Diego Martin, by Philip Sander
Holding the valley's breath, am faithful for breathing,
holding great rain in my lungs & the thrashing trees
& the heat in their boiling leaves & the river thriving,
tripping itself from the North Post down to the sea
in six great leaps like six tumulting sneezes
& the valley's mud in my mouth for bitter keeping,
a purse of black mint, & my teeth in the marrow shale
grinding the silt that breeds the weeds in my throat
& for all this flood I am almost too slight a basin,
am brimming at eyes & nose, as the hills are seeping,
the trees' red roots drowned in the soaking air,
I spit these drowning stones to the marshes waiting,
the tepid flats assuaged by yawning herons,
swarms of madding blackbirds whip me with thorns.
Exhale to rest in the heat of the swamp-palms' shadows
where the valley last gives in to the stolid gulf.
.
Dear readers: For our sixth anniversary in May 2010, The Caribbean Review of Books has launched a new website at www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com. Antilles has now moved to www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com/antilles — please update your bookmarks and RSS feed. If you link to Antilles from your own blog or website, please update that too!
Dear readers: For our sixth anniversary in May 2010, The Caribbean Review of Books has launched a new website at www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com. Antilles has now moved to www.caribbeanreviewofbooks.com/antilles — please update your bookmarks and RSS feed. If you link to Antilles from your own blog or website, please update that too!
Sunday, 20 April 2003
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)