it the title of "Bratislava Slovaks, Future Levočians" ("Prešporský Slováci, budaucj Lewočané"), which reflected the motivation of its origin.[4]
The journey from Bratislava to Levoča took the students past the High Tatras, Slovakia's and the then Kingdom of Hungary's highest, imposing, and symbolic mountain range. A storm above the mountains is a key theme in the poem.
[edit] Versions
No authorized version of Matúška's lyrics has been preserved and its early records remained without attribution.[5] He stopped publishing after 1849 and later became clerk of the district court.[6] The song became popular during the Slovak Volunteer campaigns of 1848-1849.[7] Its text was copied and recopied in hand before it appeared in print in 1851 (unattributed, as "Volunteer Song," Dobrovolňícka),[8] which gave rise to some variation, namely concerning the phrase zastavme ich ("let's stop them")[9] or zastavme sa ("let's pause").[10] A review of the extant copies and related literature inferred that Matúška's original was most likely to have contained "let's stop them." Among other documents, it occurred both in its oldest preserved handwritten record from 1844 and in its first printed version from 1851.[11] The legislated Slovak national anthem uses this version, the other phrase was used before 1993.
[edit] National anthem
On 13 Dec. 1918, only the first stanza of Janko Matúška's lyrics became one half of the two-part bilingual Czechoslovak anthem composed of the first stanza from a Czech operetta tune, "Where Is My Home?" (Kde domov můj?), and the first stanza of Matúška's song, each sung in its respective language and both played in that sequence with their respective tunes.[12] The songs reflected the two nations' concerns in the 19th century[13] when they were confronted with the already fervent national-ethnic activism of the Hungarians and the Germans, their fellow ethnic groups in the Habsburg Monarchy.
Only the first two stanzas of Matúška's lyrics were legislated as the national anthem of Slovakia after it and the Czech Republic became independent countries in 1993.[14][15] The reference to the Tatras in it has a parallel in the interpretations of Slovakia's coat of arms that was defined during the period when Matúška wrote the lyrics. A historical take on the national seal explains the three peaks as symbolic of the mountain ranges of the Mátra, Fatra, and the Tatras, another one sees all three as symbolic of the Tatras, yet another one as a representation of the mountain group of Vysoká in the High Tatras.
[edit] Lyrics
[edit] A close reading and notes
| Lightning Over the Tatras |
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| Nad Tatrou*1 sa blýska, | There is lightning over the Tatras,*1 |
| hromy divo bijú. | thunderclaps wildly beat. |
| Zastavme ich, bratia, | Let us stop them, brothers, |
| veď sa ony stratia, | for all that, they will disappear, |
| Slováci ožijú. | the Slovaks will revive. |
| To Slovensko naše | That Slovakia of ours |
| posiaľ tvrdo spalo. | has been fast asleep so far. |
| Ale blesky hromu | But the thunder's lightning |
| vzbudzujú ho k tomu, | is rousing it |
| aby sa prebralo.*2 | to come to.*2 |
| Only the above stanzas have been legislated as the anthem. |
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| Už Slovensko vstáva | Slovakia already arises, |
| putá si strháva. | tears off its shackles. |
| Hej, rodina milá, | Hey/yes, dear family, |
| hodina odbila, | the hour has struck, |
| žije matka Sláva.*3 | Mother Sláva/Glory*3 is alive. |
| Ešte jedle*4 rastú | Firs*4 are still growing |
| na krivánskej*6 strane.*5 | in the direction of*5 Kriváň.*6 |
| Kto jak Slovák cíti, | Who has feelings like a Slovak, |
| nech sa šable chytí | let him get hold of a sabre |
| a medzi nás stane. | and stand among us. |
- Romantic poets began to employ the Tatras as a symbol of the Slovaks' homeland.
- That is, to join the national-ethnic activism already underway among other peoples of Central Europe in the 19th century.
- The standard meaning of sláva is "glory," or "fame." The figurative meaning, first used by Ján Kollár in the monumental poem The Daughter of Sláva in 1824,[16] is "Goddess/Mother of the Slavs."
- The idiomatic simile "like a fir" (ako jedľa) was applied to men in a variety of positive meanings: "stand tall," "have a handsome figure," "be tall and brawny," etc.
