Читать книгу Providential - Colin Channer - Страница 13
ОглавлениеOCCUPATION
(for Klive Walker)
When he says he signed up out of Christian duty,
there’s a twitch in the lid of his dead glass eye,
a flash perhaps of what had worried him
when independence came in ’62.
Working-class, dark, and ambitious,
but scarred in ways he didn’t know,
he saw the new country as a Canaan,
land of sweet promise with a flag, an anthem,
and not to be discounted, the ska,
clean pop played by qualified sheet readers,
black men from humble backgrounds
dressed in loafers, ties and suits,
the melodies so near exactly like the jazz
arrangers borrowed,
the solos rich with Cuban licks,
the very setup so orchestral, seating in rows,
classy negroes, black but modern,
separating us and them—the conga-beating
natives of the world.
He says, once he heard the Rasta drumming
underneath Oh Carolina mongrelizing
with the pop he got urgent. Signed up.
The old campaigner finger calls another Appleton,
bites air before the sip, blows out after gulping.
Ahhhhhhhhhh. Fire out and in. Gets quiet.
Blinks his good eye plenty, while the dead one
goes adrift as he begins to boast of cordons,
raids, all-out assaults. Pinnacle. Coral Gardens,
Back-O-Wall. Machetes confiscated,
all the caches of illegal books,
and people, strange people, like the dread
who’d rather have his elbow broken than to leggo
off his ital pot. By then the rum
had soaked his tongue enough to slow it,
change its pace, grace it with cadence
of requiem.