11 February 2012

So pale she was, so pale

Ségou, Mali, 1993

She floats above the river like a shade
Of summer in her yellow cotton dress,
As pale and perfect as the moon’s caress;
With blood-red fingers slicing down the blade,
Then tracing tracks across the roughly-made
Old linen of those maps, which only guess
At crimes the conquerors dare not confess.
She hesitates: for now she is afraid
I want her. But, in truth, we never met -
Just some conceit that I may know her need,
While empires rise and empires fall - and yet
The hope remains that we may still be freed
From fear, to lay a perfume on our sweat,
To have, to hold, to love until we bleed.

RJT

2 comments:

  1. Gorgeous writing. So rich and vivid. I'd really love to know what the historical context for this piece is. The images put me in mind of Ophelia as she drowns.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Leanne.
      During the early part of 1993 I was a passenger in a truck travelling across west Africa. As we drove through Ségou in Mali I caught a glimpse of a young woman, maybe eighteen years old, walking along the road near the river, wearing a pale yellow dress and a broad-brimmed sun hat. I only saw her for a few seconds but the image has haunted me ever since, this young white woman, looking like a figure from an old photograph, striding alone through a black African city.
      Ségou was once a French colonial base, so she may have been connected with a continuing French presence there. Impossible to say for sure, though she certainly didn't look like your average Western backpacker.
      And so the poem is a fantasy about her, and about colonialism. I saw some other singular sights during my six months in Africa. Some of them may make it into poems in the future. Or maybe I'll return to this vision again.

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