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Poems

April 2002

The runners at San Benedetto

by Charles Tomlinson

Two runners are crossing the shore by night:
Their sound on sand, their lithe iambics gauge
The certainty of arrival and return
Before the wide encroachment of the waters
Smooths out their footprint frontier. Cloud
Keeps dulling the cusps of a moon
Just risen. A steadier glow
From the endless necklace of the lungomare,
A fitful one from the circling beam
Of a lighthouse that dapples keels
Close-packed, rocking at anchor.
For lovers crossing the shore by night,
None of this is their concern. They see
In the unpaved pathway a chosen destiny:
They choose each other and this place,
Place to return to and by night re-pace
In the twilit ritual that runs between
The competing geometries of shore and sky
Where the first stars prick their courses.
Lovers, how many years of light
Await you behind that sky I cannot say:
Your compact with the dark will guide you where
Beneath time&rsquo ...

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Charles Tomlinsons most recent volumes are Selected Poems (New Directions) and Jubilation (Oxford)
more from this author


This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 20 April 2002, on page 38
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