Click here to return to the main page

Caribbean Poetry:
Barbados



insert2.gif (857 bytes)
Derek Walcott

Sea Grapes

That sail which leans on light,
tired of islands
a schooner beating up the Caribbean

for home, could be Odysseus,
home-bound on the Aegean;
that father and husband's

longing, under gnarled sour grapes, is
like the adulterer hearing Nausicaa's name
in every gull's outcry.

This brings nobody peace.  The ancient war
between obsession and responsibility
will never finish and has been the same

for the sear-wanderer or the one on shore
now wriggling on his sandals to walk home,
since Troy sighed its last flame,

and the blind giant's boulder heaved the trough
from whose ground-swell the great hexameters come
to the conclusions of exhausted surf.

The classics can console.  But not enough.

from Sea Grapes, 1971

Click here to return to the main page
click on calabash:
return to main