Authors: David O'Meara
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Poetry, #World Literature
I’d spread the word that you’re pretty slow
because you’d implied I was less than bright,
and there’s one more thing I’d like to know:
are you wrong or am I right?
If a past disorder caused you trouble,
be it gastrointestinal, tooth or sinus,
if a privileged birth raised you in a bubble,
I’m afraid that’s no excuse, your Highness,
for the back-stabbing habits of an asshole.
If you’re really itching to put me in my place,
fine, let’s drop the gloves, and like Picasso,
I’ll happily rearrange your face.
And while you carve mine to a tragic mask,
we’ll raise a chorus of the same old song,
since there’s one more thing you’d like to ask:
were you right or was I wrong?
The sky’s stretched so white
noon stings, bleached
of shade. In the street,
baked chrome blinds
as a car passes with sudden
starred light, and the lawn’s
a clump of stiff leaves
below the asthmatic scratchings
of the linden’s crown.
Chrysanthemum heads wither
and crisp like rust; the choked
veins of perennials are edged
with brown, flattened to the stem.
Power lines buzz above curb dust.
A cyclist ticks by
beside the construction site;
men chew bread,
looking flayed and stunned
in the faint, bent shadow
of a backhoe’s boom, the jackhammer
planted on the asphalt like a heroic
Soviet prop. The ballpark,
empty, roasts like the Negev,
just sand and brittle tufts
of grass, where Christ might
appear through the haze
and do a deal for one gulp
of bottled water. Sprinklers
whisking in the yards can’t
stave off the parched decay,
their thimble-shallow spray
sponged dry by sun in minutes.
At 4 a.m., we wake
to the window banging back
on its hinges, and the downpour,
a day-for-night burst
of blurred white in street glow,
rain slashing down
and the dry roots slugging it back.
He stood at the front of the lecture hall,
rushed to explain the important themes
of the Twentieth-Century American Novel,
last class before midterms.
Our essays were weak; he wanted us
to get this, to sift the full impact
of the novel’s plot, a book he clearly loved.
It was a quintessential early-winter day, sky
the colour of pasta water, stirred with flurries,
and the small break of Christmas before us.
The painted vents blew hot, drowsy breath.
‘Now, one more thing,’ he said, then talked
of the cancer they’d found, his treatments
and the chance of success. There’d be
a
TA
for the rest of term.
He blinked at his watch; the time was gone.
Silent, we loaded books into knapsacks.
‘Good luck on the exam. Reread your notes.
And please, remember the motifs,’ he said
as we poured toward the door,
‘of the white horse and the pillar of smoke.’
Time sawing its hinds,
it crests the pasture’s rump,
countless long-jumps
in a row, a pelted arrow
fletched for lift.
It shakes off
sleek
and
quick
as too flat; its stride taps the course,
a triple-time tattoo through sprays
of heather and gorse,
where it winks, framed in haze.
Though it’s said to pound
rice cakes on the moon,
a trickster or Aesop’s fool,
it refuses to be other than real
when you see it running. Pity
it can’t sing while the hound bears
down with that boggle-eyed stare
chugging the void
on a whisk of gangly limbs
to muzzle all zags and hearsay.
What would it sing? Psalm,
plainsong, tin pans,
cable in a squall,
cymbal crash, cackle, drag
on a rutted brake pad,
chanson to sum up our fable
before its raw chords are shot,
before its shot chords are ash.
Before I am called into dinner,
you call out, ‘Come here,
come look,’ lifting a cracked wand
of bone from the dry manure
you turn in your hand
and weigh. Kicking around,
we hunt for more parts of the set,
limbs or rib slats fanned
out like smashed bracelets
mislaid in the clover.
‘Let’s go,’ I say, ‘it’s late.’
You turn the thing over and over.
Likely we’ll have no language
to resemble the ones we use now
when the
LAGEOS
satellite finally drops
to Earth. Silver, with a solid
brass core, its arc set
to track our planetary shift
until its highly stable orbit
deteriorates in the year 8,000,000.
Any sense of its first purpose
will be lost to whoever
might still be here. What they’d
look like, eat or dream is anyone’s
guess, but we fixed a plaque inside
with drawings of the Earth, circa now,
and another one with future coastlines
fanned out like a stretched accordion
to show them how the world might look
after 80,000 inches of continental drift,
one every century. If anything’s left
to inspect those shifted silhouettes –
our prodigal land mounted in a dimpled,
silver ball – they might just
read them as portent, threat or tall saga
cooked up by a far-too-distant race
to understand.
