Poems Ancient and Modern

Poems Ancient and Modern

Today’s Poem: In the Wilderness

Christ of His gentleness / Thirsting and hungering

Joseph Bottum's avatar
Joseph Bottum
Feb 14, 2024
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Francisco de Zurbarán, Agnus Dei, c. 1637 (Wikimedia Commons)

For the first time in a few years, Valentine’s Day falls on Ash Wednesday this year, and what are we supposed to read as Today’s Poem here on February 14? Any poem fit for Valentine’s Day feels frivolous for Ash Wednesday; any poem suited for Ash Wednesday seems a grim choice for Valentine’s. Most Wednesdays, here at Poems Ancient and Modern, we present some comic or light verse, but that would be worse still: “Mock love or mock God” is not a happy choice.

In the end, we settled on an ashen poem about Christ’s forty days in the wilderness by Robert Graves (1895–1985). Graves was young when he published the poem in his second collection, the 1918 Fairies and Fusiliers. He’d been through the war, become friends with the poets Siegfried Sassoon (1886–1967) and Wilfred Owen (1893–1918), and published his war verses. (In 1985, a memorial was placed in Westminster Abbey for the poets of the First World War. The long-lived Graves w…

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