Authors: Derek Walcott
hoarsely requesting his rolls of coins in silver,
and the voice carried the old bugle-note that as boys
had racked us in line as cadets. I felt that shiver
of fear we all knew. His shout could carry over
the heights of Saltibus to the cliffs of D’Elles Soeurs,
the khaki slopes of D’Elles Soeurs to LaFargue River.
Then he passed my queue, as if it were Inspection.
“Our wanderer’s home, is he?”
I said: “For a while, sir,”
too crisply, mentally snapping to attention,
thumbs along trousers’ seam, picking up his accent
from a khaki order.
“Been travellin’ a bit, what?”
I forgot the melody of my own accent,
but I knew I’d caught him, and he knew he’d been caught,
caught out in the class-war. It stirred my contempt.
He knew the “what?” was a farce, I knew it was not
officer-quality, a strutting R.S.M.,
Regimental Sarn’t Major Plunkett, Retired.
Not real colonial gentry, but spoke like
them from the height of his pig-farm, but I felt as tired
as he looked. Still, he’d led us in Kipling’s requiem.
“Been doin’ a spot of writing meself. Research.”
The “meself” his accommodation. “P’raps you’ve ’eard …
the old queen,” shrugging. I said I’d been at the church.
“Ah! Were you? These things. Eyes tend to get very blurred.
So sorry I missed you. Bit of an artist, too,
was old Maud. You must come up. I’ll show you a quilt
she embroidered for years. Birds and things. Mustn’t keep you.”
O Christ! I swore, I’m tired of their fucking guilt,
and our fucking envy! War invented the queue,
and he taught that Discipline formed its own beauty
in the rhyming steps of the college Cadet Force,
that though crowds mimicked his strut, it was his duty
to make us all gentlemen if not officers.
“Nice to see you, sir,” said my old Sergeant Major,
and my eyes blurred. Then he paused at the white glare of
the street outside, and left, as the guard closed the door,
the wound of a language I’d no wish to remove.
II
I remembered that morning when Plunkett and I,
compelled by her diffident saunter up the beach,
sought grounds for her arrogance. He in the khaki
grass round the redoubt, I in the native speech
of its shallows; like enemy ships of the line,
we crossed on a parallel; he had been convinced
that his course was right; I despised any design
that kept to a chart, that calculated the winds.
My inspiration was impulse, but the Major’s zeal
to make her the pride of the Battle of the Saints,
her yellow dress on its flagship, was an ideal
no different from mine. Plunkett, in his innocence,
had tried to change History to a metaphor,
in the name of a housemaid; I, in self-defence,
altered her opposite. Yet it was all for her.
Except we had used two opposing stratagems
in praise of her and the island; cannonballs rolled
in the fort grass were not from Olympian games,
nor the wine-bottle, crusted with its fool’s gold,
from the sunken
Ville de Paris,
legendary
emblems; nor all their names the forced coincidence
we had made them. There, in her head of ebony,
there was no real need for the historian’s
remorse, nor for literature’s. Why not see Helen
as the sun saw her, with no Homeric shadow,
swinging her plastic sandals on that beach alone,
as fresh as the sea-wind? Why make the smoke a door?
III
All that Greek manure under the green bananas,
under the indigo hills, the rain-rutted road,
the galvanized village, the myth of rustic manners,
glazed by the transparent page of what I had read.
What I had read and rewritten till literature
was guilty as History. When would the sails drop
from my eyes, when would I not hear the Trojan War
in two fishermen cursing in Ma Kilman’s shop?
When would my head shake off its echoes like a horse
shaking off a wreath of flies? When would it stop,
the echo in the throat, insisting, “Omeros”;
when would I enter that light beyond metaphor?
But it was mine to make what I wanted of it, or
what I thought was wanted. A cool wood off the road,
a hut closed like a wound, and the sound of a river
coming through the trees on a country Saturday,
with no one in the dry front yard, the still leaves,
the yard, the shade of a breadfruit tree on the door,
then the track from which a man’s figure emerges,
then a girl carrying laundry, the road-smell like loaves,
the yellow-dressed butterflies in the grass marges.
Chapter LV
I
Through the year, pain came and went. Then came Christmas,
everything right and exact, everything correct,
the golden pillars of Scotch, red sorrel, sea-moss,
the hunger of happiness spread through Philoctete
like a smooth white tablecloth, everything in place,
the plastic domes of hot dishes frosting with dew,
gravy-boats anchored on patterns of doilied lace
withdrawn from camphored cupboards, the napkin holder
of yellow bone, the cutlery flashing in light
after a year in the drawer, shoulder to shoulder
the small army of uncorked wines and the corked-too-tight
explosives of ginger-beer, the ham pierced with cloves,
a crusted roast huge as a thigh, black pudding, souse,
the glazed cornmeal pies sweating in banana leaves,
and a smell of forgiveness drifting from each house
with the smell of varnish, and a peace that drifted
out to the empty beach; that brimmed in the eyes of
wineglasses, his heart bubbling when she lifted
the steaming shield from the rice. “Ah, Philosophe!”
he said to himself from the depth of gratitude,
“you cannot say life not good, or people not kind,”
as Ma Kilman sipped her sauce from the ladling wood
and pronounced, “It good,” to both the one who was blind
and the healed one, in her generous widowhood.
The day after Christmas Achille rose excited
by the half-dark. A stale cock crew. Grass grew lighter
in the pastures. Moon-basins flashed in the riverbed.
Today he was not the usual kingfish-fighter
but a muscular woman, a scarf round his head.
