Read The Poetry of Derek Walcott 1948-2013 Online
Authors: Derek Walcott
sodden canvas of the sky like a hopeless sail,
gusting in sheets and hazing the hills completely
as if the whole valley were a hull outriding the gale
and the woods were not trees but waves of a running sea.
When light cracks and thunder groans as if cursed
and you are safe in a dark house deep in Santa
Cruz, with the lights out, the current suddenly gone,
you think: “Who'll house the shivering hawk, and the
impeccable egret and the cloud-colored heron,
and the parrots who panic at the false fire of dawn?”
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IV
These birds keep modeling for Audubon,
the Snowy Egret or White Heron in a book
that, in my youth, would open like a lawn
in emerald Santa Cruz, knowing how well they look,
strutting perfection. They speckle the islands
on river-bank, in mangrove marsh or cattle pasture,
gliding over ponds, then balancing on the ridge
of a silken heifer, or fleeing disaster
in hurricane weather, and picking ticks
with their electric stab as if it were sheer privilege
to study them in their mythical conceit
that they have beat across the sea from Egypt
with the pharaonic ibis, its orange beak and feet
profiled in quiet to adorn a crypt,
then launch themselves with wings that, beating faster
are certain as a seraph's when they beat.
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V
The perpetual ideal is astonishment.
The cool green lawn, the quiet trees, the forest
on the hill there, then, the white gasp of an egret sent
sailing into the frame then teetering to rest
with its gawky stride, erect, an egret-emblem!
Another thought surprises: a hawk on the wrist
of a branch, soundlessly, like a falcon,
shoots into heaven, circling above praise or blame,
with the same high indifference as yours,
now dropping to tear a field mouse with its claws.
The page of the lawn and this open page are the same,
an egret astonishes the page, the high hawk caws
over a dead thing, a love that was pure punishment.
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VI
I hadn't seen them for half of the Christmas week,
the egrets, and no one told me why they had gone,
but they are back with the rain now, orange beak,
pink shanks and stabbing head, back on the lawn
where they used to be in the clear, limitless rain
of the Santa Cruz Valley, which, when it rains, falls
steadily against the cedars till it mists the plain.
The egrets are the color of waterfalls,
and of clouds. Some friends, the few I have left,
are dying, but the egrets stalk through the rain
as if nothing mortal can affect them, or they lift
like abrupt angels, sail, then settle again.
Sometimes the hills themselves disappear
like friends, slowly, but I am happier
that they have come back now, like memory, like prayer.
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VII
With the leisure of a leaf falling in the forest,
pale yellow spinning against greenâmy ending.
Soon it will be the dry season, the hills will rust,
the egrets dip their necks undulant, bending,
stabbing at worms and grubs after the rain,
sometimes erect as bowling pins, they stand
as strips of cotton-wool peel from the mountain,
then when they move, gawkily, they move this hand
with their feet's splayed fingers, their darting necks.
We share one instinct, that ravenous feeding
my pen's beak, plucking up wriggling insects
like nouns and gulping them, the nib reading
as it writes, shaking off angrily what its beak rejects,
selection is what the egrets teach
on the wide-open lawn, heads nodding as they read
in purposeful silence, a language beyond speech.
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VIII
We were by the pool of a friend's house in St. Croix
and Joseph and I were talking; he stopped the talk,
on this visit I had hoped that he would enjoy
to point out, with a gasp, not still or stalking
but fixed in the great fruit tree, a sight that shook him
“like something out of Bosch,” he said. The huge bird was
suddenly there, perhaps the same one that took him,
a sepulchral egret or heron; the unutterable word was
always with us, like Eumaeus, a third companion
and what got him, who loved snow, what brought it on
was that the bird was such a spectral white.
Now when at noon or evening on the lawn
the egrets soar together in noiseless flight
or tack, like a regatta, the sea-green grass,
they are seraphic souls, as Joseph was.
5Â Â Â THE ACACIA TREES
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I
You used to be able to drive (though I don't) across
the wide, pool-sheeted pasture below the house
to the hot, empty beach and park in the starved shade
of the acacias that print those tiny yellow flowers
(blank, printless beaches are part of my trade);
then there were men with tapes and theodolites who measured
the wild, uneven ground. I watched the doomed acres
where yet another luxury hotel will be built
with ordinary people fenced out. The new makers
of our history profit without guilt
and are, in fact, prophets of a policy
that will make the island a mall, and the breakers
grin like waiters, like taxi drivers, these new plantations
by the sea; a slavery without chains, with no blood spiltâ
just chain-link fences and signs, the new degradations.
I felt such freedom writing under the acacias.
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II
Bossman, if you look in those bush there, you'll find
a whole set of passport, wallet, ID, credit card,
that is no use to them, is money on their mind
and is not every time you'll find them afterwards.
You jest leave your bag wif these things on the sand,
and faster than wind they jump out of the bush
while you there swimming and rubbing tanning lotion
and when you find out it is no good to send
the Special Unit, they done reach Massade.
But I not in that, not me, I does make a lickle
change selling and blowing conch shells, is sad
but is true. Dem faster than any vehicle,
and I self never get in any commotion
except with the waves, and soon all that will be lost.
Is too much tourist and too lickle employment.
How about a lickle life there? Thanks, but Boss,
don't let what I say spoil your enjoyment.
