Poetry Explorer


Classic and Contemporary Poetry


SPRING STRAINS by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS

Poem Explanation Poet Analysis

First Line: IN A TISSUE-THIN MONOTONE OF BLUE-GREY BUDS
Last Line: FLUNG OUTWARD AND UP -- DISAPPEARING SUDDENLY!
Subject(s): SPRING;

In a tissue-thin monotone of blue-grey buds
crowded erect with desire against
the sky --
tense blue-grey twigs
slenderly anchoring them down, drawing
them in --

two blue-grey birds chasing
a third struggle in circles, angles,
swift convergings to a point that bursts
instantly!

Vibrant bowing limbs
pull downward, sucking in the sky
that bulges from behind, plastering itself
against them in packed rifts, rock blue
and dirty orange!

But --
(Hold hard, rigid jointed trees!)
the blinding and red-edged sun-blur --
creeping energy, concentrated
counterforce -- welds sky, buds, trees,
rivets them in one puckering hold!
Sticks through! Pulls the whole
counter-pulling mass upward, to the right,
locks even the opaque, not yet defined
ground in a terrific drag that is
loosening the very tap-roots!

On a tissue-thin monotone of blue-grey buds
two blue-grey birds, chasing a third,
at full cry! Now they are
flung outward and up -- disappearing suddenly!



Home: PoetryExplorer.net