A tragedy of suffocating failures of interpersonal understanding and communication. As a nearly-forgotten Vesaas, it deserves a deeper discussion, certainly, and his usual empathetic understanding of his characrers and humanity in general is in full effect, but this was also published elsewhere as a play and it shows in the form: mostly dialogue with much less of Vesaas' intensely clear and expressive description. When he does indulge in scenery and characters fading into such, it glimmers, though. And some nice ambiguous images in the titular bleached-out laundry lines as well.
Later: docked a star because it's okayl but honestly I wouldn't really be very interested if it weren't Vesaas. The characters aren't so compelling, and the tragedy is of a forced sort that is meant to seem inevitable, but for me it comes off as manpilulated melodrama.