It was stuffy from the burning light,
And his glances are like rays.
I just shuddered: this
Might tame me.
He leaned over - he would say something...
The blood drained from his face.
Let it lie like a tombstone
On my life love.

Don't like it, don't want to watch?
Oh, how beautiful you are, damn you!
And I can't fly
And since childhood I was winged.
My eyes are filled with fog,
Things and faces merge,
And only a red tulip,
The tulip is in your buttonhole.

As simple courtesy dictates,
He came up to me, smiled,
Half-affectionate, half-lazy
Touched my hand with a kiss -
And mysterious, ancient faces
Eyes looked at me...

Ten years of freezing and screaming,
All my sleepless nights
I put it in a quiet word
And she said it in vain.
You walked away and it started again
My soul is both empty and clear.

Analysis of the poem “Confusion” by Akhmatova

The triptych poem “Confusion” (1912) is a vivid example of A. Akhmatova’s love lyrics. The poetess’s collection “Rosary Beads” begins with it. The work reflected the feelings and experiences of a strong and independent woman who was struck by a sudden surge of love.

Each of the three parts of the poem describes a certain phase in the development of love. In the first, the lyrical heroine is amazed by the mere gaze of a man who burns her “like rays.” She realizes that she has met a man who “can... tame.” Akhmatova, as a strong creative personality, had a pronounced individuality. Therefore, such frank recognition is very important. At the same time, she notices that this love will become a “tombstone” in her life. The poetess previously could not imagine that a man was able to completely take over her thoughts and relegate creativity to the background.

In the second part, the lyrical heroine already surrenders to the irresistible male charm. She is driven into despair that the “damned” handsome man does not pay attention to her. The poetess can no longer continue her free creative flight (“I can’t take off”). The fog of love does not allow her to soberly assess what is happening (“things and faces merge”). Before the eyes of a woman in love, “only a red tulip” in her beloved’s buttonhole clearly appears. It becomes a symbol of passionate feeling.

The third part of the triptych is dedicated to the denouement of an imaginary romance. The man did not notice the confusion of the lyrical heroine. He simply walked up to her out of politeness and “half affectionately, half lazily” kissed her hand. For the woman, this moment became decisive. Ten long years of “sleepless nights” waiting for true love flashed through her mind. She “put all her accumulated feelings into a quiet word,” but immediately regretted it. The man did not react to this and left. The passion disappeared as quickly as it appeared. Emptiness reigned again in the soul of the lyrical heroine.

The poem “Confusion” very clearly characterizes the features of Akhmatova’s inner world. This independent woman is capable of expressing deep feelings and has been waiting for its arrival for a long time. For the sake of true love, she can lose her freedom. But nothing will make her humiliate herself in front of an indifferent person. If a man rejects her love, then the poetess will not show her offended feelings in any way. Suffering and torment will only affect her soul.

“Confusion” Anna Akhmatova

It was stuffy from the burning light,
And his glances are like rays.
I just shuddered: this
Might tame me.
He leaned over - he would say something...
The blood drained from his face.
Let it lie like a tombstone
On my life love.

Don't like it, don't want to watch?
Oh, how beautiful you are, damn you!
And I can't fly
And since childhood I was winged.
My eyes are filled with fog,
Things and faces merge,
And only a red tulip,
The tulip is in your buttonhole.

As simple courtesy dictates,
He came up to me, smiled,
Half-affectionate, half-lazy
Touched my hand with a kiss -
And mysterious, ancient faces
The eyes looked at me...
Ten years of freezing and screaming,
All my sleepless nights
I put it in a quiet word
And she said it - in vain.
You walked away and it started again
My soul is both empty and clear.

Analysis of Akhmatova’s poem “Confusion”

In 1914, Akhmatova released her second collection of poetry, “The Rosary.” The circulation at that time was considered very impressive - 1000 copies. Over the next nine years, the book was reprinted eight more times. Anna Andreevna became incredibly popular immediately after the release of her debut collection “Evening” in the spring of 1912. The audience liked her simple form and surprisingly sincere love lyrics. The second book consolidated the success of the young poetess. Among the most famous works included in the Rosary is the triptych "Confusion", dated 1913. Its exact addressee is unknown. Some researchers of Akhmatova’s work call the literary critic Nedobrovo, others call the poet Blok. The second option should be considered less likely.

Three poems tell a love story in sequence. The triptych opens with a text telling how the lyrical heroine first met her lover. The main thought that arose in her mind at that moment was that this man was able to tame her. The feeling of love immediately captured the woman, who was distinguished by her obstinate character and independent disposition. To convey the atmosphere of that fateful meeting, Akhmatova shares details: “it was stuffy from the burning light,” “I just shuddered,” “the blood drained from my face” - these are the little things that allow you to see the picture in its entirety. The poem ends with a gloomy prediction. The heroine does not expect anything good from the sudden feeling: barely born love will become a tombstone in her life, which can be seen as a symbol of the loss of personal independence.

