Poem of the week from The Wanderer by Christopher Brennan

over 3 years in The guardian

This intense account of a lonely winter journey owes much to Milton and German Romanticism
From The Wanderer
The land I came thro’ last was dumb with night,a limbo of defeated glory, a ghost:for wreck of constellations flicker’d perishingscarce sustained in the mortuary air,and on the ground and out of livid poolswreck of old swords and crowns glimmer’d at whiles;I seem’d at home in some old dream of kingship:now it is clear grey day and the road is plain,I am the wanderer of many yearswho cannot tell if ever he was kingor if ever kingdoms were: I know I amthe wanderer of the ways of all the worlds,to whom the sunshine and the rain are oneand one to stay or hasten, because he knowsno ending of the way, no home, no goal,and phantom night and the grey day alikewithhold the heart where all my dreams and daysmight faint in soft fire and delicious death:and saying this to myself as a simple thingI feel a peace fall in the heart of the windsand a clear dusk settle, somewhere, far in me. Continue reading...

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