Authors: Raymond Carver
We press our lips to the enameled rim of the cups
and know this grease that floats
over the coffee will one day stop our hearts.
Eyes and fingers drop onto silverware
that is not silverware. Outside the window, waves
beat against the chipped walls of the old city.
Your hands rise from the rough tablecloth
as if to prophesy. Your lips
tremble…
I want to say to hell with the future.
Our future lies deep in the afternoon.
It is a narrow street with a cart and driver,
a driver who looks at us and hesitates,
then shakes his head. Meanwhile,
I coolly crack the egg of a fine Leghorn chicken.
Your eyes film. You turn from me and look across
the rooftops at the sea. Even the flies are still.
I crack the other egg.
Surely we have diminished one another.
If I call stones blue it is because
blue is the precise word, believe me.
—
FLAUBERT
You are writing a love scene
between Emma Bovary and Rodolphe Boulanger,
but love has nothing to do with it.
You are writing about sexual desire,
that longing of one person to possess another
whose ultimate aim is penetration.
Love has nothing to do with it.
You write and write that scene
until you arouse yourself,
masturbate into a handkerchief.
Still, you don’t get up from the desk
for hours. You go on writing that scene,
writing about hunger, blind energy —
the very nature of sex —
a fiery leaning into consequence
and eventually, utter ruin
if unbridled. And sex,
what is sex if it is not unbridled?
You walk on the strand that night
with your magpie friend, Ed Goncourt.
You tell him when you write
love scenes these days you can jackoff
without leaving your desk.
“Love has nothing to do with it,” you say.
You enjoy a cigar and a clear view of Jersey.
The tide is going out across the shingle,
and nothing on earth can stop it.
The smooth stones you pick up and examine
under the moon’s light have been made blue
from the sea. Next morning when you pull them
from your trouser pocket, they are still blue.
—
for my wife
This afternoon the Mississippi —
high, roily under a broiling sun,
or low, rippling under starlight,
set with deadly snags come out to fish
for steamboats —
the Mississippi this afternoon
has never seemed so far away.
Plantations pass in the darkness;
there’s Jones’s landing appearing out
of nowhere, out of pine trees,
and here at 12-Mile Point, Gray’s
overseer reaches out of fog and receives
a packet of letters, souvenirs and such
from New Orleans.
Bixby, that pilot you loved,
fumes and burns:
D——nation, boy! he storms at you time and again.
Vicksburg, Memphis, St Looey, Cincinnati,
the paddleblades flash and rush, rush
upriver, soughing and churning
the dark water.
Mark Twain you’re all eyes and ears,
you’re taking all this down to tell later,
everything,
even how you got your name,
quarter twain, mark twain,
something every schoolboy knew
save one.
I hang my legs further over the banister
and lean back in shade,
holding to the book like a wheel,
sweating, fooling my life away,
as some children haggle,
then fiercely slap each other
in the field below.
On the banks of the
river they call Indus today
we observe a kind of
bean
much like the Egyptian bean
also
crocodiles are reported
upstream & hillsides grown over
with myrrh & ivy
He believes
we have located the headwaters
of the River Nile
we offer
sacrifice
hold games
for the occasion
There is much rejoicing &
the men think
we shall turn back
These elephants their
emissaries offer
are giant
terrifying beasts yet
with a grin he yesterday
ran up a ladder onto
the very top of one
beast
The men
cheered him & he
waved & they cheered him
again
He pointed across the river
& the men grew silent
The builders
busy themselves with great rafts
at the water’s edge
on the morrow
we again set our faces
to the East
Tonight
wind birds
fill the air
the clacking of their bills
like iron on iron
The wind
is steady is fragrant
with jasmine
trail of the country behind us
The wind moves
through the camp
stirs the tents of
the Hetaeri
touches each
of the sleeping soldiers
Euoi! Euoi!
men cry out
in their sleep & the horses
prick their ears & stand
shivering
In a few hours
they all shall wake
with the sun
shall follow the wind
even further
I lean over the balcony of the minaret.
My head swims.
A few steps away the man who intends
to betray me begins by pointing out
key sights —
market church prison whorehouse.
Killed, he says.
Words lost in the wind but
drawing a finger across his throat
so I will get it.
He grins.
The key words fly out —
Turks Greeks Arabs Jews
trade worship love murder
a beautiful woman.
He grins again at such foolishness.
He knows I am watching him.
Still he whistles confidently
as we start down the steps
bumping against each other going down
commingling breath and bodies in the narrow spiralling dark.
Downstairs, his friends are waiting
with a car. We all of us light cigarettes
and think what to do next.
Time, like the light in his dark eyes,
is running out as we climb in.
