HOME / poem: A weekly poem, read by the author.

Llandudno

Rigged with a sea-shawl of twilight and mist,
The refurbished eighteenth-century boardwalk
Emptied of its visitors, the souvenir stands closed down,
And like the currach housed in a local museum
We toured that day, its broad-planked floor strained
Against the anchor of its history. But no telling

What prospect the mind beheld, or the body
Remembered, to find itself wrong-footed and alive
To four or five skinheads stepping from the stairway
By a tackle shop, their forearms barred with swastikas,
And embedded in the leather of their combat boots,
A cross-hatch metalwork of razor blades.

Print This ArticlePRINTEmail to a FriendE-MAILShare This ArticleRECOMMEND...Get Slate RSS FeedsRSS
Sherod Santos is the author of five books of poetry, most recently The Perishing. In 2005, he published Greek Lyric Poetry: A New Translation.
Click here to visit Robert Pinsky's Favorite Poem Project site.
What did you think of this article?
Join The Fray: Our Reader Discussion Forum
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES
TODAY'S PICTURES
TODAY'S CARTOONS
TODAY'S DOONESBURY
TODAY'S VIDEO
Costume parties.53/TP.jpg
Cartoonists' take on government spending.23/TC.jpg
More TK. 1/122939/2183724/DoonesburyPlaceholder.jpg