Read A River Dies of Thirst Online
Authors: Mahmoud Darwish Catherine Cobham
She passed like an event
with a hawk aloft on each shoulder
and her chest rising and falling like the act of love
bearing twins nudging and jostling one another on the marble
her knees emitting lightning flashes visible to the blind
and her legs two pillars of a marble temple
wondrous in the wind
And the feet two wicked little birds, aerial-terrestial
and the hair streaming out behind her
a military banner conquering the desert
The eyes not regarding her victims
so nobody saw her eyes and nobody could tell the story
of violets she had mown down
that woman-jinn-fate
who passed like an event
But I escaped, and no harm came to me
save the weakness of the description in this poem.
Skogås is on the outskirts of Stockholm, a forest of birches, pines, poplars, cherries and cypresses. Salim Barakat, in the isolation chosen for him by the artful winds of fate, has not emerged from it since he became part of the scene, surrounded by the birds of the north: magpies, crows, nutcrackers, woodpeckers, jays, blue tits, blackbirds, pheasants and waxwings. He has made friends with them, and knows them by their plumage, beaks, tails and migratory habits, and he has bestowed Kurdish adjectives upon them, derived from an anxiety, not to disrupt his isolation, but to make it more comfortable living far from home, away from writers jealous of the exile’s eloquence, and close to the squirrels, rabbits, deer and foxes that greet him through the window, and run away and play while he conducts his linguistic exercises. He wakes up to the sound of birds quarrelling at the windows of his house of brick and timber, and drags his little cart to the meat market – responding to its call to his senses. There he makes his choice, unashamedly eager for the training of the wild in the art of cooking. To kindle the desire between the eater and the eaten, he selects hot, pungent spices, special mushrooms to enhance the word play, and Shiraz wine to stimulate the poet’s inclination to rejoice and sing in the autumn of exile. He drags his little cart through the forest, accompanied by the birds of the north who recognise him from his rain and sweat-soaked vest. Nobody but a Kurd like him would brave the Baltic climate. If he’s having ideas now, they are just about cooking – his day’s visible poem. Cooking is the talent of knowing what goes with what, of using poetic imagination to achieve
smell and taste, and of creating sensuous meaning out of primitive form. Cooking is the poetry of the senses when they are combined in the hand, an edible poem which cannot tolerate mistakes in the balance of the ingredients. And Salim Barakat cannot tolerate praise since he became prone to tears.
The exile looks around to see which way to go
and words-memories escape him
In front is not in front of him
behind is not behind
On the right a lit-up sign
on the left another
He asks himself:
Where does life begin?
I need a narcissus
so I can be master of my own image!
And he says: ‘The free man is he who chooses his exile
for some reason or other’
I am free so
I’ll walk on, then the way will become clear.
George Steiner says to me: ‘The poet should be a guest.’
I say: ‘And a host!’
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The faded leaves falling from the trees are words in search of a skilful poet to put them back on the branches.
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When there is rhythm concealed in an image it becomes the musical accompaniment to an idea.
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As I sit with Peter Brook, the birds of Aristophanes and Farid al-Din al-Attar fly above us on a common journey to the limits of meaning.
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Exile? The visitor longs for it, because it is like being a bird flying happily around with nobody asking it: ‘What’s your name? What do you want?’
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On the bus, I study the pavement and see myself sitting at the bus stop waiting for the bus.
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Pretending to be neutral, in a poem or a novel, is the only forgivable crime against morality.
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Interrupting the rhythm from time to time is necessary for the rhythm.
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I leave the other side of my life where it wants to stay, and follow the remainder of my life in search of the other side of it.
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My feeling leaps out of me carrying an umbrella and walks along in the rain. My feeling is an external activity like the rain.
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The autumn winds sweep the street and teach me the skill of deleting. Deleting is writing.
‘No. Things would not be different as
we used to think if we had waited another hour’
he says to her, and leaves
‘Perhaps if a bird had alighted on my shoulder
things would be different’
she says to him, and leaves
They leave together. And separate at the metro station
like two halves of a peach, and say goodbye to summer
A guitarist passes between them, and he laughs
when he cries. And he cries as he laughs saying:
‘No. Things might have been different if they had listened
to the guitar at the right time’
I said: ‘No! Things might have been
different if they had turned to look at their shadows embracing
and sweating and falling on the pavement
like autumn leaves.’
At a bread shop, on the corner of a narrow Paris street, I sip my first coffee. The smell of bread mixes with the smell of coffee in the mornings, awakening in me the desire for a fresh life, a life just beginning, and a spontaneous peace with small things, and with pigeons who prefer strutting around among cars and passers-by to flying. I don’t see anyone else sitting there with only his journals for company, but I feel I am sharing in the elderly ladies’ enthusiasm for the detailed information they are relating about other people’s lives, and the politely neutral responses of the pretty shop assistants and waitresses when male customers older than me flirt with them. I linger over my coffee to preserve an acquired sense of companionship with my surroundings, for a stranger has no alternative but to construct some kind of intimacy with some random place, and I have chosen this corner of the bread shop to form a daily routine, as if I have an appointment with hardworking memories that rely on themselves to grow and evolve. I abandon myself to thoughts about the history of bread: how was the first grain of wheat discovered in a green ear braided like a pigtail? And how did someone observe it ripening and turning golden? And how did it occur to him to grind it, knead it and bake it until he arrived at this miracle? I see fields far away in time and place and wonder how long this act of creation took. The smell of fresh bread rises into the air and I look at my watch, then come back from thousands of years away to a life just beginning.
