Read The Poetry of Derek Walcott 1948-2013 Online
Authors: Derek Walcott
The strength of one frail hand in a dim room
Somewhere in Brooklyn, patient and assured,
Restores my sacred duty to the Word.
“Home, home,” she can write, with such short time to live,
Alone as she spins the blessings of her years;
Not withered of beauty if she can bring such tears,
Nor withdrawn from the world that breaks its lovers so;
Heaven is to her the place where painters go,
All who bring beauty on frail shell or horn,
There was all made, thence their lux-mundi drawn,
Drawn, drawn, till the thread is resilient steel,
Lost though it seems in darkening periods,
And there they return to do work that is God's.
So this old lady writes, and again I believe,
I believe it all, and for no man's death I grieve.
BRISE MARINE
K with quick laughter, honey skin and hair
and always money. In what beach shade, what year
has she so scented with her gentleness
I cannot watch bright water but think of her
and that fine morning when she sang o' rare
Ben's lyric of “the bag o' the bee”
and “the nard in the fire”
                                        “nard in the fire”
against the salty music of the sea
the fresh breeze tangling each honey tress
                                        and what year was the fire?
Girls' faces dim with time, Andreuille all gold â¦
Sunday. The grass peeps through the breaking pier.
Tables in the trees, like entering Renoir.
Maintenant je n'ai plus ni fortune, ni pouvoir
 â¦
But when the light was setting through thin hair,
holding whose hand by what trees, what old wall.
Two honest women, Christ, where are they gone?
Out of that wonder, what do I most recall?
The darkness closing round a fisherman's oar.
The sound of water gnawing at bright stone.
ANADYOMENE
The shoulders of a shining nereid
Glide in warm shallows, nearing the white sand;
Thighs tangled in the golden weed,
Did fin flash there, or woman's hand?
Weed dissolves to burnished hair,
Foam now, where was milk-white breast,
Did thigh or dolphin cleave the air?
Half-woman and half-fish, or best
Both fish and woman, let them keep
Their elusive mystery.
Hurt, the wound shuts itself in sleep,
As water closes round the oar,
And as no oar can wound the sea.
Confused, the senses waken
To a renewed delight,
She to herself has taken
Sea-music and sea-light.
A SEA-CHANTEY
   Â
Là , tout n'est qu'ordre et beauté,
   Â
Luxe, calme, et volupté.
Â
Anguilla, Adina,
Antigua, Cannelles,
Andreuille, all the l's,
Voyelles, of the liquid Antilles,
The names tremble like needles
Of anchored frigates,
Yachts tranquil as lilies,
In ports of calm coral,
The lithe, ebony hulls
Of strait-stitching schooners,
The needles of their masts
That thread archipelagoes
Refracted embroidery
In feverish waters
Of the sea-farer's islands,
Their shorn, leaning palms,
Shaft of Odysseus,
Cyclopic volcanoes,
Creak their own histories,
In the peace of green anchorage;
Flight, and Phyllis,
Returned from the Grenadines,
Names entered this Sabbath,
In the port-clerk's register;
Their baptismal names,
The sea's liquid letters,
Repos donnez a cils â¦
And their blazing cargoes
Of charcoal and oranges;
Quiet, the fury of their ropes.
Daybreak is breaking
On the green chrome water,
The white herons of yachts
Are at Sabbath communion,
The histories of schooners
Are murmured in coral,
Their cargoes of sponges
On sandspits of islets
Barques white as white salt
Of acrid Saint Maarten,
Hulls crusted with barnacles,
Holds foul with great turtles,
Whose ship-boys have seen
The blue heave of Leviathan,
A sea-faring, Christian,
And intrepid people.
Now an apprentice washes his cheeks
With salt water and sunlight.
In the middle of the harbor
A fish breaks the Sabbath
With a silvery leap.
The scales fall from him
In a tinkle of church-bells;
The town streets are orange
With the week-ripened sunlight,
Balanced on the bowsprit
A young sailor is playing
His grandfather's chantey
On a trembling mouth-organ.
The music curls, dwindling
Like smoke from blue galleys,
To dissolve near the mountains.
The music uncurls with
The soft vowels of inlets,
The christening of vessels,
The titles of portages,
The colors of sea-grapes,
The tartness of sea-almonds,
The alphabet of church-bells,
The peace of white horses,
The pastures of ports,
The litany of islands,
The rosary of archipelagoes,
Anguilla, Antigua,
Virgin of Guadeloupe,
And stone-white Grenada
Of sunlight and pigeons,
The amen of calm waters,
The amen of calm waters,
The amen of calm waters.
IN A GREEN NIGHT
The orange tree, in various light,
Proclaims perfected fables now
That her last season's summer height
Bends from each overburdened bough.
She has her winters and her spring,
Her molt of leaves, which in their fall
Reveal, as with each living thing,
Zones truer than the tropical.
For if by night each golden sun
Burns in a comfortable creed,
By noon harsh fires have begun
To quail those splendors which they feed.
Or mixtures of the dew and dust
That early shone her orbs of brass,
Mottle her splendors with the rust
She sought all summer to surpass.
By such strange, cyclic chemistry
That dooms and glories all at once
As green yet aging orange tree,
The mind enspheres all circumstance.
No Florida loud with citron leaves
With crystal falls to heal this age
Shall calm the darkening fear that grieves
The loss of visionary rage.
Or if Time's fires seem to blight
The nature ripening into art,
Not the fierce noon or lampless night
Can quail the comprehending heart.
