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#London Life #Poetry Choice: Guardian Poem of the week The Days That Forced Our Lives Apart by Jill Furse

#London Life #Poetry Choice: Guardian Poem of the week The Days That Forced Our Lives Apart by Jill Furse | London Life Archive | Scoop.it
Although very short, this is both a vivid account of wartime separation and the most perfect of love poems
Ursula O'Reilly Traynor 's insight:
So pleased to be introduced to the poetry of Jill Furse. Carol Rumens gives us a fine appraisal of the poem, best read after a first, untutored reading..
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Thursday Poem: Sea Canes

Thursday Poem: Sea Canes | London Life Archive | Scoop.it

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sea Canes

 

Half my friends are dead.
I will make you new ones, said earth.
No, give me them back, as they were, instead
with faults and all, I cried.

Tonight I can snatch their talk
from the faint surf's drone
through the canes, but I cannot walk

on the moonlit leaves of ocean
down that white road alone,
or float with the dreaming motion

of owls leaving earth's load.
O earth, the number of friends you keep
exceeds those left to be loved.

The sea canes by the cliff flash green and silver;
they were the seraph lances of my faith,
but out of what is lost grows something stronger

that has the rational radiance of stone,
enduring moonlight, further than despair,
strong as the wind, that through dividing canes

brings those we love before us, as they were,
with faults and all, not nobler, just there.

 

from Selected Poems (Faber & Faber, 2007), copyright © Derek Walcott 2007, used by permission of the author

- See more at: http://poetryarchive.org/poem/sea-canes#sthash.1OIkMyca.dpuf

Ursula O'Reilly Traynor 's insight:

for those I love

who have dearly loved

and lost someone forever dear


Derek Walcott's  perfectly modulated reading of his elegiac, elemental poem,  'Sea Canes'

http://poetryarchive.org/poem/sea-canes

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