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III
You see those breakers coming around Pigeon Island
bowing like nuns in a procession? One thing I know,
when you're gone like my other friends, not to Thailand
or Russia, but wherever it is loved friends go
with their different beliefs, who were like a flock
of seagulls leaving the mirror of the sand,
or a bittern passing lonely Barrel of Beef,
or the sails that an egret hoists leaving its rock;
I go down to the same sea by another road
with manchineel shadows and stunted sea grapes
dwarfed by the wind. I carry something to read:
the wind is bright and shadows race like grief,
I open their books and see their distant shapes
approaching and always arriving, their voices heard
in the page of a cloud, like the soft surf in my head.
6
for August Wilson
August, the quarter-moon dangles like a bugle
over the brick cantonments of the Morne
whose barrack apartments have the serial glow
of postage stamps; the clouds' letters are torn,
and your sweet instrument is put away as
your silver cornet lies in its velvet case
with all those riffs and arias whose characters argue
the way that wind elates the acacias
until they wrestle with the roar of torrents,
black, jagged silhouettes ready to do battle
with enormous hands and eyes with the coming day
in the brick thickets of Pittsburgh and Seattle,
in plays that are their own battle cry and anthem,
I unhook the quarter-moon to blow their praises,
you, Horace Pippin, Romare, Jacob Lawrence,
I saw the moon's bugle there and thought of them.
7
for Oliver Jackman
It's what others do, not us, die, even the closest
on a vainglorious, glorious morning, as the song goes,
the yellow or golden palms glorious and all the rest
a sparkling splendor, die. They're practicing calypsos,
they're putting up and pulling down tents, vendors are slicing
the heads of coconuts around the Savannah, men
are leaning on, then leaping into pirogues, a moon will be rising
tonight in the same place over Morne Coco, then
the full grief will hit me and my heart will toss
like a horse's head or a threshing bamboo grove
that even you could be part of the increasing loss
that is the daily dial of the revolving shade. Love
lies underneath it all though, the more surprising
the death, the deeper the love, the tougher the life.
The pain is over, feathers close your eyelids, Oliver.
What a happy friend and what a fine wife!
Your death is like our friendship beginning over.
8Â Â Â SICILIAN SUITE
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I
Like a blackbird that shot out of the daylight
into the benign gloom of the studio, butting the glass,
fluttering and darting then thudding it again,
as if it were searching for a cage that calms
like my mind with its pitiful searching for an exit
from itself, and thinking these days of Pavese,
of a flight from you (who would have thought your shadow
could have been so solid?) that I would easily
like the trapped bird keep butting the wall of your forehead
till you let me fly through the window of your gaze
past Pigeon Island to Isola (to sacred Sicily)
from the opening parenthesis of your palms.
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II
I am haunted by hedges of pink oleander
along the Sicilian roads, their consonants of gravel
under the tires, by stone piles, by walls whose wonder
is that there was no need to travel
this far, to recognize things I already knew,
except, and now it grows, the odd broken castle
through whose doors peered a Caribbean blue,
and the name Ortigia that rings like crystal
in its fragile balance. In the pine's rustle
and the silver alder's and the olive's, a difference began,
sounds that needed translation. The sea was the same
except for its history. The island was our patron saint's
birthplace. They shared the same name:
Lucia. The heat had the identical innocence
of an island afternoon, but with a difference,
the way the oleanders looked and the olive's green flame.
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III
Soothe me, Vittorio, calm me, Quasimodo,
bless me with your clasped palms, cypress, and syllables
of the trimmed orange oleander on Somebody Street.
Screech my pain, starlings, from the stone balcony
that faces the Saracen coast, blind me, Santa Lucia,
patron saint of both isles and eyes, for my lack of vision!
There was a prophecy repeated in her smallest gestures
to the madness of an old man who loved a brown faun
that grazed on his heart even in drought.
All of you, save him! Save his clogged heart
like a tree thick with prayers like the starlings
repeating their verses from the barred windows
of Passeggio Adorno, vowing a new start,
as he watches the transients hunched over the duck pond
that was Arethusa's fountain, tomorrow, tomorrow.
All of those people and their lucky lives.
I know what I've done, I cannot look beyond.
I treated all of them badly, my three wives.
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IV
On the cathedral steps sprinkled by the bells' benediction
like water that blissfully stained the scorching street,
you were not among the small crowd in the sun,
so many in black against the Sicilian heat.
I never entered the shaded church with its pews
facing the tortured altar, but I hoped to find you:
Oh, I did, half-heartedly, but by now it was no use.
The bells meant nothing or the swallows they lifted;
still I felt you were ahead and I was right behind you,
and that you would stop on your shadow and turn your head,
and there in Sicily turn into salt, into fiction.
I don't know the cathedral's name. It's in Syracuse.
I bought a paper in a language I cannot read.
There was nothing in the paper about this. It wasn't news.
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V
We never know what memory will doâ
my body humming with so much excitement,
I thought my heartbeat sprouted wings and flew
to Syracuse, your harbor, that its flight meant
a return to Sicily and all its sunlit error
where a Greek tanker lay anchored in the blue;
my shadowy treachery, my columned patience
darted through balconies to the gusting area
of the bandstand facing the Bay of the Saracens.
Translucent ghosts, performing without shadows
silhouettes of black actors, shapes on a vase,
their quarrels caught in an oval, while what she does