Prince Rostislav (Князь Ростисла′в) is a poem by Alexey Konstantinovich Tolstoy first published in the April 1856 issue of The Russian Messenger (book 1, pp. 483-484), subtitled The Ballad.[1]
The poem was based on an episode in Slovo o Polku Igoreve concerning Prince Rostislav of Pereyaslavl (1070-1093) and his brothers' losing a battle with the Polovtsy. Fleeting from the enemy, he drowned in the Stuhna River. The quotation from Slovo was used in a corrupt form, common at the time.[2]
Later literary scholars found close similarities between this poem and Lermontov's Mermaid and Goethe's King Harald Garfager.
The poem was set to music twice, by Anton Rubinstein and Sergei Rachmaninoff.[2]
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