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    Omeros

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      but carrying its own death inside it, wearily.

      Red god gone with autumn and white winter early.

      Chapter XLIII

      I

      Flour was falling on the Plains. Her hair turned grey

      carrying logs from the woodpile. The tiny turret

      of the fort in the snow pointed like a chalet

      in a child’s crystal and Catherine remembered

      the lights on all afternoon in a Boston street,

      the power of the globe that lay in a girl’s palm

      to shake the world to whiteness and obliterate

      it the way the drifts were blurring the Parkin farm,

      the orange twilight cast by the feverish grate

      at the carpet’s edge on arrows of andirons

      in a brass quiver. She felt the light marking lines

      on her warm forehead, reddening the snow mountains

      above the chalet with their green crepe-paper pines;

      then she would shake the crystal and all would be snow,

      the Ghost Dance, assembling then, as it was now.

      Work made her wrists cold iron. She rested the axe

      down in its white echo. No life was as hard as

      the Sioux’s, she thought. But a pride had stiffened their backs.

      Hunger could shovel them up like dried cicadas

      into the fiery pit like that in the hearth,

      when she stared round-eyed in the flames. They were not meek,

      and she had been taught the meek inherit the earth.

      The flour kept falling. Inedible manna

      fell on their children’s tongues, from dribbling sacks

      condemned by the army. The crow’s flapping banner

      flew over the homes of the Braves. They stood like stakes

      without wires: the Crows, the Sioux, the Dakotas.

      The snow blew in their wincing faces like papers

      from another treaty which a blind shaman tears

      to bits in the wind. The pines have lifted their spears.

      Except that the thick, serrated line on the slope

      was rapidly growing more pine-trees. A faint bugle

      sounded from the chalet. She watched the pine-trees slip

      in their white smoke downhill to the hoot of an owl

      and yapping coyotes answering the bugle,

      as the pines lowered their lances in a gallop,

      and she heard what leapt from the pine-logs as a girl,

      the crackle of rifle-fire from the toy fort,

      like cicadas in drought; then she heard the cannon—

      the late muffled echo after it was fired

      and the dark blossom it made, its arch bringing down

      lances and riders with it. The serrated sea

      of pines spread out on the plain, their own avalanche

      whitening them, but they screamed in the ecstasy

      of their own massacre, since this was the Ghost Dance,

      and the blizzard slowly erased their swirling cries,

      the horses and spinning riders with useless shields,

      in the white smoke, the Sioux, the Dakotas, the Crows.

      The flour basting their corpses on the white fields.

      The absence that settled over the Dakotas

      was contained in the globe. Its pines, its tiny house.

      II

      “I pray to God that I never share in man’s will,

      which widened before me. I saw a chain of men

      linked by wrists to our cavalry. I watched until

      they were a line of red ants. I let out a moan

      as the last ant disappeared. Then I rode downhill

      away from the Parkin farm to the Indian camp.

      I entered the camp in the snow. A starved mongrel

      and a papoose sat in the white street, with a clay

      vessel in the child’s hands, and the dog’s fanged growl

      backed off from my horse, then lunged. Then I turned away

      down another street through the tents to more and more

      silence. There were hoof-marks frozen in the flour dust

      near a hungry tent-mouth. I got off. Through its door

      I saw white-eyed Omeros, motionless. He must

      be deaf too, I thought, as well as blind, since his head

      never turned, and then he lifted the dry rattle

      in one hand, and it was the same sound I had heard

      in Cody’s circus, the snake hiss before battle.

      There was a broken arrow, and others in the quiver

      around his knees. Those were our promises. I stared

      a long while at his silence. It was a white river

      under black pines in winter. I was only scared

      when my horse snorted outside, perhaps from the sound

      of the rattler. I went back outside. Where were the

      women and children? I walked on the piebald ground

      with its filthy snow, and stopped. I saw a warrior

      frozen in a drift and took him to be a Sioux

      and heard the torn war flags rattling on their poles,

      then the child’s cry somewhere in the flour of snow,

      but never found her or the dog. I saw the soles

      of their moccasins around the tents, and a horse

      ribbed like a barrel with flies circling its teeth.

      I walked like a Helen among their dead warriors.

      III

      “This was history. I had no power to change it.

      And yet I still felt that this had happened before.

      I knew it would happen again, but how strange it

      was to have seen it in Boston, in the hearth-fire.

      I was a leaf in the whirlwind of the Ordained.

      Then Omeros’s voice came from the mouth of the tent:

      ‘We galloped towards death swept by the exaltation

      of meeting ourselves in a place just like this one:

      The Ghost Dance has tied the tribes into one nation.

      As the salmon grows tired of its ladder of stone,

      so have we of fighting the claws of the White Bear,

      dripping red beads on the snow. Whiteness is everywhere.’”