The orange tree, in various light
Proclaims that fable perfect now
That her last season's summer height
Bends from each overburdened bough.
ISLANDS
for Margaret
Merely to name them is the prose
Of diarists, to make you a name
For readers who like travellers praise
Their beds and beaches as the same;
But islands can only exist
If we have loved in them. I seek
As climate seeks its style, to write
Verse crisp as sand, clear as sunlight,
Cold as the curled wave, ordinary
As a tumbler of island water;
Yet, like a diarist, thereafter
I savor their salt-haunted rooms,
(Your body stirring the creased sea
Of crumpled sheets), whose mirrors lose
Our huddled, sleeping images,
Like words which love had hoped to use
Erased with the surf's pages.
So, like a diarist in sand,
I mark the peace with which you graced
Particular islands, descending
A narrow stair to light the lamps
Against the night surf's noises, shielding
A leaping mantle with one hand,
Or simply scaling fish for supper,
Onions, jack-fish, bread, red snapper;
And on each kiss the harsh sea-taste,
And how by moonlight you were made
To study most the surf's unyielding
Patience though it seems a waste.
FROM
The Castaway
(1965)
THE CASTAWAY
The starved eye devours the seascape for the morsel
Of a sail.
The horizon threads it infinitely.
Action breeds frenzy. I lie,
Sailing the ribbed shadow of a palm,
Afraid lest my own footprints multiply.
Blowing sand, thin as smoke,
Bored, shifts its dunes.
The surf tires of its castles like a child.
The salt-green vine with yellow trumpet-flower,
A net, inches across nothing.
Nothing: the rage with which the sandfly's head is filled.
Pleasures of an old man:
Morning: contemplative evacuation, considering
The dried leaf, nature's plan.
In the sun, the dog's feces
Crusts, whitens like coral.
We end in earth, from earth began.
In our own entrails, genesis.
If I listen I can hear the polyp build,
The silence thwanged by two waves of the sea.
Cracking a sea-louse, I make thunder split.
Godlike, annihilating Godhead, art
And self, I abandon
Dead metaphors: the almond's leaflike heart,
The ripe brain rotting like a yellow nut
Hatching
Its babel of sea-lice, sandfly and maggot,
That green wine bottle's gospel choked with sand,
Labeled, a wrecked ship,
Clenched seawood nailed and white as a man's hand.
THE SWAMP
Gnawing the highway's edges, its black mouth
Hums quietly: “Home, come home⦔
Behind its viscous breath the very word “growth”
Grows fungi, rot;
White mottling its root.
More dreaded
Than canebrake, quarry, or sun-shocked gully-bed
Its horrors held Hemingway's hero rooted
To sure, clear shallows.
It begins nothing. Limbo of cracker convicts, Negroes.
Its black mood
Each sunset takes a smear of your life's blood.
Fearful, original sinuosities! Each mangrove sapling
Serpentlike, its roots obscene
As a six-fingered hand,
Conceals within its clutch the mossbacked toad,
Toadstools, the potent ginger-lily,
Petals of blood,
The speckled vulva of the tiger-orchid;
Outlandish phalloi
Haunting the travellers of its one road.
Deep, deeper than sleep
Like death,
Too rich in its decrescence, too close of breath,
In the fast-filling night, note
How the last bird drinks darkness with its throat,
How the wild saplings slip
Backward to darkness, go black
With widening amnesia, take the edge
Of nothing to them slowly, merge
Limb, tongue and sinew into a knot
Like chaos, like the road
Ahead.
A VILLAGE LIFE
for John Robertson
   Â
I
Through the wide, gray loft window,
I watched that winter morning, my first snow
crusting the sill, puzzle the black,
nuzzling tom. Behind my back
a rime of crud glazed my cracked coffee-cup,
a snowfall of torn poems piling up
heaped by a rhyming spade.
Starved, on the prowl,
I was a frightened cat in that gray city.
I floated, a cat's shadow, through the black wool
sweaters, leotards, and parkas of the fire-haired,
snow-shouldered Greenwich Village mädchen,
homesick, my desire
crawled across snow
like smoke, for its lost fire.
All that winter I haunted
your house on Hudson Street, a tiring friend,
demanding to be taken in, drunk, and fed.
I thought winter would never end.
I cannot imagine you dead.
But that stare, frozen,
a frosted pane in sunlight,
gives nothing back by letting nothing in,
your kindness or my pity.
No self-reflection lies
within those silent, ice-blue irises,
whose image is some snow-locked mountain lake
in numb Montana.
And since that winter I have learnt to gaze
on life indifferently as through a pane of glass.
   Â
II
Your image rattled on the subway glass
is my own death-mask in an overcoat;
under New York, the subterranean freight
of human souls, locked in an iron cell,
station to station cowed with swaying calm,
thunders to its end, each in its private hell,
each plumped, prime bulk still swinging by its arm
upon a hook. You're two years dead. And yet
I watch that silence spreading through our souls:
that horn-rimmed midget who consoles
his own deformity with Sartre on Genet.
Terror still eats the nerves, the Word
is gibberish, the plot Absurd.
The turnstile slots, like addicts, still consume
obols and aspirin, Charon in his grilled cell
grows vague about our crime, our destination.
Not all are silent, or endure
the enormity of silence; at one station,
somewhere off 33rd and Lexington,
a fur-wrapped matron screamed above the roar
of rattling iron. Nobody took her on,
we looked away. Such scenes
rattle our trust in nerves tuned like machines.
All drives as you remember it, the pace