Thursday, January 22, 2026

The Long Voyage (#poetry)


The Long Voyage

Not that the pines were darker there,
nor mid-May dogwood brighter there,
nor swifts more swift in summer air;
  it was my own country,
 
having its thuderclap of spring,
its long midsummer ripening,
its corn hoar-stiff at harvesting,
  almost like any country,
 
yet being mine; its face, its speech,
its hills bent low within my reach,
its river birch and upland beech
  were mine, of my own country.
 
Now the dark waters at the bow
fold back, like earth against the plow;
foam brightens like the dogwood now
  at home, in my own country.
 
-Malcolm Cowley
 
One last bit of Malcolm Cowley and then maybe I'm done for now. Cowley's own country where he grew up was rural western Pennsylvania; his first book of poems was titled Blue Juniata for the left bank tributary of the Susquehanna.
 
This poem together with three others by Cowley first appeared in Poetry magazine of October 1938, along with others by Kenneth Fearing, Stephen Spender, and Edna St. Vincent Millay. In 1938, Cowley was living on the east coast, in Connecticut.

6 comments:

  1. You've succeeded in lodging his name in my mind and creating a little reference point, which is nice (well, for now anyway... you know how it goes).

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    1. I know. Facts just flit right out of my head...

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  2. Love that line 'thunderclap of spring'. :D

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    1. Doesn't that really catch spring? At least in my part of the world. Bang! And it's gone--on to the long midsummer ripening.

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  3. I feel like that is a book of poetry that I once owned. Look inside the cover and see if my name is there.

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    1. A bunch of my books did come from Half Price books in Houston, but not it seems this one...

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