Read The Poetry of Derek Walcott 1948-2013 Online
Authors: Derek Walcott
Walking, I'd stop and turn. What had I heard,
wheezing behind my heel with whitening breath?
Nothing. Sixth Avenue yawned wet and wide.
The night was white. There was nowhere to hide.
CRUSOE'S JOURNAL
I looked now upon the world as a thing remote, which I had nothing to do with, no expectation from, and, indeed, no desires about. In a word, I had nothing indeed to do with it, nor was ever like to have; so I thought it looked as we may perhaps look upon it hereafter, viz., as a place I had lived in but was come out of it; and well might I say, as Father Abraham to Dives, “Between me and thee is a great gulf fixed.”
Robinson Crusoe
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Once we have driven past Mundo Nuevo trace
             safely to this beach house
perched between ocean and green, churning forest
             the intellect appraises
objects surely, even the bare necessities
             of style are turned to use,
like those plain iron tools he salvages
             from shipwreck, hewing a prose
as odorous as raw wood to the adze,
             out of such timbers
came our first book, our profane Genesis
             whose Adam speaks that prose
which, blessing some sea-rock, startles itself
             with poetry's surprise,
in a green world, one without metaphors;
             like Christofer he bears
in speech mnemonic as a missionary's
             the Word to savages,
its shape an earthen, water-bearing vessel's
             whose sprinkling alters us
into good Fridays who recite His praise,
             parroting our master's
style and voice, we make his language ours,
             converted cannibals
we learn with him to eat the flesh of Christ.
All shapes, all objects multiplied from his,
             our ocean's Proteus;
in childhood, his derelict's old age
             was like a god's. (Now pass
in memory, in serene parenthesis,
             the cliff-deep leeward coast
of my own island filing past the noise
             of stuttering canvas,
some noon-struck village, Choiseul, Canaries,
             with crocodile canoes,
a savage settlement from Henty's novels,
             Marryat or R.L.S.,
with one boy signaling at the sea's edge,
             though what he cried is lost;)
So time that makes us objects, multiplies
             our natural loneliness.
For the hermetic skill, that from earth's clays
             shapes something without use,
and separate from itself, lives somewhere else,
             sharing with every beach
a longing for those gulls that cloud the cays
             with raw, mimetic cries,
never surrenders wholly for it knows
             it needs another's praise
like hoar, half-cracked Ben Gunn, until it cries
             at last, “O happy desert!”
and learns again the self-creating peace
             of islands. So from this house
that faces nothing but the sea, his journals
             assume a household use,
We learn to shape from them, where nothing was
             the language of a race,
and since the intellect demands its mask
             that sun-cracked, bearded face
provides us with the wish to dramatize
             ourselves at nature's cost,
to attempt a beard, to squint through the sea-haze,
             posing as naturalists,
drunks, castaways, beachcombers, all of us
             yearn for those fantasies
of innocence, for our faith's arrested phase
             when the clear voice
startled itself saying “water, heaven, Christ,”
             hoarding such heresies as
God's loneliness moves in His smallest creatures.
CRUSOE'S ISLAND
   Â
I
The chapel's cowbell
Like God's anvil
Hammers ocean to a blinding shield;
Fired, the sea-grapes slowly yield
Bronze plates to the metallic heat.
Red, corrugated iron
Roofs roar in the sun.
The wiry, ribbed air
Above earth's open kiln
Writhes like a child's vision
Of hell, but nearer, nearer.
Below, the picnic plaid
Of Scarborough is spread
To a blue, perfect sky,
Dome of our hedonist philosophy.
Bethel and Canaan's heart
Lie open like a psalm.
I labor at my art.
My father, God, is dead.
Past thirty now I know
To love the self is dread
Of being swallowed by the blue
Of heaven overhead
Or rougher blue below.
Some lesion of the brain
From art or alcohol
Flashes this fear by day:
As startling as his shadow
Grows to the castaway.
Upon this rock the bearded hermit built
His Eden:
Goats, corn-crop, fort, parasol, garden,
Bible for Sabbath, all the joys
But one
Which sent him howling for a human voice.
Exiled by a flaming sun
The rotting nut, bowled in the surf
Became his own brain rotting from the guilt
Of heaven without his kind,
Crazed by such paradisal calm
The spinal shadow of a palm
Built keel and gunwale in his mind.
The second Adam since the fall
His germinal
Corruption held the seed
Of that congenital heresy that men fail
According to their creed.
Craftsman and castaway
All heaven in his head,
He watched his shadow pray
Not for God's love but human love instead.
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II
We came here for the cure
Of quiet in the whelk's center,
From the fierce, sudden quarrel,
From kitchens where the mind
Like bread, disintegrates in water,
To let a salt sun scour
The brain as harsh as coral
To bathe like stones in wind,
To be, like beast or natural object, pure.
That fabled, occupational
Compassion, supposedly inherited with the gift
Of poetry had fed
With a rat's thrift on faith, shifted
Its trust to corners, hoarded
Its mania like bread,
Its brain a white, nocturnal bloom
That in a drunken, moonlit room
Saw my son's head
Swaddled in sheets
Like a lopped nut, lolling in foam.
O love, we die alone!
