“Well, I had this little notion - I started writing when I
was eleven, writing poetry. I was passionately addicted to it; it was my great
refuge through adolescence.”
– Harry Mathews
Born
in New York City on Valentine’s Day, 1930, Mathews was the author of many
volumes of poetry, plus various novels, short fiction, and essays. He also was
a translator of the French language and the first American chosen for
membership in the French literary society known as Oulipo, dedicated to
exploring new possibilities in literature. He
wrote right up until his death in 2017, and among his best-known poetic works
were Armenian Papers: Poems 1954-1984 and
The New Tourism. For Saturday’s Poem, here is,
Shore Leave
All
roads lead to good intentions;
East
is east and west is west and God disposes;
Time
and tide in a storm.
All
roads, sailor’s delight.
(Many
are called, sailors take warning:
All
roads wait for no man.)
All
roads are soon parted.
East
is east and west is west: twice shy.
Time
and tide bury their dead.
A
rolling stone, sailors delight.
“Any
Port” – sailor take warning:
All roads are another man’s poison.
All roads take the hindmost,
East is east and west is west and few are
chosen,
Time and tide are soon parted,
The Devil takes sailor’s delight.
Once burned, sailors take warning:
All roads bury their dead.
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