Today was the day of fifes, the prattling skin
of the goat-drums, the day of dry gourds, of brass bells
round his ankles, not chains from the Bight of Benin
but those fastened by himself. He was someone else
today, a warrior-woman, fierce and benign.
Today he was African, his own epitaph,
his own resurrection. Today people would laugh
at what they had lost in the
paille-banane
dancers;
today was the day when they wore the calabash
with its marks; today the rustling banana-trash
would whirl with spinning Philoctete, the cancer’s
anemone gone from his shin; the balancer’s
day on the bamboo poles and the stilt-strider’s height
floating past balconies, past the fretwork mansards;
today was the children’s terror and their delight,
running up the street and hiding in people’s yards.
Achille walked out into the blinding emptiness
of the shut village. He strode like a prizefighter
on Boxing Day, carrying Helen’s yellow dress,
and the towel that matched it draped over his head,
the Lifebuoy soap in a dish swallowed by his hand
to wash off the love-sweat with Helen. By the shed
of the fishermen’s depot a trough in the sand
held the public standpipe with its brass-knuckled fist.
The shower was a trickle. First Achille lathered
his skull white as Seven Seas’s hair, then pulled the waist
of the trunks to forage his crotch. Then he rolled dirt
from back of the ankles with a hard-pressing wrist,
then rubbed one heel where the thorn-vine had left its hurt.
Then he opened the shower full out and let it drum
the streaming soap past his eyes, groping to close it.
“You smell like a flower,” he teased himself. “How come?”
Next he unfrayed the soap-dried knots in his armpit,
and spray flew from his hair to the quick-picking comb.
The village was hung over. The sun slept in the street
like a dog, with no traffic. He shook Philo’s gate.
The sufferer was cured now. He walked very straight.
II
Those elbows like anchors, those huge cannonball fists
wriggled through the armholes of the tight lemon dress.
Helen helped him stuff the rags and align his breasts.
At first she had laughed, but then, with firm tenderness,
Achille explained that he and Philo had done this
every Boxing Day, and not because of Christmas,
but for something older; something that he had seen
in Africa, when his name had followed a swift,
where he had been his own father and his own son.
The sail of her bellying stomach seemed to him
to bear not only the curved child sailing in her
but Hector’s mound, and her hoarse, labouring rhythm
was a delivering wave. There, in miniature,
the world was globed like a fruit, since its texture is
both acid and sweet like a golden
pomme-Cythère,
the apple of Venus, and the
Ville de Paris
that he had dived for once, in search of a treasure
that was kneeling right there, that had always been his.
She did not laugh anymore, but she helped him lift
the bamboo frame with its ribbons and spread them out
from the frame, and everything she did was serious.
She knelt at his feet and hooked the bells to the skirt.
Small circular mirrors necklaced the split bodice
that was too small for his chest, and their flashing lights
multiplied her face with the tears in their own eyes.
She lifted the mitre, its panes like Easter kites,
and with this she fitted him. He straightened its spire
with his huge hands and their rope-furrowed calluses,
then he took up the wand and stood there in the mirror
of her pride and her butterfly-quiet kisses.
He was resinous and frightening. He smelt like trees
on a ridge at sunrise, like unswaying cedars;
then he set out for the hot road towards Castries,
the square already filling with tables. Buses
passed him with screaming children and in their cries
was the ocean’s distance over three centuries.
III
Their small troupe stood in the hot street. Three musicians,
fife, chac-chac, and drummer and the androgynous
warriors, Philo and Achille.
Un! Deux! Trois!
The dance
began with Philo as its pivot, to the noise
of dry leaves scraping asphalt, the banana-trash
levitating him slowly as the roofs spun round
the dip and swivel of the head, a calabash
masking the agonized face, as Achille drummed the ground
with quick-stuttering heels, stopped. And then he stood straight.
Now he strode with the wand and the fluttering mitre
until he had walked to the far end of the street.
There he spun. Then, knee passing knee, he stepped lighter
than a woman with her skirt lifted high crossing
the stones of a stream when the light is small mirrors,
with the absurd strength of his calves and his tossing
neck, which shook out the mitre like a lion’s mane,
with a long running leap, then a spin, while he held
the shaft low, like a rod divining. All the pain
re-entered Philoctete, of the hacked yams, the hold
closing over their heads, the bolt-closing iron,
over eyes that never saw the light of this world,
their memory still there although all the pain was gone.
He swallowed his nausea, and spun his arms faster,
like a goblet on a potter’s wheel, its brown blur
soothed by his palms, as the bamboo fifes grew shriller
to the slitted eyes of the fifers. The drummer’s wrists
whirred like a hummingbird’s wings, and, to Achille, the
faster they flew, the more he remembered, blent
to his rite; then suddenly the music ceased.
The crowd clapped, and Achille, with great arrogance, sent
Philoctete to bow and pick up the coins on the street
glittering like fish-scales. He let the runnels of sweat
dry on his face. Philoctete sat down. Then he wept.
BOOK SEVEN
Chapter LVI
I
One sunrise I walked out onto the balcony
of my white hotel. The beach was already swept,
and in the clear grooves of the January sea
there was only one coconut shell, but it kept
nodding in my direction as a swimmer might
with sun in his irises, or a driftwood log,
or a plaster head, foaming. It changed shapes in light
according to each clouding thought. A khaki dog
came racing its faster shadow on the clean sand,
then stopped, yapping at the shell, not wetting its paws,
backing off from the claws of surf that made the sound
of a cat hissing; then it faked an interest
in a crab-hole and worried it. If that thing was
a coconut, why didn’t it drift with the crest
of the slow-breathing swell? Then, as if from a vase,