      Look, Catherine! There are no more demons outside the door.

      The white wolf drags its shawled tail into the high snow

      through the pine lances, the blood dried round its jaw;

      it is satisfied. Come, come to the crusted window,

      blind as it is with the ice, through the pane’s cataract;

      see, it’s finished. It’s over, Catherine, you have been saved.

      But she sat on a chair in the parlour while the cracked

      window spread its webs, and for days and nights starved

      and thinned in her rocker. The maddened wind runs

      around the still farm. Bread greened, and like a carved

      totem her body hardened to wood. Apples dried, onions

      curled with green sprouts, and rats, growing bolder,

      with eyes like berries, moved like the burial lanterns

      of the cavalry. Her shawl slipped from one shoulder

      but she left it there, in peace, since this was peace now,

      the winter of the Ghost Dance. “I’m one year older,”

      she said to the feathery window. “I loved snow

      once, but now I dread its white siege outside my door.”

      Years severed in half by winter! By a darkness

      through which branches groped, paralyzed in their distress.

      Which flocks betrayed. Wild geese with their own honking noise

      over jammed highways, the Charles’s slow-moving ice.

      No twilight, but lamps turned on in mid-afternoon,

      my humped shadow like a bear entering its cave,

      clawing at the frozen lock, as every noun

      became its muffled echo, every street a grave

      with snow on both sides. I caught the implications

      of a traffic-light winking on an iron s
    ky

      that I could, since the only civilizations

      were those with snow, whiten to anonymity.

      Turn the page. Blank winter. The obliteration

      of nouns fading into echoes, the alphabet

      of scribbling branches. Boots stamp the trolley station.

      Dead cars foam at the mouth with icicles. The boat

      of the streetcar’s light divides the frozen breakers,

      then steaming passengers scratch at the webbed windows’

      quickly stitched lace. Swaying in black coats and parkas,

      every face is a lantern wincing when the doors

      part their rubber accordion, their tears like glass.

      The name I had mispronounced was as muffled now

      as any white noun outside the spectral stations

      along the line, where the faces were flecked with snow

      when the full car passed them, resigned in their patience

      like statues in their museum. Her old address

      enlarged with the next stop. The passengers staggered

      on the straps, the doors in a blast of malice

      grinned open, the bell rang, and suddenly I stood

      in bewildering whiteness, flakes clouding my eyes.

      The streets were white as her studio, huge boulders

      of sculptured coral, the blinding limestone of Greece

      like frozen breakers on the path between closed doors.

      The panes of ice in the gutters were as grey as

      those of the houses. I climbed steps, I read buzzers,

      searched from the pavement again for that attic where

      a curved statue had rolled black stockings down its knees,

      unclipped and then shaken the black rain of its hair,

      and “Omeros” echoed from a white-throated vase.

      But no door opened to show me her startled eyes

      behind its brass chain, no light linked the Asian bones

      of the axe-blade cheek. The glaucous windows were blind.

      I had lost the address. I walked through coral stones

      that whined like a cemetery in the sunlit wind,

      then waited for the trolley’s eye as we did once

      on the other side of that year. One came. Its doors

      yawned and rattled shut. Its hull slid past the combers.

      Houses passed like a wharf. Hers. Or some other house.

      BOOK SIX

      Chapter XLIV

      I

      In hill-towns, from San Fernando to Mayagüez,

      the same sunrise stirred the feathered lances of cane

      down the archipelago’s highways. The first breeze

      rattled the spears and their noise was like distant rain

      marching down from the hills, like a shell at your ears.

      In the cool asphalt Sundays of the Antilles

      the light brought the bitter history of sugar

      across the squared fields, heightening towards harvest,

      to the bleached flags of the Indian diaspora.

      The drizzling light blew across the savannah

      darkening the racehorses’ hides; mist slowly erased

      the royal palms on the crests of the hills and the

      hills themselves. The brown patches the horses had grazed

      shone as wet as their hides. A skittish stallion

      jerked at his bridle, marble-eyed at the thunder

      muffling the hills, but the groom was drawing him in

      like a fisherman, wrapping the slack line under

      one fist, then with the other tightening the rein

      and narrowing the circle. The sky cracked asunder

      and a forked tree flashed, and suddenly that black rain

      which can lose an entire archipelago

      in broad daylight was pouring tin nails on the roof,

      hammering the balcony. I closed the French window,

      and thought of the horses in their stalls with one hoof

      tilted, watching the ropes of rain. I lay in bed

      with current gone from the bed-lamp and heard the roar

      of wind shaking the windows, and I remembered

      Achille on his own mattress and desperate Hector

      trying to save his canoe, I thought of Helen

      as my island lost in the haze, and I was sure

      I’d never see her again. All of a sudden

      the rain stopped and I heard the sluicing of water

      down the guttering. I opened the window when

      the sun came out. It replaced the tiny brooms

      of palms on the ridges. On the red galvanized

      roof of the paddock, the wet sparkled, then the grooms

      led the horses over the new grass and exercised

      them again, and there was a different brightness

      in everything, in the leaves, in the horses’ eyes.

