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March

The sun is hotter than the top ledge in a steam bath;
The ravine, crazed, is rampaging below.
Spring — that corn-fed, husky milkmaid —
Is busy at her chores with never a letup.

The snow is wasting (pernicious anemia —
See those branching veinlets of impotent blue?)
Yet in the cowbarn life is burbling, steaming,
And the tines of pitchforks simply glow with health.

These days — these days, and these nights also!
With eavesdrop thrumming its tattoos at noon,
With icicles (cachectic!) hanging on to gables,
And with the chattering of rills that never sleep!

All doors are flung open — in stable and in cowbarn;
Pigeons peck at oats fallen in the snow;
And the culprit of all this and its life-begetter—
The pile of manure — is pungent with ozone.

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Comments


  • GaryCGibson
    February 14, 2004
    Edit | Reply
    It is interesting to compare this poem to some of Ginsberg's. The subject is different...not politics for Pasternak, yet a free style description existentially perhaps flows in each. Pasternak however writes about salient features of life in nature and society in rurul Russia instead of about the Vietnam War and political opposition in the Bay Area. Personification of spring in this poem brings the practical to experience.