Authors: Derek Walcott
of furred leopardskin. Because of its fiery name
under an arching rocket painted on its side,
the Space Age had come to the island. Passengers
crammed next to each other on its animal hide
were sliding into two worlds without switching gears.
One, atavistic, with its African emblem
that slid on the plastic seats, wrinkling in a roll
when the cloth bunched, and the other world that shot them
to an Icarian future they could not control.
Many accepted their future. Most were prepared
for the Comet’s horizontal launching
of its purring engine, part rocket, part leopard,
while Hector, arms folded, leant against the bonnet
like a gum-chewing astronaut. He would park it
first in rank. Every old woman who got on it—
there was always one quarrelling from the market—
would pause and look at the painted flames with
“Bon Dieu!
Déjà?”
—meaning “Hell? Already?” Once, one remarked,
“All I see is tiger-skin, yes. So let us prey.”
And pray they did, when Hector rammed the flaming door
shut, then his own side harder as he touched the charm
of a fur monkey over the dashboard altar
with its porcelain Virgin in flowers and one arm
uplifted like a traffic signal to halt. Her
statue lurched, swaying, the passengers clutched the skins
as Hector pedalled the clutch in roaring reverse,
and the wharf flashed past them quicker than all their sins
as the old woman clawed the rosary in her purse
and begged the swaying Virgin not to forget her
at the hour of our death, and sudden silence
descended on the passengers and on Hector,
because it was here he had stepped between Helen’s
fight with Achille. Why he had bought this chariot
and left the sea. He believed she still loved Achille,
and that is why, through palm-shadows, the leopard shot
with its flaming wound that speed alone could not heal.
He was making no money. The trips were too short.
He liked wide horizons. Soon the Comet was known
through the sea of banana fields to the airport,
making four trips a day when most transports made one,
hearing his fame shouted on the way to Vieuxfort,
and sometimes, just for a change, coming back empty,
he leant back on the leopardskin, the stereo on
his favourite station: Country. He liked the falling
scarves of the sunset saying goodbye to the sea
the way he had left it. Curving around Praslin
he thought of his
camerades
hauling their canoes
and the dusk thatching their sheds without any noise.
III
The months revolved slowly like the silk parasols
at college cricket-matches; sometimes cicadas
past the edge of the pavilion burst into applause
for a finished stroke. By five, the fielders’ shadows
on the slanted field were history, and the light
for that moment turned as tea-tinted as the prose
of old London journals,
The Sphere, The Tatler, The
Illustrated London News;
then quietly, the white
languid dominion of the water-lily in the heat
behind the reed-barred gates of Maud Plunkett’s pond
was floating into darkness, the clouds were dying,
the field sparked with green fireflies, like sparks flying
from an evening coalpot, the singeing stars.
Low over the mangoes, close over the hills, like fire
under a tin, the sun went out, and the horizon
enclosed the schooners, the canoes, and an empire
faded with one last, spastic green flash, but so soon
they hardly noticed. The Plunketts quietly continued,
parades continued, cricket resumed, and the white feathers
of the proconsul’s pith-helmet, and the brass and red
of the fire engines. Everything that was once theirs
was given to us now to ruin it as we chose,
but in the bugle of twilight also, something unexpected.
A government that made no difference to Philoctete,
to Achille. That did not buy a bottle of white kerosene
from Ma Kilman, a dusk that had no historical regret
for the fishermen beating mackerel into their seine,
only for Plunkett, in the pale orange glow of the wharf
reddening the vendors’ mangoes, alchemizing the bananas
near the coal market, this town he had come to love.
Chapter XXIII
I
It was a rusted port with serrated ridges
over which clouds carried grey crocus-bags of rain;
past its heyday as a coaling-station. Dredges
deepened its draft and volcanic silt would remain
on its bed, but liners, higher than the iron
lance of the market, whitened the harbour and rose
above the Customs. Every noon, a carillon
sprinkled its yellow petals above a morose
banyan. The Church of Immaculate Conception
was numbering the Angelus. With lace frills on,
balconies stood upright, as did the false pillars
of the Georgian library; each citizen
stood paralyzed as the bell counted the hours.
A dozen halos of sound down through the ages
confirmed the apostles. At store-counters, shoppers
crossed themselves with the shopgirls; tellers in cages
stopped riffling their own notes with one wet fingertip
drying before it moved on to turn the next leaf.
The streets held statues. A traveller off a ship
could have sauntered through that Pompeii of their belief
made by the ash of the Angelus, like St. Pierre,
whose only survivor had been a prisoner
who watched the volcano’s powder mottle the air
across the channel to blacken milk and flour.
Then the statues stirred, iron-shop blinds rippled down,
the banks closed for an hour, the entire town
went home for lunch, to come back on the stroke of one.
II
Maud heard the carillon, faint in the wiry heat
over the hot harbour. She watched a lizard crawl down
the fly screen. She took off her damp gardening hat
and lay on the faded couch, she loosed her bodice
and blew down to her heart. It was cool in the shade
of the stone porch hung with her baskets of orchids.
She stared at the slope of the lawn down to the farm
where grass withered in scabs. Then, a canoe. Headed
for Africa, probably, passing her royal palm.
Shadows were sloping down the desiccated lawn
from the bougainvillea hedge. The morning-glory
was wilting. The sea-grape’s leaves were vermilion,
orange, and rust, their hues a
memento mori
as much as autumn’s, when their crisp pile would be raked
by limping Philoctete. Smoke wrote the same story
since the dawn of time. Smoke was time burning. It snaked
itself into a cloud, the wrinkled almond trees
grew older, but lovely, the dry leaves were baked
like clay in a kiln. Their brightness was a disease
like the golden dwarf-coconuts. It was the same
every drought. The sea hot. The sea-almond aflame.
