The Wanderer or The Exile’s Lament
By onemorething
- 3710 reads
I have been reading the Old English poem, The Wanderer, which Tolkien would have liked to have been renamed The Exile's Lament. I suppose this is my response having spent time reading several translations of it. Was especially struck by these lines, '(One) weary in spirit cannot resist fate, nor (can) the troubled thought (mind) afford consolation'. (Trans. Robert E. Diamond) But I really like another take on those lines...'Can a weary mind weather the shitstorm? I think not. Can a roiling heart set itself free? I don't think so.' (Trans. Aaron Hostetter)
Who carries the old words
of the dead? Quiet --
for my ears are closed to them.
They say a raven could carry a man
off a battlefield, could bear the weight
of death. I can believe it,
they are birds of exile, some, even
wanderers of thresholds.
Transience is for the lost
or friendless, when purpose or
meaning has expired,
when we regress to invocations -
prayer to paper, paper folded
and placed, neat, beneath a stone.
I throw a coin into a fountain,
mutter wishes to the new moon,
but I cannot find the home of God.
And I dine on rhetorical questions, yet
belly empty, heart, a witch flower, love
like frost, a lamb resigned to slaughter.
Raven's foot and raven's leek
are pressed to war wounds, and
afterwards, the confrontation of change.
I am Winter, my face swan-pale.
Who speaks? Croak.
I have stayed here too long.
Image is from here: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Redon_the-raven.jpg
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Comments
Wonderful penmanship as ever,
Wonderful penmanship as ever, Rachel.
Best, Luigi x
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"I am winter, my face swan
"I am winter, my face swan-pale.." You carry the old words of the dead with eloquence and meaning :)
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Excellent
and serious poetry.
I wonder if 'god' should be capitalized? Or if you might insert 'any' before the lower-cased god?
Marvellous work.
Ewan
x
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This is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day
Atmospheric, beautiful and serious poetry. That's why it's our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day.
Please share and retweet, dear readers, if you like it too.
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Hi Rachel,
Hi Rachel,
your skill at writing such amazing poetry always so authentic, is like a breath of fresh air, spiriting the reader into your world.
The two stanzas that stood out for me were:
Raven's foot and raven's leek
are pressed to war wounds, and
afterwards, the confrontation of change.
I am Winter my face swan - pale.
Who speaks? Croak.
I have stayed here too long.
These are stunning lines.
Jenny.
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Bleak, restless and beautiful
Bleak, restless and beautiful. I will come back to this one. Can see why it received the golden cherries. -very well deserved!
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This is is wicked good, as
This is is wicked good, as they say in Vermont. I just say plain awesome.
Rich
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this reaches right inside you
this reaches right inside you and tugs.
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This is our Poem of the Month
This is our Poem of the Month - Congratulations!
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