XI (The Right of Way): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 14:35, 1 July 2024
Author | Williams, William Carlos |
---|---|
Genre | Poetry |
Journal or Book | - |
Publisher | - |
Year of Publication | 1923 |
Pages | - |
Additional information | This poem was published in Williams's book Spring and All. We took this poem from a version of Spring and All which was published in 1970. |
In passing with my mind
on nothing in the world
but the right of way
I enjoyed on the road by
virtue of the law –
I saw
an elderly man who
smiled and looked away
in the north past a house –
a woman in blue
who was laughing and
leaning forward to look up
into the man’s half
averted face
and a boy of eight who was
looking in the middle of
the man’s belly
at a watchchain –
the supreme importance
of this spectacle
sped me by them
without a word –
Why bother where I went?
for I went spinning on the
four wheels of my car
along the wet road until
I saw a girl with one leg
over the rail of a balcony