III
A liner grew from the Vigie promontory,
white as a lily, its pistil an orange stack.
She crept past the orchids. At the morning-glory
she stopped in mid-channel, then slowly turned her back
on the island. By dusk, she’d be a ghost like all
her sisters, a smudge on a cloud. Maud marked their routes:
the cost of a second-class berth from Portugal
to Southampton, then Dublin, but the cheapest rates
staggered Dennis. She soon grew used to the liner
moored to the hedge. A girl was coming up the trace,
pausing for breath, and though the light was behind her
and the garden glaring, by the slow, pelvic pace
that made men rest on their shovels cleaning the pens
and the gardener pause from burning leaves on the lawn,
a heap in his hands, Maud knew that gait was Helen’s,
but the almond eyes were hooded in the smooth face
of arrogant ebony. Maud tugged off a glove
finger by finger, prepared for the coming farce.
Slow as the liner she came up the stone-flagged walk
in her black church dress—a touch of the widow there—
then paused at the morning-glory to wrench a stalk
head-down, stripping its yellow petals tear by tear.
My bloody allamandas! Maud swore. And, naturally,
being you, you want me to leave the verandah,
or maybe I’ll ask you up for a spot of tea.
Oh Mother of God, another allamanda!
She’ll wreck the blooming garden if I don’t come down.
She had timed it well. A little intimacy
between us girls. She’d seen the Land Rover in town
no doubt, but not this time, Miss Helen,
non merci.
We aren’t having any confession together;
then hated herself for her rage. Those lissome calves,
that waist swayed like a palm was her island’s weather,
its clouded impulses of doing things by halves,
lowering her voice to match its muttering waves,
the deep sigh of night that came from its starlit leaves.
The cackle of her infuriating laughter
when she joked with the gardener from the kitchen,
but when Maud came to the kitchen to quiet her,
she would suck her teeth and tilt that arrogant chin
and mutter something behind her back in patois,
and when Maud asked her what, she’d smile: “Ma’am, is noffing.”
Maud walked down the steps to the flagged path from the shade
of the stone porch, and Helen was starting to walk
towards her, then stopped and turned. “Morning,” Helen said.
Morning. No “Madam.” No “Good.” All in a day’s work.
Maud stopped. In midstream the liner now hovered
over Helen’s tautly brushed hair. Maud nodded
as amiably as she could, but with one palm covered
over an excessive squint.
“So, how are you, Helen?”
“I dere, Madam.”
At last. You dere. Of course you dare,
come back looking for work after ruining two men,
after trying on my wardrobe, after driving Hector
crazy with a cutlass, you dare come, that what you mean?
“We’ve no work, Helen.”
“Is not work I looking for.”
Pride edged that voice; she’d honed her arrogance
on Maud’s nerves when she worked here, but there was sorrow
in the old rudeness. Helen tore the stalk in her hands.
“What I come for this morning is see if you can borrow
me five dollars. I pregnant. I will pay you next week.”
Maud went as purple as one of her orchids. “I see.
How’ll you pay me back, Helen, if you’re out of work?
It’s none of my business, but what happened to Achille?
Hector not working?”
“I am vexed with both of them,
oui.
”
What was it in men that made such beauty evil?
She was as beautiful as a liner, but like it, she
changed her course, she turned her back on her friends.
“I’ll fetch my purse,” Maud said. Helen turned her back
and stared out to sea. This is how all beauty ends.
When Maud came with the money, she was down the track
with the arrogant sway of that hip, stern high in the line
of the turned liner. Maud stood, enraged, in the sun.
Then she picked up the flowers Helen had wrenched from the vine.
The allamandas lasted three days. Their trumpets would bend
and their glory pass. But she’d last forever, Helen.
Chapter XXIV
I
From his heart’s depth he knew she was never coming
back, as he followed the skipping of a sea-swift
over the waves’ changing hills, as if the humming
horizon-bow had made Africa the target
of its tiny arrow. When he saw the swift flail
and vanish in a trough he knew he’d lost Helen.
The mate was cleaning the bilge with the rusted pail
when the swift reappeared like a sunlit omen,
widening the joy that had vanished from his work.
Sunlight entered his hands, they gave that skillful twist
that angled the blade for the next stroke. Half-awake
from last night’s blocko, the mate waveringly pissed
over the side, keeping his staggering balance.
“Fish go get drunk.” Achille grinned. The mate cupped his hands
in the sea and lathered his head. “All right. Work start!”
He fitted the trawling rods. Achille felt the rim
of the brimming morning being brought like a gift
by the handles of the headland. He was at home.
This was his garden. God bless the speed of the swift,
God bless the wet head of the mate sparkling with foam,
and his heart trembled with enormous tenderness
for the purple-blue water and the wilting shore
tight and thin as a fishline, and the hill’s blue smoke,
his muscles bulging like porpoises from each oar,
but the wrists wrenched deftly after the lifted stroke,
mesmerizing him with their incantatory
metre. The swift made a semicircular turn
over the hills, then, like a feathery lure, she
bobbed over the wake, the same distance from the stern.
He felt she was guiding and not following them
ever since she’d leapt from the blossoms of the froth
hooked to his heart, as if her one, arrowing aim
was his happiness and that was blessing enough.