The hand of the statue, a statue of a general or an artist, is held out, not to greet the sun and rain, or old soldiers and new admirers, but like the hand of a noble beggar asking for donations from passers-by, not to help him walk again, but to cover the costs of eternity. The best this granite hand receives is a bunch of roses bought by a man for a woman who has left him waiting alone by the statue.
Beirut. Sun and rain. Sea blue/green and all the colours in between. But Beirut is not herself this time. She looks at her reflection in the mirror and asks: ‘Why do you want to look like someone else, my beautiful?’ She deposits her beauty on a wave of anxiety and hides her makeup in a drawer, does her hair hurriedly and waits, not knowing what for, like a rose on the public highway. But the atmosphere is seething with the secrets of the clouds approaching from both directions, the desert and the sea, and imagination has no control over the anarchy of the unexpected. She puts her imagination to one side, and surrenders herself to a song that praises meaninglessness without aspiring to the glory of the absurd. Beirut is deprived of the chance to forget her wounds or remember her tomorrow, which has been abandoned to the throw of a dice in a game of backgammon played without rules, like the experimentation of postmodernist poets in her empty cafés. Nobody wins, everyone’s a loser, even if my friend Unsi al-Hajj says: ‘The winner loses and the loser wins.’ Sorrowing Beirut anaesthetises her sadness with an old song about old times: countryside and cedar trees and innocence and a duel between two lovers competing for the same girl. The sorrow sleeps for a few hours, but not the fear. Beirut is frightened for herself and of herself, and of what familiar things the storm is preparing for her in the guise of the unfamiliar.
Forty Junes: a tank on the road to
the house. A military control tower to watch the birds
doves hovering in a half circle. A barren palm tree
Anger explodes and brother kills brother, and flees
from his mother. A slogan lights up the streets: We
love life and hate its enemies. A narrow street
where no girls walk. A demonstration by school students
against the maps. ‘There is no God coming down from
his throne.’ A passer-by says mockingly to me: ‘I have no heroes
since June arrived so casually
I swear to God we are on our own. What time is it
now?’ ‘My watch has gone wrong,’ I say
He says: ‘And mine is always wrong.’ Lorries pass
transporting goods with Hebrew names
crates of water. Fruit. Wheat and wine. He says:
‘It’s as if we’ve forgotten our springs, our vines, our names,
and a mask is our identity: in order not to be
clearly seen we see those hidden here all too clearly’
Forty Junes here. The land shrinks and its inhabitants
multiply, surplus to the need of grass for the poor
and of the Ashkenazi for Arab labour
But they hold out, even if reluctantly, and do not move
to Canada. This is our land, and the sky is real
not a metaphor, and high as our hopes. He says to me:
‘Is June a memory?’ and I say: ‘It is a wound
bleeding acutely still, even though its victim says: “I have
forgotten the pain.”’
That hurrying woman, crowned with a wool blanket and a pitcher of water, dragging a boy in her right hand and his sister in her left, followed by a herd of frightened goats, that woman fleeing from a cramped war zone to a non-existent refuge – I have known her for sixty years. She is my mother who left me behind at a crossroads with a basket of dry bread, a candle, and a box of matches ruined by the damp.
The woman I’m seeing now in the same image on a colour TV screen, I have known well for forty years. She is my sister, following in the footsteps of our mother journeying in the wilderness: fleeing from a cramped war zone to a non-existent refuge.
The woman I will see tomorrow in the same setting, I also know. She is my daughter whom I left in the middle of the poems so that she could learn to walk, then fly, beyond this setting, and perhaps earn the admiration of the viewers and disappoint the snipers. For a clever friend said to me: ‘It’s time for us to move on, if we can, from a subject that makes people pity us to one that makes them envy us.’
Did we have to fall from a great height, and see our own blood on our hands, to realise that we are not angels, as we used to believe?
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Did we have to expose ourselves in public so our reality could lose its virginity?
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How we lied when we said: ‘We are an exception!’
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Believing yourself is worse than lying to someone else.
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To be kind to those who hate us and cruel to those who love us is the baseness of the arrogant, and the self-importance of the dishonourable.
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Oh past! Don’t change us as we move away from you.
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Oh future! Don’t ask us who we are and what we want from you, for we don’t know either.
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Oh present! Be a little patient with us, for we are only passers-by with heavy shadows.
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Identity is what we bequeath, not what we inherit, what we invent, not what we remember. Identity is the distorted image in the mirror that we must break the minute we grow fond of it.
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He put on a mask and felt bold and brave, and he killed his mother because it was her fault he was easy prey, and because a female soldier stopped him and exposed her breasts to him, saying: ‘Has your mother got ones like these, you son of a whore?’
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If Muhammad were not the Seal of the Prophets then every gang would have a prophet, and all the companions of the prophet would have militias.
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We like remembering June on its fortieth anniversary. If we don’t find somebody to defeat us again we’ll defeat ourselves with our own hands so that we don’t forget.
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However much you look into my eyes you won’t find my expression there. I snatched it away in shame.
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My heart does not belong to me, nor to anyone else. It declared its independence from me before it turned into a stone.
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Does the man who shouts ‘God is great’ over the body of his victim-brother know he is an unbeliever, since he sees God in his own image: smaller than a fully-formed human being?
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The prisoner, eager to partake of the legacy of prison, hid the smile of victory from the camera but did not succeed in suppressing the happiness flowing from his eyes. Perhaps because the hastily prepared text was more powerful than the actor.
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What do we need the narcissus for, since we are Palestinians?
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As we don’t know the difference between a mosque and a university, because they are both from the same root in Arabic, why do we need the state, since states pass just as surely as time?