Nicholas Hely Hutchinson |
Hedges Freaked With Snow
No argument, no anger, no remorse,
No dividing of blame.
There was poison in the cup - why should we ask
From whose hand it came?
No grief for our dead love, no howling gales
That through darkness blow,
But the smile of sorrow, a wan winter landscape,
Hedges freaked with snow.
Robert Graves
I don't know what this poem means. Acceptance without question? A blankness, an emptiness that comes from too much having happened, too much to process? It makes me think a little of T.S. Eliot's line "This is the way the world ends, not with a bang, but a whimper." What I love is how Grave's translates the physical landscape into his inner landscape, and that "hedges freaked with snow" is brilliant.
No comments:
Post a Comment