Tuesday, December 07, 2004

In Bimini, without a haze...

We've decided to take a (temporary) break from our Poet of the week feature in order to concentrate on excerpts from chapbooks, anthologies and other poetry books that grab our attention.

Today we've got an excerpt from Derek Walcott's brand-new book, The Prodigal. On one level, it's a travel narrative, a series of collisions between the culture of Walcott's home island of Saint Lucia and that of Europe and Latin America. It's also a personal meditation on old age.

The following is taken from one of Walcott's St. Lucia sections.

Part III, 17, IV

You never think of January as a stormy month,
but the African wind blows rain across the cape,
the combers come in fast and their high surf
explodes irregularly along the Causeway.
It is the season of rainbows, of a thin drizzle
in the wet air; so many, their backs arch
like radiant dolphins, they leap over the hills
above the villages, profuse with benediction,
over the hissing sea and the small fine roads
and the indigo ranges heavy with the darkening rain.
But now, even farther north, in Bimini,
it would be clearer, finer, without a haze
over the lime-green shallows and the violet reefs
and the dark chasms full of wavering reeds,
and the abyss of my deep cowardice,
my fears and treacheries in an old age
foam-crested with conspiratorial murmurings
subliminal, submarine, when my ageing prayer
is, hooked to this craft, to break clear of the nets
to shudder like a great convulsive marlin
into heaven and fall crashing and leap again
scattering prisms and led by veering dolphins
vault for the last time breaking free of the line.

From The Prodigal, copyright © 2004 by Derek Walcott. Published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux.

Other places:

More on Derek Walcott (including an audio clip) at The Academy of American Poets.

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