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BARON OF KEKKO BALINT BALASSA

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 240 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARON OF KEKKO BALINT BALASSA  and GYARMAT (1551-1594), Magyar lyric poet, was born at KekkS, and educated by the reformer, Peter Bornemissza, and by his
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mother, the highly gifted
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Protestant zealot, Anna Sulyok . His first
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work was a
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translation of Michael Bock's Wiirtzgertlein
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fir die krancken Seelen, to comfort his
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father while in prison (1570-1572) for some
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political offence . On his father's release, Balint accompanied him to court, and was also
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present at the coronation
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diet of Pressburg in 1572 . He then joined the army and led a merry
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life at the fortress of Eger . Here he fell violently in love with Anna Losonczi, the daughter of the hero of
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Temesvar, and evidently, from his verses, his love was not unrequited . But a new
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mistress speedily dragged the ever
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mercurial youth away from her,and deeply wounded, she gave her hand to Kriszt6f Ungnad . Naturally Balassa only began to realize how much he loved Anna when he had lost her . He pursued her with gifts and verses, but she remained true to her pique and to her
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marriage vows, and he could only enshrine her memory in immortal verse . In 1574 Balint was sent to the camp of Gaspar Bekesy to assist him against Stephen Bathory; but his troops were encountered and scattered on the way thither, and he himself was severly wounded and taken prisoner . His not very rigorous captivity lasted for two years, and he then disappears from sight . We next hear of him in 1584 as the wooer and winner of Christina Dobo, the daughter of the valiant commandant of Eger . What led him to this step we know not, but it was the cause of all his subsequent misfortunes .

His wife's greedy relatives nearly ruined him by legal processes, and when in 1586 he turned

Catholic to escape their persecutions they declared that he and his son had become
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Turks . His simultaneous
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desertion of his wife ied to his expulsion from Hungary, and from 1589 to 1594 he led a vagabond life in Poland, sweetened by innumerable amours with damsels of every degree from cithara players to princesses . The
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Turkish war of 1594 recalled him to Hungary, and he died of his wounds at the siege of Esztergom the same
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year . Balassa's poems fall into four divisions: religious
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hymns, patriotic and martial songs,
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original love poems, and adaptations from the Latin and German . They are all most original, exceedingly objective and so excellent in point of style that it is difficult even to imagine him a contemporary of Sebastian Tinodi and Peter Ilosvay . But his erotics are his best productions . They circulated in MS. for generations and were never printed till 1874, when Farkas Dealt discovered a perfect copy of them in the Radvanyi library . For beauty, feeling and transporting passion there is nothing like them in Magyar literature till we come to the age of Michael Csokonai and Alexander Petofi . Balassa was also the inventor of the strophe which goes by his name . It consists of nine lines—a a b c c b d d b, or three rhyming pairs alternating with the rhyming third,
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sixth and ninth lines . See Aron Szilady, Balint Balassa's Poems (Hung.)
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Budapest, 1899 . (R .

N .

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