PoemI Wrung My Hands
Author / PoetAnna Akhmatova
ReferenceKiev, 1911
TagsDesolation, Rain, Sadness, Veil

I wrung my hands under my dark veil. . .
“Why are you pale, what makes you reckless?”
— Because I have made my loved one drunk
with an astringent sadness.

I’ll never forget. He went out, reeling;
his mouth was twisted, desolate. . .
I ran downstairs, not touching the banisters,
and followed him as far as the gate.

And shouted, choking: “I meant it all
in fun. Don’t leave me, or I’ll die of pain.”
He smiled at me — oh so calmly, terribly —
and said: “Why don’t you get out of the rain?”

Anna Akhmatova
Anna Akhmatova
23 Jun 1889 - 5 Mar 1966
Region: Eastern Europe
Period: Modernist
Movement: Acmeism
Awards: Lenin Prize

more poems by Anna Akhmatova

Poem NameTopic
Grey-Eyed King (Another Translation)Autumn, King, Loss
March ElegyMemory, Treasures, Wandering
White NightDoor, Hell, Sunset
You Thought I Was That TypeBetrayal, Defiance, Finality
You Will Hear ThunderDeparture, Fire, Longing
You’ll live, but I’ll notDeath, Fate, Freedom
True TendernessDesire, Love, Silence
To The ManyForgetfulness, Love, Reflection
SolitudeMuse, Stones, Sunrise
Sunshine Has Filled The RoomBirthday, Dreams, Snow

all poems by Anna Akhmatova

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