The Bridge Over the Border Poem by Kate Clanchy

The Bridge Over the Border

Rating: 4.5


Here, I should surely think of home -
my country and the neat steep town
where I grew up: its banks of cloud,
the winds and changing, stagey light,
its bouts of surly, freezing rain, or failing that,

the time the train stuck here half and hour.
It was hot, for once. The engine seemed
to grunt and breathe with us,
and in the hush, the busker at the back
plucked out Scotland the Brave. There was

a filmic, golden light and the man opposite
was struck, he said, with love.
He saw a country in my eyes.
But he was from Los Angeles,
and I was thinking of another bridge.

It was October. I was running to meet a man
with whom things were not quite settled,
were not, in fact, to ever settle, and I stopped
halfway to gaze at birds, - swallows
in their distant thousands, drawn

to Africa, or heat, or home, not knowing
which, but certain how. Shifting on the paper sky,
they were crosses on stock-market graphs,
they were sand in a hoop shaken sideways,
and I stared, as if panning for gold.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Lawrence Wolfe-Xavier 31 May 2020

The Poet’s ToolKit Simile Metaphor Consonantal Alliteration Vowel Alliteration Lyricism Music/Melody Rhyme Half Rhyme Enjambment Visual Rhyme Metre/Measure Visualisation Prosody Personification Onomatopoeia Caesura Metonymy Inversion Measure Inversion Refrain Anaphora © 2009 Lawrence Wolfe-Xavier Note: Italicised items are also used in Prose December 2019 Where are they in this work?

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