•
In Fort Kochi, Kerala,
a long day of walking the baked stretch
of Bazaar Road past the ferry terminal
to Ernakulam. Textiles, pots, oils, ceramics,
paper and tobacco spilled for sale
from the open shutters of the shops.
Goats nudged garbage while the touts
called out to
please look
at their leather sandals, sarongs
and elephant tea cozies. The dance
of haggling, offers
and countered head shakes.
Mosquitoes devoured your bare legs
under the batik tablecloth
as we sat for biryani and curry.
I’d spread the newspaper out,
looking for news of home
in a tiny font. But read
a report of the Italian snail
thriving on the grounds
at Cliveden and a theory about
how it got there: stowaway in 1896
on a marble balustrade
imported from the Villa Borghese.
Structures of one empire humped
across shipping lanes to another,
the marvel of Rome raided for newer money,
while the snail
plods its slime trail
twenty-seven metres each century.
•
For those who cite
The Matrix, Rocky
and the
CGI
’d prequels to
Star Wars
as good reason to hate them,
remember the
Aeneid
is also a sequel.
And remember a thousand years
separate Homer and Virgil, only
two thousand more between Virgil
and us. War that follows rage, the care
of fields and horses, some details might
still ring so true that he seems
near each time we hear them.
Hungry, Virgil crosses the bridge
to Trastevere, adjusts his toga
beside a line of smart cars, catching
the whiff of dinner venting through
trattorie
shutters. In a doorway,
he watches the chef bent over
a scratched counter, who steadies
then chops an onion’s soft, rotten
underside until he frees crisp layers
lambent at its core, sauté s them
in olive oil with garlic,
the sizzle and smell
so familiar the poet might forget
Maecenas isn’t waiting to debate
rhetoric or Aeneas’s fate
in the gardens up the Esquiline Hill.
•
Where does the Danube start?
Magris searches in his book.
He visits Furtwangen
with friends, finds a brook
that drains into a tributary,
the exact source
an argument for centuries, inch
by sodden inch. Near a clear spring
on a hill, they reach a dip
rinsed with rivulets,
and follow a slope to a house
where they knock
at the threshold, squint into a window.
Feet shuffle through half-empty rooms
to the door
which opens on a perturbed old woman
not interested in questions.
But since they’ve
come all this way, she listens, squints
and points to a rough ditch near
a woodshed
gushing cold water. ‘The water reaches
the gutter,’ she explains,
‘through a basin,
which is constantly full because of a tap
that no one ever succeeds
in turning off.’
•
I never tire of arriving.
At Pamukkale, the wind chucked
leaves and palm fronds as we crossed
the main square.
Barefoot, we ascended
the travertine rock, its stalactites’ drip
and slow froth of calcium
like an overpoured pint of Guinness
cooled to dollops of white-rimmed shelves.
Ruins at the top,
the once-bustling spa town of Heirapolis,
its paving stones still rutted
by the wear of cart wheels.
Here you can walk past the colonnades
of antiquity’s shops. Wealthy Romans
took the hot springs here, retired
and died, their sarcophagi
accumulating to another kind
of stop for tourists north of the baths.
Shells of modern tourism too, lobby fragments
from the 1970s, more evidence of
how eras settle, retreat,
each strata engraved as ghost structure.
This abandoned front desk, the green
marble floor at dusk, light like soft copper,
haunting as any wheel rut
crowded with weeds –
you can find them if you follow
these unmarked goat tracks
further still.
•
‘If I cannot bend the higher powers,
I will move the infernal regions.’
A favourite quote of Freud’s
and the Secessionist painters of Vienna,
lovers of the glimpse, the held-back, what
beats at your insides to claw a way out.
I wrote it down looking at Klimt’s
Attersee
in the Leopold Museum south of the Ringstrasse.
The words are Juno’s in Virgil’s
Aeneid
,
a summation of alternative options
for those cast outside the party line.
The ode to Plan B.
Attersee
might be landscape
as subversive frill,
the lake’s abstract surface
stroked with turquoise
over green and blue underpaint
like the bangled skies of Van Gogh.
Klimt’s lake
stretches, infinitely if it could,
to the top edge of canvas
and the dark, heavy shape painted there,
an island or shoreline that by limiting
the infinite has given it value.
•
I thought I saw Sophie Scholl
in a club underground
in Warsaw
that we found by following smokers
down an alley and steep, concrete stairwell,
through tobacco fog to air-sucking bass.
She was nodding at the mosh edge,
beer clutched in her hand
in that post-Cold War dance hall.
