NORTHWEST PASSAGEafter Cavafy
The Franklin Expedition, 1845-48When you set out to find your Northwest Passageand cross to an empty region of the mapwith a headlong desire to know what lies beyond,sailing the thundering ice-fields on the ocean,feeling her power move you from below;when all summer the sun’s hypnotic eyewon’t blink, and the season slowly passes, an endlessdream in which you’re forever diving into pools,fame’s image forever rising up to meet you;when the fall comes, at last, triumphantly,and you enter Victoria’s narrow frozen Strait,and your Terror and Erebus freeze in the crushing floes;in that long winter night among the steeplesof jagged ice, and the infinite, empty plain of wind and snow,when the sea refuses to be re-born in spring,three winters pass without a thaw, and the men,far from their wives and children, far from God,are murdering one another over cards;when blue gums, colic, paralysis of the wristscome creeping indiscriminately among you;and you leave the ships, and set out on the ice,dragging the lifeboats behind, loadedwith mirrors and soap, slippers and clocks,into the starlit body of the night,with your terrible desire to know what lies beyond;then, half-mad, snow blind, even then,before you kill the ones who’ve drawn the fatal lots,and take your ghastly communion in the snow,may you stumble at last upon some band of Inuithauling their catch of seal across the ice,and see how foolish you have been:forcing your way by will across a landthat can’t be forced, but must be understood,toward a passage just now breaking up within.
From Sailing to Babylon (2012) by James Pollock.
(Painting: Caspar David Friedrich, "The Wreck of the Hope.")
6 comments:
You could arrange this as prose and not lose anything. Why not prose? Why arrange with line breaks? It flows along as somewhat mellifluous prose; it doesn't need to be a poem.
Thanks for "mellifluous," and thanks for reading, but let me point out that the poem is written in blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter).
Well done, James. For me, yr poem recalls the memory of standing in front of the three graves on Beechy Island: beautiful, terrific, awe-ful, tragic, hilarioius, etc, all amounting to a kind of grappling for some sort of impossible mental orientation. Also, "with mirrors and soap, slippers and clocks" is kinda the best.
Thanks Andy!
A beautiful poem that at once captures both the mood of a long harsh period in life and a single moment in time.
Much obliged, John. For more poems from the book, click on my name, which will take you to my Web site.
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