William Carlos Williams

Blueflags

Blueflags - meaning Summary

A Quiet Moment by Marsh

The poem describes a brief, intimate scene as a car stops at the end of a road by a marsh. Children run into the reeds and gather blueflag irises, their chatter and gestures bringing life to the quiet landscape. Sensory details—sight of grape clusters and blue mist, sound of children, and the smell of calamus—shape a moment of domestic pleasure and natural abundance, where human joy and the marsh coexist calmly.

Read Complete Analyses

I stopped the car to let the children down where the streets end in the sun at the marsh edge and the reeds begin and there are small houses facing the reeds and the blue mist in the distance with grapevine trellises with grape clusters small as strawberries on the vines and ditches running springwater that continue the gutters with willows over them. The reeds begin like water at a shore their pointed petals waving dark green and light. But blueflags are blossoming in the reeds which the children pluck chattering in the reeds high over their heads which they part with bare arms to appear with fists of flowers till in the air there comes the smell of calmus from wet, gummy stalks.

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