HURRICANE STORY, 1951
- Margaret and her man Delbert
- such a fine young couple
- everybody said
- so full of ambition
- so striving
- their little boy so bright
- so handsome
- so thriving
- Though in 1951 after the hurricane
- struck they ended up suck-
- ing salt same as everybody else
- Margaret said: Look
- we'll never get anything back together
- unless we do something serious
- something really ambitious
- Plenty people going to England now
- plenty women going in for nursing
- Let me go
- while you continue here
- with the farming
- Just for the
- time being
- As soon as I
- graduate I'll come back
- get big job
- That time see me in
- mi whites nuh
- Soon turn matron
- Together
- we can build a good life
- for our son
- But somehow she never
- got far with nursing
- for in her life she never
- knew people who could hard so
- never thought a country could cold so
- With her heart turning into stone
- with nothing to show for it
- – she wanted so much
- for the boy – she decided
- though she would continue striving
- she wouldn't write again
- until she could send him
- what amounted to
- something
- The man begging his mother
- to keep the boy said: So-so
- farming can't take us too far
- This can never provide my son
- with the life I want for him
- He set off for America
- to be a farm worker
- Every year he went
- to pick oranges
- Those on his tree
- in his yard
- turned black from blight
- for he never came back
- to that piece of ground
- He settled in the city
- Got married
- Sometimes (when prodded)
- he sent something
- for the boy
- He had
- other things
- on his mind now
- He was ambitious
- and striving again
- Going far
- Granny said
- to the boy:
- Hard-ears children
- can't reach nowhere
- you will
- never amount
- to anything
- His ears
- weren't hard
- he was just
- hard of hearing
- After a while
- he also stopped speaking
- His granny wrote
- to his father (whom
- he couldn't remember)
- to come and get him
- saying:
- I old
- I can't strive with him
- any more
- His father saying
- he would try with him
- came and took him home and
- introduced him:
- This is your sister Rose
- This is your brother Reuben
- This is your sister Carol Ann
- This is your brother Jonathan
- and this is your new mother
- Miss Sharon (a lady who looked
- as if she had learnt to smile
- out of a book)
- After a while
- they said he was too hard-ears
- to amount to anything
- and left him alone
- He'd go by the shore
- and practise writing
- (without a pen):
- First he blew breath across the water
- “Ah-”
- After that
- every day
- he'd go and call out
- Ah
- O
- Ah-o
- Ah-o
- Ah-
- He threw the sounds across
- the ocean like stones hoping
- they'd hit
- something
- rebound off
- someone
- he couldn't give
- a name to
- but only by an echo
- returning
- would he know:
- the ocean wasn't as empty
- as he was
- Every day now
- Ah-o
- Ah-o
- Ah
- Till one day
- he managed:
- Ah-o
- Ah-o
- Ma-
- Soon the sounds
- would make syllables
- the syllables
- would make words
- the words
- would make phrases
- the phrases
- would make poems
- His mother
- would never read them
- she was too busy
- swabbing out
- a hospital
- in Reading
- England
- After so many years
- she no longer even
- thought of him
- (or anything else
- for that matter)
- gazing
- day after day
- into
- that
- pail
- of water
- Until
- one day
- as she sluiced out
- a ward
- she fancied she heard
- someone
- calling her name
- Ma-
- It sounded as if
- it came
- from the
- pail
- it sounded like
- her rightful name
- (not the name
- – Miss Black –
- by which she
- was known here)
- No one here
- knew that name
- Ah-o
- Ah-o
- Ma-
- Each day she poured
- more and more
- water
- on the floor
- to try to
- capture that sound
- Miss Black
- Matron said
- (finally)
- this just
- won't do
- No she said
- turning the taps
- on full
- flooding
- the ward
- pouring out
- and ocean
- from her pail
- standing
- by that shore
- she clearly heard
- her name now
- Ma-
- I must go she said
- taking off her shoes
- I must go now
- taking off her overalls
- I must go to my –
- stripping off her clothes
- – son
- in Aenon Town, Jamaica –
- stepping into
- the water
- (as they rushed
- to restrain her)
- – my son
- my s –
- Standing on that far shore
- he heard at last rebound
- the sound he'd sent
- though slightly bent
- by distance
- and without conscious intent
- he started walking
- to meet it