The Storming Of The Bastille Poem by Paolo Giuseppe Mazzarello

The Storming Of The Bastille



In France on the 14th July people eat out, remembering a fact:
On the 14th July 1789 there was the invention of the restaurant.
That day there was the storming of the Bastille
However one has to eat every day.
The Bastille held seven prisoners: among them, four youngs.
That one was the revolution of the lawyers: Robespierre, Danton, Saint Just;
They became judges, cut the heads of dad king and mom queen.
Had those sovereigns their heads? People needed bread.
Marat was struggling with his eczema in a bathtub,
He fell on the battlefield. Citoyens, people are hungry.
Oh Jacobins your heads didn't survive, either.
Maybe it's expensive today but, Lesbia, can I invite you to dinner?
Aux armes, citoyens.

The Storming Of The Bastille
Monday, July 14, 2008
Topic(s) of this poem: historical,revolution
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This poem is written about hungry citizens.
In the picture: photo by Lorenzo Canestro, Ph.D.
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