Authors: Derek Walcott
at neglection-election to see my footman
wounded by factions that tearing him apart.
The United Force will not be a third party
between two parties, one Greek and the other Trojan,
both fighting for Helen: LP and WWPP,
only United Love can give you the answers!”
They drove through Roseau. He said:
“Are you hearing me?”
“Yes,” Hector said. “I not sure ’bout the bananas,”
pressing the button. The Comet trawled its echo
through the emerald valleys and the indigo hills,
up rutted shortcuts and their paradisal view
of rain-weathered villages with cathedrals—
the heaven of the priest’s and politician’s vow,
and the blue sea burst his heart again and again
as Philoctete sat, with the pamphlets in his lap,
watching the island filing backwards through the pane
of his wound and the window, from Vieuxfort to Cap.
He was her footman. It was her burden he bore.
Why couldn’t they love the place, same way, together,
the way he always loved her, even with his sore?
Love Helen like a wife in good and bad weather,
in sickness and health, its beauty in being poor?
The way the leaves loved her, not like a pink leaflet
printed with slogans of black people fighting war?
III
The Comet stopped again to let off Philoctete.
They were crawling through Castries, block by crowded block.
He limped through the crowds, as the crackling megaphone
moved past the market steps.
“Ces mamailles-là, nous kai rock
Gros Îlet,
the United Force giving a block-
orama till daybreak on Friday until cock
put down his saxophone and
violon en sac.
All your contributions are welcome in aid of
Professor Statics’s United Force. Peace and love!”
The night of the Statics Convention Blocko it rained,
it drenched out his faith in the American-style
conviction that voters needed to be entertained.
Statics toured the fête’s debris with a wounded smile.
Beaded bouquets of balloons, soggy paper-hats,
rain-corrugated posters, the banner across
two balconies, the cardboard cartons of pamphlets,
were history this Saturday. It was their loss,
not his. A career prophesied by the Comet’s
having a ball. He laughed. He rehired Philoctete
to clean up the hall first, then distribute the wet
balloons to the kids. Then he watched him disconnect
the bunting’s wrinkling face from a stepladder
with a pronged pole. It sagged like a kite to the street.
That, from the candidate, was his final order,
pointing a warm beer in his shorts and sandalled feet.
He hugged Philoctete, who wept for their defeat.
He left as a migrant-worker for Florida.
Chapter XXI
I
The jukebox glowed in Atlantic City. Speakers
bombarded the neon of the No Pain Café.
The night flared with vendors’ coalpots, the dull week, as
it died, exploded with Cadence, Country, Reggae.
Stars burst from the barbecues of chicken and conch,
singeing the vendors’ eyes. Round their kerosene lamp
the children’s eyes widened like moons until they sank
in the hills of their mothers’ laps. Frenetic DJs
soared evangelically from the thudding vamp
of the blockorama,
“This here is Gros Îlet’s
night, United Force, garçon, we go rock this village
till cock wake up!”
The rumshops, from Midnight Hour,
Keep Cool, No Pain Café, to the high Second Stage,
with its Christmas lights winking, with decibel power
shattered the glass stars. Tourists, in seraphic white,
floated through the crowding shadows, the cooking smells,
the domino games by gas lanterns. Helen’s night.
The night Achille dreaded above everything else.
She sprinkled and ironed a dress.
“Is the music,
the people, I like.” Once the sun set on Fridays,
he grew nauseous with jealousy, watching the thick
breadfruit leaves viciously darken as the cafés
switched their doors open, and the first policemen barred
the street off with signs. After an early supper
he sat in the frame of the back door to the yard
watching her head, in the shower he’d built for her
from brand-new galvanize, streaming from the white foam
with expensive shampoo, and, when it disappeared,
came back, the mouth parted, the eyes squeezed with delight.
She stepped over the wet stones smiling, and she nodded
to him silent on the back step with Plunkett’s towel
holding her beaded nakedness. He said nothing.
He watched the lathered stones, even they seemed to smell
of her clean feet and her long arms’ self-anointing.
In the bedroom, she started again—he should come,
but she soon gave that up. The pipe was still trickling,
so he got up and locked it. If Seven Seas was home
he would sit with him in front of the pharmacy
with its closed door, and describe some parts of the fête
to Seven Seas, whom he envied, who couldn’t see
what was happening to the village. At the bent gate
he paused. No. He would go and sit with the canoes
far up the beach and watch the star-crowned silhouette
of the crouched island. Even there the DJ’s voice
carried over the shallows’ phosphorescent noise.
Or he watched her high head moving through the tourists,
through flying stars from the coalpots, the painted mouth
still eagerly parted. Murder throbbed in his wrists
to the loudspeaker’s pelvic thud, her floating move.
She was selling herself like the island, without
any pain, and the village did not seem to care
that it was dying in its change, the way it whored
away a simple life that would soon disappear
while its children writhed on the sidewalks to the sounds
of the DJ’s fresh-water-Yankee-cool-Creole.
He sat on
In God We Troust
under black almonds,
listening to the Soul Brothers losing their soul;
the sandy alleys would go and their simple stores,
the smell of fresh bread drawn from its Creole oven,
its flour turned into cocaine, its daughters to whores,
while the DJs screamed,
“WE MOVIN’, MAN! WE MOVIN’!”
but towards what? Those stars were too fixed in heaven
to care, but sometimes he wished that he was as far
as they were. The young took no interest in canoes.
