in memory of hart crane
Testament
Orlando Ricardo MenesFar from the wilds of python roots and those air plants
like the monstrous octopi that doomed the galleons,
Hart straggles into his little garden by the sea
and falls under the spell of mimosas to find a parchment leaf,
clusia rosea, to inscribe the words roiling in his mind,
as castaways once scrawled their prayers—perhaps a new poem
about the Cuba that makes his body sweat with desire
or fear or both in those sweltering nights beneath the mosquito net.
What had brought the poet to this island, anyway?
To live cheaply and have plenty of time to write?
Perhaps something much more Romantic, sexy, like dreaming
of sailor boys with cinnamon breath and peachy skin
who fuck him singing sea chanteys in jasmine fog
thick as clotted cream? Or that molasses sunset
that jolted him to think of New England’s emerald hills
rather than this island, so much the bastard girl
of a failed empire and the concubine of chaos,
bewitching with her Circean smells of Spanish rose
and African lily and that to stay whole and sane
a full-blooded American must flee those vapors and hues
that mire a civilized mind with a wantonness
impervious to any reason or decorous discipline,
as if an English garden were mobbed by marabú weeds.
So treasonous are the tropics, he’d heard a Dutch ensign
say in a sawdust bar by the wharf of sighs,
that any man of sense should avoid this island’s
womanly seas fuming the shore with the spume
of love betrayed not so much as in a man but a child,
a boy too young to understand the volatile heart,
and Hart then remembered his own mother, whose affections
could go from warm to scalding in an instant
as these inconstant waters of a tropics too close to the sun,
and he felt trapped as never before in memories
of possession in a house ruled by his mother’s moods
that no alcohol could assuage or poem trick to art.