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Page 16

by Andras Forgach


  Down with and Death to would bloom at night

  on the timeworn stones of the Eternal City

  If that paint had even lit up

  Sheer wonder that that test-tube didn’t blow up in your hands

  Daddylee

  One time they caught him after all

  While distributing subversive leaflets

  But that’s another story

  A British army jeep rolled up beside him they grabbed him

  By the jacket he slipped out of it and jumped from the truck

  And vanished breathlessly

  Never did he finish anything decently

  My dad

  In Bucureşti many a Salon Litteraire

  Saw the cane-swaggering young man

  His tie pin adorned with diamonds

  Young Onegin went to see a play

  But left after the first curtain

  And in the salon Jewesses with blue- and red-hair

  Were talking of the Iron Guard and Michelangelo with some flair

  Selbstverständlich or certainement in French

  And the Romanians took him right off to a camp

  Someplace else the world war broke out

  The discipline there was really lax

  It was more or less hostage-taking nothing serious

  A so-called military pre-training camp

  And the guards could be easily bribed

  A bohemian drifter a rake a mini Don Juan

  Whom the women at the cleaners on A. Street so adored

  Who tickled them with his acrobatic tongue until

  They laughed themselves so shamelessly red

  And he played on my mother as on an instrument

  On her body not on her soul

  The devoted patron of brothels

  A virtuoso of the instrument

  He clambered over to her at night they made no sound

  At most the floor creaked once or twice

  The sagging mattress squeaked now and again

  We lived in the same room with our parents

  And slept on two foldaway beds

  Back then my little sister and me

  One time the Madame allowed him to

  It was back in old Szatmárnémeti

  Before he passed the examenul final

  It wasn’t by chance that she

  At the front gate of the Eminescu Secondary School

  After an examen that went disgracefully

  When in front of an army of parents

  Dad poorly failed in mathematics

  My temperamental grandma

  Broke her umbrella on his head

  Striking off his silver-embroidered

  Eminescu uniform-cap in the meantime

  She hit him so hard – while her son guffawed –

  that it rolled into the mud

  They still slept in one bed at the time

  My grandmother immersed in The Magic Mountain

  But mostly she was solving crossword puzzles

  How many letters in Mademoiselle Marcell

  Indeed in Szatmár the Madame

  Who was so very much fond of him

  Showed him a tiny hole in the wall

  Tilting a lewd picture on the wall

  Which on peering through afforded a view

  Of what domnul Munteanu

  Vice-President of Banca Comerciala

  Was up to with Liza the lily of the meadows

  Their classmate’s sister

  He told me this not long before

  He left me there on Finchley Road

  Don’t sing Dad they’ll think you are a fool

  His face twisted from rage

  At such times he came completely unhinged

  The world as such to him then ceased to be

  Even in the port of Constanţa

  No even earlier yet in Bucharest’s North Station

  The Gara de Nord

  Where his mother put him on a train

  She stayed behind at the Gara de Nord

  Waving her handkerchief for a long long time5

  But just before she simply greased the guards

  And had a fake paşaport prepared for her son too

  A savvy woman my dear grandma was

  She ensured my dad’s escape from the worst of the worst

  And exactly this may have been the root of all the troubles

  The amazing escape

  The same thing took place also in reverse

  The cunning Sisyphus absconded twice

  Even from the place he’d fled to

  Leaving behind his latest homeland too

  Swapping it for a third

  He started afresh until there was a fresh start to begin with

  He got off the hook not once but never finished a thing

  You have to be replaced and when you sink

  Mrs Pápai replaces Pápai6

  And Alcestis descended into Hades

  The photo was taken in the port of Constanţa

  Where he’d stood on the quay

  In his brand new leather jacket ready for adventure

  There a wandering photographer captured him

  In a few nimble motions and

  After the exposure

  They won’t harm the women

  So my grandma at the Gara de Nord

  No not the women7

  Don’t sing Dad they’ll think you are a fool

  I told him on Finchley Road

  At the port the photographer stuck

  His hands into a wooden box

  A portable darkroom and

  In the sunlight a miracle happened

  In the blink of an eye without even looking

  After a few nimble motions

  He presented a photograph

  With a soft and somewhat vague smile

  An expensive set of calipers and a camera

  Anything that could be turned into money

  Dad boarded a steamship in Constanţa

  But my grandfather’s purple-nailed hand

  His leaden hand on his son’s orphaned head

  While dying as he blessed his little son

  My grandfather jumped into the icy Szamos

  With the aim of avoiding enlistment

  And in one go smoked two hundred cigarettes

  And ten years later he died of it

  Dad could hardly wait to tell me how it was

  Sometimes he was like Scheherazade

  The spoiled young master

  Who jumped over life’s hurdles with great ease

  In the dark room men in mourning suits

  On the wall an oil painting of the weaving mill

  In Łódź supposedly his great-great grandfather’s

  And by the colonnade that little grocery

  Friedmann & Company

  They were robbed by the ‘Company’

