Alberta Clipper 10/14/2014: “A Visit to Laugharne” by Rose Rosberg
On October 14, 1913, Senghenydd, Wales witnessed a horrifying mining disaster. A terrible explosion from inside the local coal pits killed 439 miners and one rescuer, making the Senghenydd Colliery Disaster the worst coal mine explosion in the history of the United Kingdom. Coal mining was an early and long-lasting major source of income in Wales, and evidence of mining in the area dates back to the 14th century.
In 1963, Prairie Schooner published a section featuring Welsh poetry in the fall issue. This section explored the rhythm and different sounds represented within Welsh bardic writing forms. The fall of 1963 was a particularly warm one for Lincoln, NE, with 94 percent of the days in October reaching higher-than-average temperatures. This particular fall was not only blistering hot, but October had the clearest skies of the entire year. –Clarissa Siegel-Causey
Rose Rosberg
A Visit to Laugharne
I discovered Dylan’s lane
of quaint houses sleeping in their nest
of deceptive peace;
I heard, in turn, after my climb
the wry counterpoint of those time-
slanted headstones
which peered through disheveled grass
down at his sea, a silver-shot mist
withdrawn from its sands;
curlews fluttered, lost, with a keening
constant and thin, their clamor high-
pitched like that of ghosts
above the beach, now idle
silence waiting on the tide’s clock
for its lover’s return.
How those cries strained to touch
the far here—I know too
how quietness flows
to reach for storm with the blind
fingers of those curlews’ calls
over the widowed sands.
Prairie Schooner, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Fall 1963)