<p><em>After Russia</em> (1928) is considered to mark the high point in Marina Tsvetaeva&rsquo;s output of shorter lyrical poems. Tsvetaeva told Boris Pasternak that all that mattered in the book was its anguish. Breathtaking technical mastery and experimentation are underpinned by suicidal thoughts a sense of exclusion from the circle of human love and companionship and an increasing alienation from life itself. The sequence &lsquo;Trees&rsquo;&nbsp;evokes the hills and woods of Bohemia where Tsvetaeva loved to roam while &lsquo;Wires&rsquo; takes telegraph wires as the central image for the geographical distance separating her from Pasternak.</p>
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