| Title : | Brueghel's Winter | |||||
| Poet : | Walter de la Mare | |||||
| Date : | 11 Jul 2000 | |||||
| 1stLine: | Jagg'd mountain peak... | |||||
| Length : | 20 | Text-only version | ||||
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| Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [microfaq] | ||||||
Jagg'd mountain peaks and skies ice-green Wall in the wild, cold scene below. Churches, farms, bare copse, the sea In freezing quiet of winter show; Where ink-black shapes on fields in flood Curling, skating, and sliding go. To left, a gabled tavern; a blaze; Peasants; a watching child; and lo, Muffled, mute--beneath naked trees In sharp perspective set a-row-- Trudge huntsmen, sinister spears aslant, Dogs snuffling behind them in the snow; And arrowlike, lean, athwart the air Swoops into space a crow. But flame, nor ice, nor piercing rock, Nor silence, as of a frozen sea, Nor that slant inward infinite line Of signboard, bird, and hill, and tree, Give more than subtle hint of him Who squandered here life's mystery. -- Walter de la Mare |
Of all the poems on 'Hunters in the Snow', de la Mare's is easily the most subtle and haunting... it explores the hidden recesses, the dark shadows of Brueghel's painting with a wonderfully delicate touch. As T. S. Eliot says in his poem 'to Walter de la Mare' [1]: " - the delicate, invisible web you wove - The inexplicable mystery of sound." Even the normally staid Brittanica is enthusiastic about his poetry: "[de la Mare had] an unusual power to evoke the ghostly, evanescent moments in life... incantatory, other-worldly magic... " "Other-worldly magic" - I couldn't agree more. thomas. [1] A very beautiful tribute; I'll run it on the Minstrels some time soon. [Links] 'The Listeners' is one of the most famous and best-beloved poems ever written; it was also only the second poem ever to feature on this mailing list. You can read it at poem #2 'Napoleon' is short and direct, but no less effective for that: poem #272