You can listen to the full track on platforms like YouTube Music or Spotify . Google Watch Action Data
The song’s core theme is the painful contrast between the cyclical, balanced world of nature and the fragmented, isolated world of a person who has lost their love. Mirković uses the imagery of stags and does—symbols of grace and wild vitality—to represent a natural order where love and companionship are effortless and guaranteed. As the stags "rush through the fields" and "kiss the does," the singer remains static, trapped in a personal winter while the world around her continues its dance of connection. Symbolism of the "Krilata Košuta" (Winged Doe) jeleni_kosute_ljube
Released on the album Pomisli želju with the legendary Južni Vetar production, the song remains a staple of Balkan music for its blend of melancholy and rhythmic energy. It captures a specific "longing" ( sevdah or žal ) that resonates across generations, using simple animal imagery to touch on the deep, complex human need for belonging. You can listen to the full track on
In the refrain, the narrator projects her inner state onto the environment. The "green fields" and "springs" are described as sad, not because they have physically changed, but because their beauty serves only to remind her of what she lacks. The rhetorical question, "And where are you now?" shifts the focus from the bustling life of the forest to the empty space beside her, highlighting the universal human experience of feeling most alone when surrounded by the happiness of others. Cultural Legacy As the stags "rush through the fields" and