The second poem is disappointment. His first line is a rhetorical question. It is immediately followed by a rhetorical exclamation. The heroine understands that the man does not love her, but is unable to stop admiring his beauty. These feelings took away her wings. The fog obscured my eyes. The gaze concentrated on a bright detail - the tulip in the lover’s buttonhole. In the third poem, direct contact occurs between the characters. But on the man’s part it was dictated by simple courtesy - he approached, smiled, kissed his hand. In the heroine’s soul at this time there is a hurricane of emotions, ten years flashed before her eyes, all the sleepless nights flashed in one moment. This was expressed in a single quiet word, which was not followed by any reaction from his lover. He left, the heroine was left completely alone. The story ended - my soul felt empty and clear again.

Confusion

The mental state of the heroine of Akhmatov’s poems coincides with the state of the hero of A. Blok’s 1907 poem “Confusion” (“Are we dancing shadows?..”). See about this in the article by V. A. Chernykh “Blok’s legend in the work of Anna Akhmatova” (Silver Age in Russia). The author of the article concludes that there is a Blok “love” theme in Akhmatova’s early work and, in particular, in the collection. "Beads". Indeed, the system of images and moods in the poetry of this period reflects the intense “love” conflict of 1913 - early. 1914, connected in the fate of Akhmatova with several addressees. In 1913, she met N.V. Nedobrovo, a poet, literary critic; on February 8, 1914 or earlier in 1913, she met A.S. Lurie, a talented modernist musician. Both were attracted to Anna Akhmatova, and she was attracted to both, albeit in different ways. The relationship with her husband, N.S. Gumilev, remained difficult as before, in which the friendly equality of free individuals was replaced by confrontation and almost enmity. A light shade of sensuality appeared in poems dedicated to M. I. Lozinsky, with whom Akhmatova had known since 1911 (“Let’s not drink from the same glass...”). And, of course, the lyrical theme of “The Rosary” reflected two suicides - Vsevolod Gavriilovich Knyazev (1891–1913) - March 29 (died April 5), 1913 and Mikhail Aleksandrovich Linderberg - December 23, 1911. Both suicides were “romantic” associated with love “polygons”, one of which included O. A. Glebova-Sudeikina, the other - Akhmatova. The “Blok theme” of “Rosary” exists; it is not limited to the poem “I came to visit the poet...” (January 1914), but there is not enough data to accurately address Blok’s other poems in “The Rosary.”

Reading the poem “Confusion” by Anna Andreevna Akhmatova is akin to immersing yourself in 3 different oceans of feelings and emotions. This work amazes with its fullness, deep meaning and sincerity. This triptych dates from 1913. Critics find it difficult to determine the identity of the person to whom it was dedicated. Facts indicate the possibility that the recipients of the work could have been the literary critic N.V. Nedobrovo, whose work had a huge influence on Akhmatova, or the poet Blok. The poem was included in the second collection published by the poetess - “Rosary Beads”.

The text of Akhmatova’s poem “Confusion” is like 3 strokes on a picture of love. The first part describes the heroine's meeting with someone with whom she will soon fall in love. She immediately understands that this one will definitely be able to “tame” her. In the second poem, a new feeling appears before the reader - disappointment. The heroine feels her weakness in front of a man and realizes her inability to resist his charms. But in response he receives only indifference. And now, in the third part, the long-awaited meeting took place. Fleeting, sharp, last... And then - only pain and emptiness. The poem certainly puts you in a lyrical mood. It is difficult to imagine that such a strong feeling, such a deep story can be contained in a few lines. However, Akhmatova succeeded. The work is still taught in high school literature classes.

You can read the poem in full or download it online on our website.

It was stuffy from the burning light,
And his glances are like rays.
I just shuddered: this
Might tame me.
He leaned over - he would say something...
The blood drained from his face.
Let it lie like a tombstone
On my life love.

Don't like it, don't want to watch?
Oh, how beautiful you are, damn you!
And I can't fly
And since childhood I was winged.
My eyes are filled with fog,
Things and faces merge,
And only a red tulip,
The tulip is in your buttonhole.

As simple courtesy dictates,
He came up to me, smiled,
Half-affectionate, half-lazy
Touched my hand with a kiss -
And mysterious, ancient faces
The eyes looked at me...
Ten years of freezing and screaming,
All my sleepless nights
I put it in a quiet word
And she said it - in vain.
You walked away and it started again
My soul is both empty and clear.

