Poem
Ciaran Carson
As I Roved Out
As I Roved Out
As I Roved Out
I embraced the summer dawn. All was still beforethe palaces, their waters dead forevermore.
Shade after shadow lingered on the woodland road.
I woke quick, live, warm clouds of breath as on I strode.
Gemstones eyed my passing. Wings arose without sound.
My first adventure happened on a path I found
already littered with pale glints, wherein a flower
spoke her name to me. I blinked. It was no known hour.
I laughed to see the Wasserfall dishevelling itself
in shocks among the pines; climbing shelf by rocky shelf,
I recognized the goddess at the silvered peak.
Voilà! Veil after veil I lifted from her, not to speak
Of how my arms were fluttering as I did so.
I did it in the lane. And boldly did I go
across the plain where I betrayed her to the cock.
She fled to the city under the steeple clock,
and beggar-like I tailed her on the marble quays.
Far up the road, beneath a grove of laurel trees,
I wound her in those recollected veils, and realized,
just a little, something of her massive shape and size.
Then dawn and child, finding themselves in the wood,
sank deep down into it. On waking it was noon.
© 2014, Ciaran Carson
From: In the Light Of: After Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud
Publisher: Gallery Press, Oldcastle; Wake Forest University Press, Winston-Salem, NC
From: In the Light Of: After Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud
Publisher: Gallery Press, Oldcastle; Wake Forest University Press, Winston-Salem, NC
Ciaran Carson
(United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, 1948)
Ciaran Carson was born and grew up in Belfast, where Irish was the first language of the family home; Carson learnt English playing on the streets. From an early age, he was ‘always aware of language, how it operates. How if you say it in one language it’s not the same as saying it in another’ (as stated in a Guardian interview). Carson’s poetry is interested in the profound interdependence of ...
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As I Roved Out
I embraced the summer dawn. All was still beforethe palaces, their waters dead forevermore.
Shade after shadow lingered on the woodland road.
I woke quick, live, warm clouds of breath as on I strode.
Gemstones eyed my passing. Wings arose without sound.
My first adventure happened on a path I found
already littered with pale glints, wherein a flower
spoke her name to me. I blinked. It was no known hour.
I laughed to see the Wasserfall dishevelling itself
in shocks among the pines; climbing shelf by rocky shelf,
I recognized the goddess at the silvered peak.
Voilà! Veil after veil I lifted from her, not to speak
Of how my arms were fluttering as I did so.
I did it in the lane. And boldly did I go
across the plain where I betrayed her to the cock.
She fled to the city under the steeple clock,
and beggar-like I tailed her on the marble quays.
Far up the road, beneath a grove of laurel trees,
I wound her in those recollected veils, and realized,
just a little, something of her massive shape and size.
Then dawn and child, finding themselves in the wood,
sank deep down into it. On waking it was noon.
From: In the Light Of: After Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud
As I Roved Out
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