Tower Poetry,
Christ Church,
Oxford, OX1 1DP
Tel: 01865 286591
or contact us >
| Carol Bugan |
Far AwayFrom the edge of her cornfield you could Some said she was deaf, so I waited We sat outside the whole day. I remember Slowly, the short noon shadows around the garden Grew tall, the gate shadow touched Her bed of lilies, our shadows moved On the whitewashed door, without us moving.Once, the light of her eyes broke and In the evening I started a fire of twigs To the crickets sing of summer in the grass. I could see a thought begin on her lips She was my silent companion,
The HeronVast wings Leaves A gap of air A channel from She flew so closely above, This poem first appeared in The Oxonian Review of Books
About Carmen Bugan
This month's featured poet is Carmen Bugan who is the author of Crossing the Carpathians (Oxford Poets/Carcanet). Her poetry and prose appear, among other places, in 'PN Review', 'The Times Literary Supplement', 'Magma Poetry', and 'Modern Poetry in Translation'. She obtained her doctorate from Oxford University, where she researched the work of Seamus Heaney in the context of East European poetry in translation. |