I wanted to ask how she got there –
roaming the rebuilt
squares of
Mitteleuropa
– but she looked
too happy to bother
with dredging up the past. Anyway, what
would be the question?
Is everything changed, or the same?
knowing any answer won’t change
the hour of closing time. In that basement’s low ceiling
and sticky floor, furnished
in the dumpster vogue
of old fridges and mismatched chairs,
Sophie hardly blinked, swigged
her drink, her silence meant
as challenge to ‘put up or shut up’
or just ‘shut up and listen.’
In the speakers’ blare
I left her there.
•
We were returning from the north,
an overnight train
from Sa Pa, sharing a sleeping berth
with two young women from Switzerland.
It was 4 a.m. as the rubbed glow
of the station platform settled in our window.
We lugged backpacks
through the puzzle of Hanoi’s Old Quarter,
amazed at its paused frenzy, dark shops
locked behind metal gates, a few motorbikes
chainsawing past. A cafe opened at 5:30
and agreed to hold our packs
so we wandered to Hoan Kiem Lake
to watch the tai chi groups
balance inner tensions at sunrise.
By then, completely transformed,
the market and streets were stacked
with baskets: crab, pork,
pineapple pyramids, oysters
and sleek trout hawked by vendors,
attendants sweeping park paths
with long, wiry brooms. Police brewed tea
in their dawn kiosk, caps
angled back
off their foreheads
near stereos wired to trees
for the tai chi grannies, conjuring
longevity with techno beats.
Hanoi’s traffic and street life,
no history but the deal, offers
and banter, the good price of fish
caught that morning
in the Gulf of Tonkin.
Fuck silence or permanence.
Fuck elegy. Fuck time and pain.
•
Dawn sky, sriracha red,
Chiang Mai lunch, khao soi and mango,
a stockpile of sun before
another carousel of departure level,
the sucker-punch intake of takeoff.
Past weightless snatches of sleep,
the drop
to the terminal bus, that sub-zero palanquin
aloft over road drifts
of Baltic night:
watch as we hurried through snowfall
to brew tea and read in the lamplight
of a Helsinki hostel.
•
Olduvai, really
Oldupai
,
named for the fronded sisal plant
that grows here. Seen from space,
the Rift’s a patchwork
in algal patina, the gorge
a grey-green collage splayed
with evaporated rill beds,
steep cracks tracking the landscape
like plate sutures on a skull. Snacking
on sandwiches, we sat under
corrugated tin, protected
from the sun’s hazy weight,
rock monolith and broken scrub
hedging the Earth’s curvature.
Three and a half million years back,
three apes, predate of humans,
walked past at Laetoli through drops
of soft rain, the shapes of their prints
left by the ash layer, cemented
in tuff, stable enough to last
as the hot and grey ash fell.
Other marks: birds, a hare,
a three-toed horse
and its foal turning
in the opposite
direction. Dimpling the site,
rainprints too. But this trio, tracks
tagged 61, 62 and 63,
we know walked upright, as a habit;
left no knuckle marks, the gait
a ‘small-town walking speed’
like a stroll through the agora.
Tempting to speculate
about the story of their travel,
a family or hunting group
looking for signs of a water hole
in the wake of the volcano’s
tremors, one set of their prints
nested in the hollow of another,
the way we can follow
someone through snow
to make the going a little easier.
•
On a charity box in the Hanoi airport:
‘For Especially Difficult Children.’
Or ‘We Beg for Silent Behaving’ outside
the Basilica of St. Euphemia
in Rovinj, Croatia.
I mention this not from smugness
but as point of argument. If language blurs
across cultures in the same decade,
how will our songs and stories
translate across ticking inches of drift?
The challenge of Onkalo,
‘hiding place,’ a toxic dump
cored through granite in Finland.
Blasters descend through rock
five kilometres deep,
bore igneous strata, each layer
another geologic age.
So when they drive
their pickups down and walk
through curtains of dust, are
they descending back through time
in corridors designed to be resealed
and forgotten for a thousand centuries?
How silent it will be, down
there, when the ventilation fans
stop whirring,
the new Ice Age crested
and gone, Earth’s surface scoured
like a child’s ribboned aggie found
in the grass near a gravel road.
We’ll have no language
to warn of what we built, no marker
left to explain the world
wiped clear of any signs of us.
‘My bones would rest much easier,’
Virgil wrote, ‘if I knew your songs
would tell my story in days to come.’
•
Let me be quieter. Go
slow and listen.
Near Lake Manyara,
the unhurried swish
of elephants
gnashing through branches
as we sat for an hour
just watching. Ibises rested
in the umbrella acacias,
velvet monkeys