Lot's Wife
Anna Akhmatova
And the just man trailed God's shining agent, over a black mountain, in his giant track, while a restless voice kept harrying his woman: "It's not too late, you can still look back at the red towers of your native Sodom, the square where once you sang, the spinning-shed, at the empty windows set in the tall house where sons and daughters blessed your marriage-bed." A single glance: a sudden dart of pain stitching her eyes before she made a sound . . . Her body flaked into transparent salt, and her swift legs rooted to the ground. Who will grieve for this woman? Does she not seem too insignificant for our concern? Yet in my heart I never will deny her, who suffered death because she chose to turn.
Next 10 Poems
- Anna Akhmatova : Lying In Me
- Anna Akhmatova : March Elegy
- Anna Akhmatova : Memory Of Sun
- Anna Akhmatova : Requiem
- Anna Akhmatova : Solitude
- Anna Akhmatova : Sunbeam
- Anna Akhmatova : The Sentence
- Anna Akhmatova : Thunder
- Anna Akhmatova : Twenty-first. Night. Monday
- Anna Akhmatova : Under Her Dark Veil
Previous 10 Poems
- Anna Akhmatova : In Memory Of M. B.
- Anna Akhmatova : I Wrung My Hands
- Anna Akhmatova : I Taught Myself To Live Simply
- Anna Akhmatova : I Hear The Oriole's Always-grieving Voice
- Anna Akhmatova : I Don't Know If You're Alive Or Dead
- Anna Akhmatova : How Can You Bear To Look At The Neva?
- Anna Akhmatova : For Osip Mandelstam
- Anna Akhmatova : Everything
- Anna Akhmatova : Crucifix
- Anna Akhmatova : Celebrate