Elegy in a Botanic Gardens
"Elegy in a Botanic Gardens" is a poem by Australian poet Kenneth Slessor.
It was originally published in the poet's collection Cuckooz Contrey, and was subsequently reprinted in the author's single-author collections and a number of Australian poetry anthologies.
Synopsis
The poet returns to the Botanic Gardens in Autumn, remembering that he was there in Spring with his lover. Now that affair is over and all that is left for him are the trees, the memories and the institutional signs.Critical reception
In his study of the poet for Oxford University Press, critic Adrian Caesar noted the poem shows a "lack of vitality, world-weariness, a feeling of middle-aged ennui.” It is a lament for a love affair in which the poet visits in autumn the gardens where spring is said to have 'used him better'."Andrew Taylor commented that the poem "narrates, retrospectively, the course of a romance and its apparent termination. No cause is given for the death of the romance, but its effect has been to relocate the subject's consciousness from Wagner and memories of his springtime romance to Latin and botany."