Authors: Derek Walcott
S for serpent. He had turned his head away once;
but that was enough time for the apparition’s
back to be sealed in bush, trembling at his return.
III
His wound healed slowly. He discovered the small joys
that lay in a life patterned like those on the quilt,
and he would speak to her in his normal voice
without feeling silly. Soon he lost any guilt
for her absence. Her absence was far, yet closer
than the blue hills of Saltibus in their cool light.
His memories opened the shutters of mimosa
like the lilies that widened in her pond at night
secretly, like angels, in the faith that was hers.
In the lion-clawed tub he idled in his bath,
he loved the nap of fresh towels, he scrubbed his ears
the way she insisted, he liked taking orders
from her invisible voice. He learned how to pause
in the shade of the stone arch watching the bright red
flowers of the immortelle, he forgot the war’s
history that had cost him a son and wife. He read
calmly, and he began to speak to the workmen
not as boys who worked with him, till every name
somehow sounded different; when he thought of Helen
she was not a cause or a cloud, only a name
for a local wonder. He liked being alone
sometimes, and that was the best sign. He knew that Maud
was proud of him whenever the squared sunlight shone
on the taut comforter, that it was so well made.
Chapter LXII
I
Behind lace Christmas bush, the season’s red sorrel,
what seemed a sunstruck stasis concealed a ferment
of lives behind tin fences, an endless quarrel
which Seven Seas recorded with no instrument
except ears sharper than his mongrel’s; gardening
in his plot of old tires with violets, he’d hear them
over the roofs. He could hear the priest pardoning
their sins at vespers, the penitential anthem
of a Sunday in which no serious sins occurred.
The fishermen in black, rusty suits passed by him.
The helm of their turning week had come to a stop.
Seven Seas at his window heard their faint anthem:
“Salve Regina”
in the pews of a stone ship,
which the black priest steered from his pulpit like a helm,
making the swift’s sign from brow to muttering lip.
The village was surrendering a life besieged
by the lances of yachts in the white marina,
where egrets had hidden in the feathering reeds
of the lagoon. It had become a souvenir
of itself, and from the restaurant tables
with settings white as the yachts you could look towards
the marina’s channel to the old weathered gables
of upstairs houses over the fishermen’s yards
with biscuit-tin palings and cracked asphalt streets;
old tires wreathing a pier, vine-burdened fences,
an old woman pinning white, surrendering sheets
on a line. Its life adjusted to the lenses
of cameras that, perniciously elegiac,
took shots of passing things—Seven Seas and the dog
in the pharmacy’s shade, every comic mistake
in spelling, like
In God We Troust
on a pirogue,
BLUE GENES, ARTLANTIC CITY, NO GABBAGE DUMPED HERE
.
The village imitated the hotel brochure
with photogenic poverty, with atmosphere.
Those who were “people” lovers also have
a snapshot of Philoctete showing you his shin,
not saying how it was healed; some have Hector’s grave
heaped with its shells, and an oar. All were welcomed in
the No Pain Café with its bamboo beads, then some
proceeded to the islet where a warped bottle
crusted with fool’s gold in the amusing museum
shone like a false chalice, engravings of the Battle,
then a log with its entry,
Plunkett,
in lilac
ink. And, over and over again, the name Helen
of the West Indies, until they all turned their back
on the claim. They crushed the immortelle’s vermilion
platoons under their sandals climbing to the redoubt,
from where they shot the humped island with its blue horns
and hazed Africa windward. None saw a swift dart
over the cactus on the cliff or heard it cry once.
Lizards emerged like tongues from the mouths of cannons.
II
In the lion-coloured grass of the dry season
cannon gape at the sea from the windy summit,
their holes out of breath in the heat. If you rest one
palm on the hot iron barrel it will burn it,
but a lizard crawls there and raises its question:
“If this place is hers, did that empty horizon
once flash its broadsides with their inaudible rays
in her honour? Was that immense enterprise on
the baize tables of empires for one who carries
cheap sandals on a hooked finger with the Pitons
for breasts? Were both hemispheres the split breadfruit of
her African ass, her sea the fluted chitons
of a Greek frieze? And is she the Helen they love,
instead of a carved mouth with the almond’s odour?
She walked on this parapet in a stolen dress,
she stood in a tilted shack with its open door.
Who gives her the palm? Did sulking Achille grapple
with Hector to repeat themselves? Exchange a spear
for a cutlass; and when Paris tosses the apple
from his palm to Venus, make it a
pomme-Cythère,
make all those parallels pointless. Names are not oars
that have to be laid side by side, nor are legends;
slowly the foaming clouds have forgotten ours.
You were never in Troy, and, between two Helens,
yours is here and alive; their classic features
were turned into silhouettes from the lightning bolt
of a glance. These Helens are different creatures,
one marble, one ebony. One unknots a belt
of yellow cotton slowly from her shelving waist,
one a cord of purple wool, the other one takes
a bracelet of white cowries from a narrow wrist;
one lies in a room with olive-eyed mosaics,
another in a beach shack with its straw mattress,
but each draws an elbow slowly over her face
and offers the gift of her sculptured nakedness,
parting her mouth. The sanderlings lift with their cries.
And those birds Maud Plunkett stitched into her green silk
with sibylline steadiness were what islands bred:
brown dove, black grackle, herons like ewers of milk,
pinned to a habitat many had adopted.
The lakes of the world have their own diaspora
of birds every winter, but these would not return.