Not far from here someone
is calling my name.
I jump to the floor.
Still, this could be a trap.
Careful, careful.
I look under the covers for my knife.
But even as I curse God
for the delay, the door is thrown open
and a long-haired brat enters
carrying a dog.
What is it, child? (We are both
trembling.) What do you want?
But the tongue only hops and flutters
in her open mouth
as a single sound rises in her throat.
I move closer, kneel
and place my ear against the tiny lips.
When I stand up—the dog grins.
Listen, I don’t have time for games.
Here, I say, here—and I send her away
with a plum.
•
Rain hisses onto stones as old men and women
drive donkeys to cover.
We stand in rain, more foolish than donkeys,
and shout, walk up and down in rain and accuse.
•
When rain stops the old men and women
who have waited quietly in doorways, smoking,
lead their donkeys out once more and up the hill.
•
Behind, always behind, I climb through the narrow streets.
I roll my eyes. I clatter against stones.
I think of Balzac in his nightcap after
thirty hours at his writing desk,
mist rising from his face,
the gown clinging
to his hairy thighs as
he scratches himself, lingers
at the open window.
Outside, on the boulevards,
the plump white hands of the creditors
stroke moustaches and cravats,
young ladies dream of Chateaubriand
and promenade with the young men, while
empty carriages rattle by, smelling
of axle-grease and leather.
Like a huge draught horse, Balzac
yawns, snorts, lumbers
to the watercloset
and, flinging open his gown,
trains a great stream of piss into the
early nineteenth century
chamberpot. The lace curtain catches
the breeze. Wait! One last scene
before sleep. His brain sizzles as
he goes back to his desk—the pen,
the pot of ink, the strewn pages.
A girl pushes a bicycle through tall grass,
through overturned garden furniture, water
rising to her ankles. Cups without handles
sail upon the murky water, saucers
with fine cracks in the porcelain.
At the upstairs window, behind damask curtains,
the steward’s pale blue eyes follow.
He tries to call.
Shreds of yellow note paper
float out onto the wintry air, but the girl
does not turn her head.
Cook is away, no one hears.
Then two fists appear on the window sill.
He leans closer to hear the small
whisperings, the broken story, the excuses.
This room for instance:
is that an empty coach
that waits below?
Promises, promises,
tell them nothing
for my sake.
I remember parasols,
an esplanade beside the sea,
yet these
flowers…
Must I ever remain behind —
listening, smoking,
scribbling down the next far thing?
I light a cigarette
and adjust the window shade.
There is a noise in the street
growing fainter, fainter.
•
I don’t know the names of flowers
or one tree from another,
nevertheless I sit in the square
under a cloud of Papisostros smoke
and sip Hellas beer.
Somewhere nearby there is a Colossus
waiting for another artist,
another earthquake.
But I’m not ambitious.
I’d like to stay, it’s true,
though I’d want to hang out
with the civic deer that surround
the Hospitaler castle on the hill.
They are beautiful deer
and their lean haunches flicker
under an assault of white butterflies.
•
High on the battlement a tall, stiff
figure of a man keeps watch on Turkey.
A warm rain begins to fall.
A peacock shakes drops of water
from its tail and heads for cover.
In the Moslem graveyard a cat sleeps
in a niche between two stones.
Just time for a look
into the casino, except
I’m not dressed.
•
Back on board, ready for bed,
I lie down and remember
I’ve been to Rhodes.
But there’s something else —
I hear again the voice
of the croupier calling
thirty-two, thirty-two
as my body flies over water,
as my soul, poised like a cat, hovers —
then leaps into sleep.
Enraged by what he called
the impertinence of the Hellespont
in blowing up a storm
which brought to a halt
his army of 2 million,
Herodotus relates
that Xerxes ordered 300
lashes be given
that unruly body of water besides
throwing in a pair of fetters, followed
by a branding with hot irons.
You can imagine
how this news was received
at Athens; I mean
that the Persians were on the march.
We stand around the burning oil drum
and we warm ourselves, our hands
and faces, in its pure lapping heat.
We raise steaming cups of coffee
to our lips and we drink it
with both hands. But we are salmon
fishermen. And now we stamp our feet
on the snow and rocks and move upstream,
slowly, full of love, toward the still pools.
This yardful of the landlord’s used cars
does not intrude. The landlord
himself, does not intrude. He hunches
all day over a swage,
or else is enveloped in the blue flame
of the arc-welding device.
He takes note of me though,
often stopping work to grin
and nod at me through the window. He even
apologizes for parking his logging gear
in my living room.
But we remain friends.
Slowly the days thin, and we
move together towards spring,
towards high water, the jack-salmon,
the sea-run cutthroat.