That was longtime shit. Once it came from Africa.
And the sea would soon get accustomed to the noise.
He watched a falling star singe the arc of its zone
and traced the comet as its declining vector
hissed out like a coal in the horizon’s basin
over the islet, and he trembled for Hector,
the title he gave his transport. Bright Helen
was like a meteor too, and her falling arc
crossed over the village, over some moonlit lane
with its black breadfruit leaves. Every life was a spark,
but her light remained unknown in this backward place,
falling unobserved, the way he watched the meteor
at one in the morning track the night of her race,
then fade, forgotten, as sunrise forgets a star.
II
Dominus illuminatio mea,
Egypt delivered
back to itself. India crumpling on its knees
like a howdah’d elephant, all of the empowered
tide and panoply of lances, Gurkhas, Anzacs, Mounties
drained like a bath from the bunghole of Eden’s Suez,
or a back-yard canal. In Alexandria, at the raven’s hour,
clouds of the faithful hunch at the muezzin’s prayers,
with the hymn of mosquitoes, deserts whence our power
withdrew, Himalayan hill-stations where the millipede
enters and coils, like a lanyard around a flagpole,
and the rat scuttles in straw, jungles where a leopard
narrows its gaze to sleep on a crumbling uphol-
stered sofa, while chickens climb the stairs. The crest
of the bookmark was under his thumb, the frontispiece
signed by a boy’s hand.
D. Plunkett.
He laid him to rest
between the water-stained pages as he shut the book.
Dominus illuminatio mea,
O Lord, light of my life.
He turned his head towards Maud, but she did not look
up from her needle. He fiddled with the paper-knife
on the blotter. He had won the prize for an essay
on the Roman Empire. In those days, history was easy.
He arched like the cat, and went to the verandah
as Maud looked up once. The Major counted the stars
like buttons through the orchids; they were the usual wonder.
He heard the contending music, on one side from the bars
of the village, thudding; on the other, across black water,
the hotel’s discotheque. At that very moment Achille was
studying a heaven whose cosmology had been erased
by the crossing. He was trying to trace the armature
of studs and rivets where the constellations are placed,
but for him they were beads on an abacus, no more.
From night-fishing he knew the necessary ones,
the one that sparkled at dusk, and at dawn, the other.
All in a night’s work he saw them simply as twins.
He knew others but would not call them by their given
names, forcing a silvery web to link their designs,
neither the Bear nor the Plough, to him there was heaven
and earth and the sea, but Ursa or Plunkett Major,
or the Archer aiming? He tried but could not distinguish
their pattern, nor call one Venus, nor even find
the pierced holes of Pisces, the dots named for the Fish;
he knew them as stars, they fitted his own design.
III
“What?”
She was draping the silk slip on a hanger,
twisting it skillfully. She turned her breasts away.
Down the deep ravine of her shoulders, his anger
drained like the soapy water over the pathway
of stones he had placed there, where her small footprints dried.
It was still moonlight, and the moonlight filled the sheen
of the nightgown she entered like water as her pride
shook free of the neck. He saw the lifted wick shine
on the ebony face, and the shadow she made
on the wall. Now the shadow unpinned one earring,
its head tilted, and smiled. It was in a good mood.
It checked its teeth in a mirror, he watched it bring
the mirror close to its eyes. The blocko was done.
It was so quiet in the village, he heard the stars
click like its earrings when the shadow put them down.
He turned his face to the wall. Whoever she was,
however innocent her joy, he couldn’t take it
anymore. A transport passed, and in the silence
he felt his heart sicken, watching her as she brushed
her hair slowly and stopped. And Achille saw Helen’s
completion for the first time. He saw how she wished
for a peace beyond her beauty, past the tireless
quarrel over a face that was not her own fault
any more than the full moon’s grace sailing dark trees,
and for that moment Achille was angrily filled
with a pity beyond his own pain. There was peace
in the clouds, and the moon in a silk-white nightgown
stood over him.
“What?” he said. “What make you this whore?
Why you don’t leave me alone and go fock Hector?
More men plough that body than canoe plough the sea.”
The lance of his hatred entered her with no sound,
yet she came and lay next to him, and they lay quietly
as two logs laid parallel on moonlit sand.
He heard the fig-trees embracing and he smiled
when the first cock cuckolded him. She found his hand
and held it. He turned. She was asleep. Like a child.
Chapter XXII
I
Shortly after, she moved in with Hector. She moved
everything while he was fishing but a hairpin
stuck in her soap-dish. To him this proved
that she would come back. Stranger things than that happen
every day, Ma Kilman assured him, in places
bigger than Gros Îlet. When he walked up a street,
he stuck close to the houses, avoiding the faces
that called out to him from doorways. He passed them straight.
Gradually he began to lose faith in his hands.
He believed he smelt as badly as Philoctete
from the rotting loneliness that drew every glance
away from him, as stale as a drying fishnet.
He avoided the blind man with his black, knotted hands
resting on the cane; he avoided looking at
a transport when it approached him, in case, by chance,
it was Hector driving and should in case she sat
on the front seat by him; the van that Hector bought
from his canoe’s sale had stereo, leopard seat.
II
The Comet, a sixteen-seater passenger-van,
was the chariot that Hector bought. Coiled tongues of flame
leapt from its sliding doors. Each row was a divan