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Colin Hamilton
You Fell

(Strahov Monastery, Prague, 1991)
Did the table's wooden roughness slow
the slosh of eggs out of the shark's split belly?
One monk pricked his finger on a tooth.
- When he walked out into your baroque
-
- streets of winter rain, he went emboldened by
the thought: I know cold, dark monsters
- of the deep. I've pricked my fingers
-
- on their beast teeth and bled. There are
oceans beyond this saltless city. Since I
-
- already knew all that, other questions
-
- followed me: Who brought that shark to Prague
-
and what iced casket carried it? Who stuffed
-
- the thing? And who, when monastery
-
- became museum, mounted it in a case painted
-
with distant fish? Someone knew all
-
- the answers, but I was just killing time,
-
- keeping dry, until she, who'd gone to see
-
the human body without a soul, returned.
-
- ***
-
- My key does a quarter turn though I'd push it further. There's something
soft in the lock, something dead in your ears. I could turn away, but you're
not leaving. Inside, the kitchen's lit by four blue flames. And my name,
that's what you're saying from leagues underwater, which have been compressed
and sweetened into a bottle of rum.
-
- You greet me then my family. I ask about your health. It's the same:
worse. To explain, you hit your chest four times, scoring out the attacks
that haven't killed you, rap a fist to skull twice. That makes you smile
and propose a toast. You show me your pills and say what each one costs.
You're spitting with anger.
-
- ***
-
- What makes you angry is me nodding my head and not understanding. I
nod, you shake yours. A huge hand swats me away. There's a story being
told and I should listen. Once, you were like me. That was in Germany.
You show your teeth.
-
- It wasn't all bad. There were women. You count. French. Dutch. Russian.
Hungarian. Ukrainian. Polish. I should have known you then.
-
- Sometimes there will be a woman with me. She's like a gift of years,
though you'll age back through them in an hour. Then all that's left are
the stories. This one is about your children. Not Dasha, but the others
you've never met. Maybe 200 of them you suggest. You laugh your only laugh.
French. Dutch. Polish. Italian. Ukrainian. Russian. Soon your fingers will
be too thick to count on.
-
- ***
-
- I want, she kept repeating, to tell you
-
- better, but she didn't have the words. When
-
the doctors, they cut him. It was so loud.
-
- It was-I thought he would wake. But,
-
- no, everything was gone. Just a body there,
-
not sleeping. He had no face, or,
-
- his face, it could not speak. Not speak.
-
- Had rigor mortis set in? Yes, they
-
broke his arms to open him.
-
- Sometimes, with you, I feel
-
- myself hardening.
-
(This angered her.)
-
- ***
-
- In the story, your shoulders hunch and your fingers spread. Once you've
looked both ways, they become fists you can run with.
-
- In the story, everyone dies. Your parents, your friends. Your wife,
though it took twenty years to waste her. One morning I thought you'd die,
but I uncorked the bottle in time. That night, after I watched you tumble
back into the bathroom, heard the smack of skull on porcelain, saw the
blood, saw you climb up out of it, I started thinking nothing would kill
you. I started thinking there must be a second, smaller heart lodged beneath
your ribs, a lump of liquor and fat, blackened by coal, which has only
begun to beat.
-
- ***
-
- What is the story of failure? Something
-
- about your father in a gothic cellar,
-
in a chalked circle, candles of course,
-
- whipping a dog to death while an imported
-
- astrologer cheered him on. What had he put
-
inside that dog? It hardly matters. So he killed
-
- a dog. This city lets you. It let me
-
- follow her. Where she went, the scripted
-
stones did jut from the ground like broken
-
-
-
- teeth, and she kept calling it a mouth
-
- a mouth. She felt each push of wind,
-
but didn't want to be touched by me.
-
-
- Something about you, not drying the drink
-
- you've spilled on your lap, spilling
-
your stories to a stranger you want to call
-
- son, a stranger who could hardly
-
- understand the words you're saying, even
-
when your lips were moving with them.
-
- ***
-
- Before you leave, I give you the American stamps. You told me they're
for your grandson, but you put your glasses on. They're the first thing
you've seen all day.
-
- Sometimes before you go you like to confess. Maybe the women you loved
while your wife was dying. Something about the hotel where you took them.
Once you told me you'd been the chief homicide detective in the entire
country. It was a strange story, and I missed many of the details: a train
to Bratislava, a body without its head, some Gypsies, a letter. It frightened
you to tell me, but maybe that was your only way to make it true.
-
- ***
- Your city spirals: tower, arch, smoke and
-
- flag. Your cobbled streets buckle as though
-
those stones, if loosened, would ascend.
-
- Even the Atlases-bearded, brawny men,
-
- waist-tapered and taut, arched in doorways
-
and under columns-shove this city skyward.
-
- At dusk as day and people fade, I've strayed
-
- with the half-hope a Titan would offer me
-
its load.The press of stone does tempt: to hold,
-
- to be that monk, her lover, your child or the one
-
- who returns. But the weight dizzies. Look
-
down: There, in the puddled streetlights
-
- shattering in the rain, see how
-
- they laid one constellation after another upon you
-
until, destiny-draped and gaudy,
-
- you fell.
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