The African swallow, the finch from India
now spoke the white language of a tea-sipping tern,
with the Chinese nightingales on a shantung screen,
while the Persian falcon, whose cry leaves a scar
on the sky till it closes, saw the sand turn green,
the dunes to sea, understudying the man-o’-war,
talking the marine dialect of the Caribbean
with nightjars, finches, and swallows, each origin
enriching the islands to which their cries were sewn.
Across the bay the ridge bristled once with a fort,
then the inner promontory itself; its shipping
was martial then, its traffic in masts the swift fleet
of both navies; sails soared to the boatswain’s piping,
like Seven Seas’s kettle, squadrons would slowly surge
from volcanic inlets. Its map, riddled with bays
like an almond leaf, provided defence or siege,
but its cannons, set in their spiked circle, could blaze
like the forehead of Mars. Now French, now British yards
fluttered from its mornes; no sooner was one flag set
than another battle unravelled its lanyards
and a bugle hoisted the other. Each sunset,
with its charred flagships, its smouldering fires, its coals
fanned by the breeze at landfall, dilated and died,
every Redcoat an ember, its garrisoned souls
shouldering their muskets like palm-fronds until Parade
marched into night’s black oblivion that vizored
Mars’ brow. Along the horizon in a green flash
a headland swallowed the sun’s leaf like a lizard
to the thudding cannonballs of a calabash.
Then long shadows alternated like the keyboard
of Plunkett’s piano to the fringed lamp of the moon,
as the siege and battles were changed to its shawled song
crossing the sea. Now there were hundreds of Frenchmen
and British listening in their separate cemeteries,
who died for a lizard, for red leaves to belong
to their ranks, for that green flash that was History’s.
III
Galleons of clouds are becalmed, waiting for a wind.
The lizard spins on its tripod, panning, to find
the boulders below where slaves built the breakwater.
The Battle of the Saints moves through the surf of trees.
School-texts rustle to the oval portrait of a
cloud-wigged Rodney, but the builders’ names are not there,
not Hector’s ancestor’s, Philoctete’s, nor Achille’s.
The blue sky is a French tunic, its Croix de Guerre
the sunburst of a medal. The engraved ovals
of both admirals fit, when a schoolbook closes,
into one locket. Screaming only in vowels,
the children burst out of History. Some classes
race past the breakwater, the anonymous cairn
carried by a line of black ants, some up the street
to crouch under the window-ledge by Ma Kilman,
to shout at his elbow and frighten Philoctete,
then yell: “Aye! Seven Seas!” in their American
accent. One stalks near the growling dog on a bet.
Their books are closed like the folded wings of a moth.
The lizard leaps into the grass. You bend your head
to hear “Iounalo” from the cannon’s mouth.
Chapter LXIII
I
Seven Seas sat anchored in the rumshop window,
the khaki dog stretched at his feet clicking at flies.
The Saturday sunlight laid a map on the floor
and smaller maps on his shades. Hefting the empties
from the blocko, the girl took them out the back door
to stack them near the gate. She was Ma Kilman’s niece
fresh from the country, and the village was for her
a startling city, its music widening her eyes
like a new Helen. The dog’s tail thudded the floor.
The hot deck of the rumshop idled like a ship
becalmed in Saturday’s doldrums. In the rocker
Ma Kilman yawned, steering them into deep gossip.
“Statics is her uncle, the girl. He went Florida,
after the election, as a migrant-picker.
You know Maljo. Didier? That man worried her,
yes, with his outside children plus what he stick her
with, but this one, my godchild, is legitimate.
She very obedient. She will make a good maid.”
“I know Florida,” Seven Seas said. “The life better
there, but not good. That is the trouble with the States.”
“Statics change,” she said. “Somebody bring a letter
home from him. Christine, you go and sit by those crates
in the yard and call me when the sweet-drink truck come.”
The girl went out to the yard.
“A long letter home.
His job is to put the oranges in a sack
one by one, as if they is islands.”
“In the South,”
Seven Seas said, “the Deep South, you musn’t talk back.
You do what the white man give you and shut your mouth.”
“Anyway,” she sighed, “Statics meet this Cherokee
woman, a wild Indian, you know, and they live well
together. ‘Good electricity,’ he say. He
send her photo to his wife, so his wife could tell
people she know a real Indian, not a West
Indian. I see the picture and she look real wild,
not with feathers and so on, but with big, big breast
like she ready! Which is why I send out the child.
Aye, aye! Statics send to say one night at a bar,
a true-true Indian come in and next thing he know
this Choctaw truck-driver lift him by the collar
and start choking him, and he tell the woman, ‘Let’s blow,
babe,’ and leave Statics high and dry like a canoe.
Statics write to say his woman now is the dollar.”
II
Helen came into the shop, and she had that slow
feline smile of a pregnant woman, the slow grace
that can go with it. Sometimes the gods will hallow
all of a race’s beauty in a single face.
She wanted some margarine. Ma Kilman showed her where
the tubs were kept in the freezer. Helen chose one,
then she paid Ma Kilman and left. The dividing air
closed in her wake, and the shop went into shadow,
with the map on the floor, as if she were the sun.
“She making child,” she said. “Achille want to give it,
even is Hector’s, an African name. Helen
don’t want no African child. He say he’ll leave it
till the day of the christening. That Helen must learn
where she from. Philo standing godfather. You see?
Standing, Philo, standing straight! That sore used to burn
that man till he bawl,
songez?
”
“I heard his agony
from the yam garden,” Seven Seas said. “They doing well,
the white yams. The sea-breeze does season them with salt.”