Odysseus rested on his oar and saw

The ruffled foreheads of the waves

Crocodiling and mincing past: he rammed

The oar between their jaws and looked down

In the simmering sea where scribbles of weed defined

Uncertain depth, and the slim fishes progressed

In fatal formation, and thought

                                                 If there was a single

Streak of decency in these waves now, they’d be ridged

Pocked and dented with the battering they’ve had,

And we could name them as Adam named the beasts,

Saluting a new one with dismay, or a notorious one

With admiration; they’d notice us passing

And rejoice at our shipwreck, but these

Have less character than sheep and need more patience.

I know what I’ll do he said;

I’ll park my ship in the crook of a long pier

(And I’ll take you with me he said to the oar)

I’ll face the rising ground and walk away

From tidal waters, up riverbeds

Where herons parcel out the miles of stream,

Over gaps in the hills, through warm

Silent valleys, and when I meet a farmer

Bold enough to look me in the eye

With ‘where are you off to with that long

Winnowing fan over your shoulder?’

There I will stand still

And I’ll plant you for a gatepost or a hitching-post

And leave you as a tidemark. I can go back

And organise my house then.

                                               But the profound

Unfenced valleys of the ocean still held him;

He had only the oar to make them keep their distance;

The sea was still frying under the ship’s side.

He considered the water-lilies, and thought about fountains

Spraying as wide as willows in empty squares,

The sugarstick of water clattering into the kettle,

The flat lakes bisecting the rushes. He remembered spiders and frogs

Housekeeping at the roadside in brown trickles floored with mud,

Horsetroughs, the black canal, pale swans at dark:

His face grew damp with tears that tasted

Like his own sweat or the insults of the sea.