With this poem
Lord Byron departed, as the
Romantic poets had wont, from
literary tradition. Whilst depicting a
biblical event,
The Destruction of Sennacherib was penned after one of the century's first
archaeologists, young British adventurer
Austen Henry Layard, explored the ruins of
Nineveh in 1847 and rediscovered the lost palace of
Sennacherib across the
Tigris River from modern
Mosul in northern
Iraq. Layard's find
corroborated an event that went unrecorded save for its (rather fantastic and
supernatural) depiction in the
Bible.
Romantic lore has it that
Lord Byron was inspired by accounts of the
discovery in the
newspaper, and did something unusual for his time that has since become
commonplace - he wrote about
current events.
The Destruction of Sennacherib thus stands as a brilliant example of how the
Romantics brought
literature into the
modern age.
The event was originally recorded in II Kings 18:19, a passage which reports that Sennacherib's invincible army was laid low by the angel of the Lord, after which Sennacherib returned to Nineveh where he was murdered by his sons. Nineveh itself fell to the medes and Babylonians in 612 BC, its splendour buried under the shifting dust of northern Mesopotamia.
Inscribed in cuneiform on the colossal sculptures in the doorway of its throne room was Sennacherib's own account of the siege of Jerusalem. It differed in detail from the biblical one, but confirmed that Sennacherib did not capture the city. This find generated an excitement that is difficult to imagine today, because amid the increasing religious doubt and scriptural revisionism of the mid-nineteenth century, it gave Christian fundamentalists an independent eyewitness corroboration of a biblical event, written in the
doorway of the very room where Sennacherib may have issued his order to attack.
John Malcolm Russell, The Modern Sack of Nineveh and Nimrud, Culture without Context: The Newsletter of the Illicit Antiquities Research Centre, Issue 1, Autumn 1997, Cambridge, UK. This and more archaeological info at http://www-mcdonald.arch.cam.ac.uk/IARC/CWOC/Issue1/Nineveh.htm.
The Destruction of Sennacherib
THE Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold,
And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold;
And the sheen of their spears was like stars on the sea,
When the blue wave rolls nightly on deep Galilee.
Like the leaves of the forest when Summer is green,
That host with their banners at sunset were seen:
Like the leaves of the forest when Autumn hath blown,
That host on the morrow lay withered and strown.
For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast,
And breathed in the face of the foe as he passed;
And the eyes of the sleepers waxed deadly and chill,
And their hearts but once heaved, and for ever grew still!
And there lay the steed with his nostril all wide,
But through it there rolled not the breath of his pride;
And the foam of his gasping lay white on the turf,
And cold as the spray of the rock-beating surf.
And there lay the rider distorted and pale,
With the dew on his brow, and the rust on his mail:
And the tents were all silent, the banners alone,
The lances unlifted, the trumpet unblown.
And the widows of Ashur are loud in their wail,
And the idols are broke in the temple of Baal;
And the might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword,
Hath melted like snow in the glance of the Lord!
George Gordon, a.k.a. Lord Byron (1788-1824), 1815