I am borne by the bell
Backward to boyhood
To the gray wood
Spire, harvest and marigold,
To those whom a cruel
Just God could gather
To His blue breast, His beard
A folding cloud,
As He gathered my father.
Irresolute and proud,
I can never go back.
I have lost sight of hell,
Of heaven, of human will,
My skill
Is not enough,
I am struck by this bell
To the root.
Crazed by a racking sun,
I stand at my life's noon,
On parched, delirious sand
My shadow lengthens.
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III
Art is profane and pagan,
The most it has revealed
Is what a crippled Vulcan
Beat on Achilles' shield.
By these blue, changing graves
Fanned by the furnace blast
Of heaven, may the mind
Catch fire till it cleaves
Its mold of clay at last.
Now Friday's progeny,
The brood of Crusoe's slave,
Black little girls in pink
Organdy, crinolines,
Walk in their air of glory
Beside a breaking wave;
Below their feet the surf
Hisses like tambourines.
At dusk when they return
For vespers, every dress
Touched by the sun will burn
A seraph's, an angel's,
And nothing I can learn
From art or loneliness
Can bless them as the bell's
Transfiguring tongue can bless.
CODICIL
Schizophrenic, wrenched by two styles,
one a hack's hired prose, I earn
my exile. I trudge this sickle, moonlit beach for miles,
tan, burn
to slough off
this love of ocean that's self-love.
To change your language you must change your life.
I cannot right old wrongs.
Waves tire of horizon and return.
Gulls screech with rusty tongues
Above the beached, rotting pirogues,
they were a venomous beaked cloud at Charlotteville.
Once I thought love of country was enough,
now, even I chose, there's no room at the trough.
I watch the best minds root like dogs
for scraps of favor.
I am nearing middle-
age, burnt skin
peels from my hand like paper, onion-thin,
like Peer Gynt's riddle.
At heart there's nothing, not the dread
of death. I know too many dead.
They're all familiar, all in character,
even how they died. On fire,
the flesh no longer fears that furnace mouth
of earth,
that kiln or ashpit of the sun,
nor this clouding, unclouding sickle moon
whitening this beach again like a blank page.
All its indifference is a different rage.
FROM
The Gulf
(1969)
THE CORN GODDESS
Silence asphalts the highway, our tires hiss
like serpents, of God's touching weariness,
his toil unfinished, while in endless rows
the cabbage fields, like lilies, spin in air;
his flags rot, and the monkey god's nerves rattle
lances in rage. Human rags tend cattle
more venal every year, and chrome-tooled cars
lathered like estate horses nose the shallows.
At dusk the Presbyterian cattle-bell
collects lean, charcoal-brittle elders,
stalled in their vision of a second hell,
as every crossroad crucifies its sect
of bell-voiced, bell-robed sisters, gold-gelders
baying for self-respect. But, over braziers
of roasting corn while their shucked souls
evenly char, the sybil glows. Her seal's skin
shines like drizzled asphalt, in that grin
all knowledges burnt out. Jeer, but their souls
catch an elation fiercer than your desolate
envy; from their fanned, twisting coals
their shrieks crackle and fly. The sparks
are sorrowing upward though they die.
from
METAMORPHOSES
   Â
MOON
Resisting poetry I am becoming a poem.
O lolling Orphic head silently howling,
my own head rises from its surf of cloud.
Slowly my body grows a single sound,
slowly I become
a bell,
an oval, disembodied vowel,
I grow, an owl,
an aureole, white fire.
I watch the moonstruck image of the moon burn,
a candle mesmerized by its own aura,
and turn
my hot, congealing face, towards that forked mountain
which wedges the drowned singer.
That frozen glare,
that morsured, classic petrifaction.
Haven't you sworn off such poems for this year,
and no more on the moon?
Why are you gripped by demons of inaction?
Whose silence shrieks so soon?
JUNTA
The sun's brass clamp electrifies a skull
kept shone since he won Individual
of the Year, their first year on the road,
as Vercingetorix And His Barbarous Horde;
lurching from lounge to air-conditioned lounge
with the crazed soldier ant's logistic skill
of pause as capture, he stirs again to plunge,
his brain's antennae on fire through the black ants
milling and mulling through each city fissure;
banlon-cool limers, shopgirls, Civil Servants.
“Caesar,” the hecklers siegheil, “Julius Seizure!”
He fakes an epileptic, clenched salute,
taking their tone, is no use getting vex,
some day those brains will squelch below his boot
as sheaves of swords hoist Vercingetorix!
So that day bursts to bugling cocks, the sun's gong
clangs the coup, a church, a bank explodes
and, bullet-headed with his cow-horned gang
of marabunta hordes, he hits the road.
Dust powders the white dead in Woodford Square;
his black, khaki canaille, panting for orders,
surge round the kiosk, then divide to hear
him clomp up silence louder than the roars
of rapine. Silence. Dust. A microphone
crackles the tinfoil quiet. On its paws
the beast mills, basilisk-eyed, for its one
voice. He clears his gorge and feels the bile
of rhetoric rising. Enraged that every clause
“por la patria, la muerte” resounds
the same, he fakes a frothing fit and shows his wounds,
while, as the cold sheaves heighten, his eyes fix
on one black, bush-haired convict's widening smile.