This “feminine essence” and at the same time the significance of the human personality is represented with great artistic expressiveness in the poem "Don't you love, don't want to watch?" from the triptych "Confusion":

Don't like it, don't want to watch? Oh, how beautiful you are, damn you! And I can’t fly, But I’ve been winged since childhood. A fog obscures my eyes, Things and faces merge, And only a red tulip, A tulip in your buttonhole. 1913

Careful reading of the poem, setting logical emphasis, choosing the intonation of the upcoming reading aloud is the first and very important step towards understanding the content of the work. This poem cannot be read as a complaint from a woman who has fallen out of love - it feels hidden strength, energy, will, and it must be read with hidden, restrained drama. I. Severyanin was wrong in calling Akhmatova’s heroines “unfortunate”; in fact, they are proud, “winged”, like Akhmatova herself - proud and capricious (see, for example, the memoirs of memoirists about the founders of Acmeism, who claimed that N. Gumilyov was despotic, O. Mandelstam is quick-tempered, and A. Akhmatova is capricious).

Already the first line “Don’t like, don’t want to look?”, consisting of only verbs with a negative particle “not”, is full of strength and expression. Here the action expressed by the verb opens the line (and the poem as a whole) and ends it, doubling its energy. Strengthens the negation, and thereby contributes to the creation of an increased expressive background, by repeating “not” twice: “you don’t love, you don’t want.” In the first line of the poem, the heroine’s demands and indignation break through. This is not the usual female complaint, lamentation, but amazement: how can this happen to me? And we perceive this surprise as legitimate, because such sincerity and such strength of “confusion” cannot be trusted.

Second line: “Oh, how beautiful you are, damned!” - speaks of the confusion, confusion of a rejected woman, of her subordination to a man; she is aware of her helplessness, impotence, exhaustion. By the way, about “him,” except that he is “beautiful,” we learn nothing more from this poem. And why is “he” “cursed”? Akhmatova rarely resorts to expressive vocabulary; she is usually very strict and restrained in expressing feelings, but here she deviates from her own poetic tradition. For what? Obviously, in order to convey the power of experience, the power of love passion. But, I think, not only for this. The representative detail of “him”’s appearance for the heroine of the poem (and for us) is a purely external detail - that the hero is “handsome” (the heroine is “winged”, this is a completely different characteristic), after which the word “cursed” follows. In addition, the stressed “and” in the word “beautiful” gives it some sophistication, elegance, and mannerism. The beauty of “him,” marked by the expressive “cursed” (after which there is also an exclamation mark), acquires a “fatal” character, a shade of excess, artificiality, not worthy of the stunning sincerity and “authenticity” of the lyrical heroine of the poem. This line is a harsh response (hidden and, apparently, involuntary irony) of the wayward lyrical heroine to “him,” devoid of inner depth and true originality.

And then follow two lines, absolutely remarkable in this lyrical masterpiece: “And I cannot fly, // But since childhood I have been winged.” Only a “winged”, freely floating, proud woman can experience “confusion” of such force. She had not felt her wings, that is, freedom and lightness (remember the story “Easy Breathing” by I. Bunin), she felt them only now - she felt their heaviness, helplessness, impossibility (short-term!) to serve her. This is the only way to feel them... The word “winged” is in a strong position (at the end of the line), and the stress in it is the vowel sound [a], about which M.V. Lomonosov said that it can contribute to "the image of splendor, great space, depth and magnitude, as well as fear." The feminine rhyme (that is, the stress on the second syllable from the end of the line) in the line “And since childhood I was winged” does not create a feeling of sharpness, isolation, but on the contrary, it creates a feeling of flight and openness of the heroine’s space. It is no coincidence that “wingedness” becomes representative of Akhmatova (Akhmatova!), and it is no coincidence that Akhmatova argued that a poet who cannot choose a pseudonym for himself has no right to be called a poet.

The defeat of the heroine of the poem, who has fallen out of love, her concentration on her experiences - the loss of wingedness - blinds her, in her eyes “things and faces” that have lost their individuality merge.

In the last two lines of the poem, a fiery red “tulip” glows, repeated twice and twice in a strong position - at the junction: at the end of one and then at the beginning of the next line. The above statement by M.V. Lomonosov's ideas about the sound [a] fully apply to the stressed [a] in the word "tulip", giving it additional strength, the "greatness" of the experience combined with confusion (according to Lomonosov - "fear"). The red color is dual in its symbolism: it is also the color of life, the fullness of its manifestation, but it is also a sign of tragedy 2. The heroine’s involuntary concentration on the tulip once again emphasizes her concentration on her feelings, and not on the object of her love, his appearance, eyes. He doesn't deserve it, one must think. He has a tulip in his buttonhole, but the tulip cannot serve as a representative of him: for him it is just a flower, an ornament. The tulip becomes a symbol of the ongoing drama in the eyes of the lyrical heroine and the reader.

The entire poem leaves a feeling of freedom, the “wingedness” of the heroine, and not her weakness. And these are not only “women’s” poems about love, but poems about human pride and love in general. The heroine of this poem by Akhmatova is a headstrong, willful, free woman, like the elements. Akhmatova, as you know, “taught women to speak.” Talk about yourself, about your feelings, about your love - “the fifth season.”