      II

      I smelt the leaves threshing at the top of the year

      in green January over the orange villas

      and military barracks where the Plunketts were,

      the harbour flecked by the wind that comes with Christmas,

      edged with the Arctic, that was christened Vent Noël;

      it stayed until March and, with luck, until Easter.

      It freshened the cedars, waxed the laurier-cannelle,

      and hid the African swift. I smelt the drizzle

      on the asphalt leaving the Morne, it was the smell

      of an iron on damp cloth; I heard the sizzle

      of fried jackfish in oil with their coppery skin;

      I smelt ham studded with cloves, the crusted accra,

      the wax in the varnished parlour: Come in. Come in,

      the arm of the Morris chair sticky with lacquer;

      I saw a sail going out and a sail coming in,

      and a breeze so fresh it lifted the lace curtains

      like a petticoat, like a sail towards Ithaca;

      I smelt a dead rivulet in the clogged drains.

      III

      Ah, twin-headed January, seeing either tense:

      a past, they assured us, born in degradation,

      and a present that lifted us up with the wind’s

      noise in the breadfruit leaves with such an elation

      that it contradicts what is past! The cannonballs

      of rotting breadfruit from the Battle of the Saints,

      the asterisks of bulletholes in the brick walls

      of the redoubt. I lived there with every sense.

      I smelt with my eyes, I could see with my nostrils.

      Chapter XLV

      I

      One side of the coast plunges its precipices

      into the Atlantic. Turns require wide locks,

      since the shoulder is sharp and the curve just misses

      a long drop over the wind-bent trees and the rocks

      between the trees. There is a wide view of Dennery,

      with its stone church and raw ochre cliffs at whose base

      the African breakers end. Across the flecked sea

      whose combers veil and unveil the rocks with their lace

      the next port is Dakar. The uninterrupted wind

      thuds under the wings of frigates, you see them bent

      from a force that has crossed the world, tilting to find

      purchase in the sudden downdrafts of its current.

      The breeze threshed the palms on the cool December road

      where the Comet hurtled with empty leopard seats,

      so fast a man on a donkey trying to read

      its oncoming fiery sign heard only two thudding beats

      from the up-tempo zouk that its stereo played

      when it screeched round a bridge and began to ascend

      away from the palm-fronds and their wickerwork shade

      that left the windscreen clear as it locked round the bend,

      where Hector suddenly saw the trotting piglet

      and thought of Plunkett’s warning as he heard it screel

      with the same sound t
    hat the tires of the Comet

      made rounding the curve from the sweat-greased steering wheel.

      The rear wheels spin to a dead stop, like a helm.

      The piglet trots down the safer side of the road.

      Lodged in their broken branches the curled letters flame.

      Hector had both hands on the wheel. His head was bowed

      under the swaying statue of the Madonna

      of the Rocks, her smile swayed under the blue hood,

      and when her fluted robe stilled, the smile stayed on her

      dimpled porcelain. She saw, in the bowed man, the calm

      common oval of prayer, the head’s usual angle

      over the pew of the dashboard. Her lifted palm,

      small as a doll’s from its cerulean mantle,

      indicated that he had prayed enough to the lace

      of foam round the cliff’s altar, that now, if he wished,

      he could lift his head, but he stayed in the same place,

      the way a man will remain when Mass is finished,

      not unclenching his hands or freeing one to cross

      forehead, heart, and shoulders swiftly and then kneel

      facing the altar. He bowed in endless remorse,

      for her mercy at what he had done to Achille,

      his brother. But his arc was over, for the course

      of every comet is such. The fated crescent

      was printed on the road by the scorching tires.

      A salt tear ran down the porcelain cheek and it went

      in one slow drop to the clenched knuckle that still gripped

      the wheel. On the flecked sea, the uninterrupted

      wind herded the long African combers, and whipped

      the small flag of the island on its silver spearhead.

      II

      Drivers leant over the rail. One seized my luggage

      off the porter’s cart. The rest burst into patois,

      with gestures of despair at the lost privilege

      of driving me, then turned to other customers.

      In the evening pastures horses grazed, their hides wet

      with light that shot its lances over the combers.

      I had the transport all to myself.

      “You all set?

      Good. A good pal of mine died in that chariot

      of his called the Comet.”

      He turned in the front seat,

      spinning the air with his free hand. I sat, sprawled out

      in the back, discouraging talk, with my crossed feet.

      “You never know when, eh? I was at the airport

      that day. I see him take off like a rocket.

      I always said that thing have too much horsepower.

     


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