- A less rigorous reading could give "on the slope[s] of Kriváň."
- See the article on Kriváň for the mountain's symbolism.
[edit] Poetics
One of the trends shared by many Slovak Romantic poets was frequent versification that imitated the patterns of the local folk songs.[17] The additional impetus for Janko Matúška to embrace the trend in "Lightning Over the Tatras" was that he actually designed it to replace the lyrics of an existing folk song. Among the Romantic-folkloric features in the structure of "Lightning Over the Tatras" are the equal number of syllables per verse, and the consistent a−b−b−a disyllabic rhyming of verses 2-5 in each stanza. Leaving the first verses unrhymed was Matúška's license (a single matching sound, blýska—bratia, did not qualify as a rhyme):
- — Nad Tatrou sa blýska,
- a - hromy divo bijú.
- b - Zastavme ich bratia,
- b - veď sa ony stratia,
- a - Slováci ožijú.
Another traditional arrangement of Matúška's lines gives 4-verse stanzas rhymed a−b−b−a with the first verse made up of 12 syllables split by a mid-pause, and each of the remaining 3 verses made up of 6 syllables:[18]
- a - Nad Tatrou sa blýska, hromy divo bijú.
- b - Zastavme ich bratia,
- b - veď sa ony stratia,
- a - Slováci ožijú.
[edit] An English rhyming ditty
Note: The prosody, rhyming patters, and language of the anonymous ad-hoc piece below contain no attributes of the original, or of the canons of Slovak Romantic poetry.
- Far above the Tatra
- lightning bolts are pounding.
- These bolts we shall banish,
- brothers, they will vanish;
- Slovaks are rebounding.
- Our Slovakia was,
- until now, quiescent.
- But the lightning flashing
- and the thunder crashing
- made it effervescent.
[edit] References
- ^ Brtáň, Rudo (1971). Postavy slovenskej literatúry.
- ^ Buchta, Vladimír (1983). "Jozef Podhradský - autor prvého pravoslávneho katechizmu pre Čechov a Slovákov". Pravoslavný teologický sborník, (10).
- ^ Sojková, Zdenka (2005). Knížka o životě Ľudovíta Štúra.
- ^ Brtáň, Rudo (1971). "Vznik piesne Nad Tatrou sa blýska". Slovenské pohľady.
- ^ Cornis-Pope, Marcel; John Neubauer (2004). History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th Centuries.
- ^ Čepan, Oskár (1958). Dejiny slovenskej literatúry.
- ^ Sloboda, Ján (1971). Slovenská jar: slovenské povstanie 1848-49.
- ^ Anon. (1851). "Dobrovolňícka". Domová pokladňica.
- ^ Varsík, Milan (1970). "Spievame správne našu hymnu?". Slovenská literatúra.
- ^ Vongrej, Pavol (1983). "Výročie nášho romantika". Slovenské pohľady, 1.
- ^ Brtáň, Rudo (1979). Slovensko-slovanské literárne vzťahy a kontakty.
- ^ Klofáč, Václav (1918-12-21). "Výnos ministra národní obrany č. 4580, 13. prosince 1918". Osobní věstník ministerstva Národní obrany, 1.
- ^ Auer, Stefan (2004). Liberal Nationalism in Central Europe.
- ^ National Council of the Slovak Republic (1992-09-01), “Paragraph 4, Article 9, Chapter 1, Constitution of the Slovak Republic”, Law 460/1992, Zbierka zákonov.
- ^ National Council of the Slovak Republic (1993-02-18), “Section 1, Paragraph 13, Part 18, Law on National Symbols of the Slovak Republic and their Use”, Law 63/1993, Zbierka zákonov.
- ^ Kollár, Ján (1824). Sláwy dcera we třech zpěwjch.
- ^ Bakoš, Mikuláš (1966). Vývin slovenského verša od školy Štúrovej.
- ^ Kraus, Cyril (2001). Slovenskí romantici: Poézia.
[edit] External links
- Slovak National Anthem, full version
- Slovak National Anthem, chorus only
- Slovak National Anthem, instrumental only played by the US Navy Band
- Slovak National Anthem, sheet music, lyrics
- Slovak National Anthem, sheet music for orchestral instruments


