By using the guise of the 14th-century Persian poet Hafez, Ladinsky implies that the human need for connection has not changed in centuries and never will. Since Ladinsky credits the poem to an older writer, readers might believe that even people from another era similarly value relationships.
Ladinsky further implies the connection between past and present through the “We” (Line 3). The speaker uses the “We” to reveal who exactly has “a great need” (Line 2) in the second and third lines. Because it gives no identifying details about the “We,” the poem gives the reader the ability to imagine themselves in the “We.” Ladinsky also makes the reader feel like a participant in the poem by employing direct, non-descriptive language. The reader does not need to know precisely why the terrain is dangerous or what it looks like as they climb because they implicitly accompany the speaker on the journey.
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