Window | Freda Downie Analysis
Then rosy, from the butcher’s shop, A woman stares. Her apron’s stain Is like a continent of pain. I wave. A bird dives from the top
In psychoanalytic terms (particularly Lacanian), the window functions as a mirror. The speaker sits inside, watching “the people pass,” but she cannot hear them: “I can hear the glass.” This is a stunning inversion of expectation. Normally, glass is silent; we hear what is through it. Here, the medium becomes the message. The glass asserts its own materiality, its own blocking presence. Hearing the glass is akin to hearing the sound of one’s own isolation — the hum of the barrier itself. window freda downie analysis
On a symbolic level, the abandoned ball could represent the speaker’s own lost youth or fertility. Downie herself was a mother (to the poet Sophie Hannah, as is occasionally noted in biographical notes), but the speaker here is solitary, watching, unparticipating. The ball’s slight motion is a ghost of activity, an echo of a life not lived. Then rosy, from the butcher’s shop, A woman stares
But there is also a modernist echo here. One thinks of T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” (“I have measured out my life with coffee spoons”) or the fragmented, dehumanized figures in William Carlos Williams’ “The Dance.” Downie is working in a tradition where the city reduces individuals to types, to gestures, to flat surfaces. However, she adds a specifically feminine inflection: the speaker is confined inside (a domestic space), while the “paper cut-outs” perform a public, male-ordered world beyond. The final line of stanza 1 — “I can hear the glass” — deserves its own section. In a poem ostensibly about vision, Downie suddenly shifts to sound. This synesthetic disruption alerts us that the speaker’s senses are unreliable or hyper-acute. What does it mean to “hear” glass? Perhaps the faint vibration, the settling of the pane, or even a tinnitus-like inner ringing. But more likely, Downie means that the speaker is so acutely aware of the barrier that it has become sonorous. A bird dives from the top In psychoanalytic