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Best Poems Written by James Andrews

Below are the all-time best James Andrews poems as chosen by PoetrySoup members

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Details | James Andrews Poem

Sargasso Sea

Becalmed, the doldrums bear down frowning.
Hull fouled by weeds, persistent barnacles.
The ship is steadfast in her silence, 
The light alone enough to shatter us.

Beyond us, off the bow the dolphins plunge
And leap toward home
While we, a company of refugees, 
Lie static on this open ocean.

Our eyes are burned by distance.
No breeze to flutter them, 
Our tattered flags of truce no longer fly, 
But hang like limp, compliant prisoners.

We pray for wind, 
The puff-cheeked gods of weather
Drawn upon our useless maps.

A force 10 gale, 
The flecks of wave tops on our faces
Rage, determined demons, 
In our dreams. 

 
James Andrews

Copyright © James Andrews | Year Posted 2013



Details | James Andrews Poem

County Road

I know I've been here in this afternoon
4: 10 P.M.
Like lubricated clockworks in a perpetual machine
My life returns to this brown earth blue sky
Pressed in between the distance
And the silence and the cries of crows
Who gather, circle, and grow louder
In the rising dusk.
This is how it has been, is, will always be.

This red clay bank where the road was carved
Has risen here forever.
That old capped well has always dripped and echoed
In the plunging darkness
And the far-off crack that is cicadas breaking from their skins, 
These things have always been in motion.

That path that disappears just there between the trees
Leads now, as ever, to a grand but faded house
Drowsing in the humming shade, 
Where my father's fathers lived and died, 
Lay open eyed and wide awake
Through first bird sounds and whipporwhills
As grey ascended into daylight once again
And just as always far too soon.

A place where lost boys raged
And beat their hands against closed doors, 

Is this my road, these shaded woods, 
This certain path the only map that I can read? 

Sometimes in the small hours even now
I think I hear the pounding of my father's desperate hands
On doors locked, bolted, and immune, 
The ringing of his secret wars
Down darkened, pine floored corridors
Where secrets are piled thick upon each other.

The only sound I hear now on this narrow road
Is wind that hisses in the branches
In sharp swift gusts from long ago

Standing now beneath those branches, 
Owning no locked door to pound upon, 
I wonder why my clenched and aching hands
Are bleeding.

Thunder rolls and rumbles, 
Distant in the fading afternoon.

Copyright © James Andrews | Year Posted 2013


Book: Reflection on the Important Things