Ballad O' Chernobyl
“Erik, dae ye ken the wind
Roving o’er Swaeden?
Wha’s the cloud, the billow’d smoke
Wi’ danger heavy-laden?”
Erik didna ken the wind;
He didna ken the smoke.
An’ nae a lad could trace the storm
Tae Russia, where i’ woke.
There the fields o’ fulvous grain
Lie fallow in th’ wake;
There the tsars wi’ tremors rue
Chernobyl’s grave mistake.
Somewhere heifers birth their calv’s
Half-form’d in the debris;
Somewhere widows bury men
Wi’ cancer in the lea.
Brave an’ noble Soviets
Wha ne’er want’d fame
Frae tragedy—ye play’d well,
Bu’ fire’s nae a game!
An’ tae think it a’ began
When twa men fac’d the daemon,
An’ th’ heavy arms o’ smoke
Wrap’d slowly o’er Swaeden.
“Erik, dae ye ken the wind
Roving o’er Swaeden?
Tha’s the cloud, the billow’d smoke
Wi’ sorrow heavy-laden.”
Author’s Note: This ballad is written in the traditional Scottish dialect and is about the Swedes' discovery of the Soviet Union's nuclear facility accident at Chernobyl. Swedish scientists were the first to discover the high amounts of wind-transmitted radioactivity and exposed the Soviets' attempted cover-up.