  That heavy hand on Dad’s little head

  That toy balloon weighing a ton

  The ten fresh-baked crescent rolls Margit handed out

  To the beggars loafing by the cemetery gate

  So the mourning prayer would be valid

  He may have taken it wherever he went

  That blessing

  It protected him not

  It protected him from nothing at all8

  Bruria

  It happened to her halfway still in Athens

  She had two days before boarding the ship

  She thought she’d walk up until the Parthenon

  And noticed as she neared the holy temple

  Ambling over the marble debris

  That someone was photographing her and only her

  I could yet detail this at length

  It was a slightly cool mid-morning

  Not like in Budapest but a winter day in Athens

  When Boreas unmercifully blows

  And Kaikias and Notos are blowing in the face

  And you’re exposed to the ceaselessly buffeting

  Jostling whirling


  Air currents on the magnetic hilltop

  That slap and rip at your clothes as if at any moment

  A surge of wind will snatch you up and slam you about

  The birds steer well clear of it

  And meanwhile the sun the impassive Helios is blazing

  Your brain almost boils from rage and fury

  The unknown man took not one

  But a dozen pictures of my mother

  One sees on them how Mum her expression rock-hard

  Approaches the photographer

  Tornado-like

  Descending marble steps

  Like Pallas Athena on the plains of Troy

  Her jaw her stiff cheekbones bulging

  Her glance a stinging pebble

  Like someone caught red-handed

  Oh why didn’t I ever see you this way

  Unmerciful goddess

  Or like Agave who was spied on and who in a frenzy

  Unwittingly killed her son Pentheus

  Or Medea who with triumphant laughter

  Tore her sons to pieces

  Mum was under strict orders

  Not to allow any such occurrence9

  Her behaviour was defined by command

  She had to report anything suspicious

  But back then she told her tale otherwise

  How much sudden silence how many half truths

  That’s not how you told this story dear Mum

  For even if she wasn’t a Mata Hari

  Though the comparison would be apt

  But if one reflects on one’s mother

  And Mata Hari never had a child

  Turned out not to have been a spy after all

  A blooper like that can slip in any time

  She was a tiny cog in the wheel

  And so my mother headed with terrible wrath

  Toward that CIA (KGB, Shin Bet, MI6) agent

  Like raging Hera Jupiter’s wife

  Or like Artemis riding her wildly galloping horse

  Handbag on her arm and drawing her furious expression

  Like an Amazon drawing her bow

  And we know what little remained of Actaeon

  This time the matter had a better outcome

  Later we all wondered at the pictures

  At the stone face of the stern agent

  This hurt her to the tune of twenty dollars

  I think that much less remained

  Of the money her comrades had given her

  To espy the Zionist conspiracy

  And build up socialism

  She wasn’t a heroine she wasn’t far no

  She tread mid-way between two homelands

  Between two reasons between two treasons

  Schmitz Schmitz little Schmitz

  You won’t even get to Auschwitz

  When the writing appeared on a wall

  When a whole country went to the streets

  That sound alone stirred in her ears

  On the decaying mortar as she got off the tram

  The inscription face to face

  The imperturbable reality

  They would have hung Dad from a lamppost

  Because he’d spoken silly things on the street

  At twilight those nasty men youngsters

  Had not my little sister that wonder

  With her red shock of hair and the retroussé nose

  Had she not been sitting on his arm

  To go to leave and tekel upharsin

  To spring up and to skedaddle

  To run away from here anywhere

  Might have seemed a reasonable conclusion

  But a special seventh sense

  She had and he too

  The nurse and the journalist

  Pápai and Mrs Pápai

  Forgács and Mrs Forgács

  Marcell and Bruria

  For unerringly bad decisions

  Every decision is bad

  Okay – needing to decide at all is bad

  And there are in fact situations in which

  good decisions can’t be made

  Like when I am writing this

  Like the way I am writing this

  To marry or not to marry by all means

  you’ll regret it

  To go or not to go by all means

  you’ll regret it

  The point is of course that one shouldn’t succeed

  To boldly resist all sound arguments

  To spit at any word of warning

  To do what our hearts dictate

  Is indeed a romantic concept

  A revolutionary doesn’t think he goes

  And does what his heart dictates

  Dashing ahead to save the world

  And in place of the heart

  Shards of glass rusty barbed wire

  If there is no sin let us invent the sin

  He is a highly talented individual who knows

  how to keep quiet but at the same time

  travels the world with open eyes – this is what she said

  of me to them – She – she said this of me to them

  When she thought

  I could take the baton from her

  That I could become

  Pápai junior

  Never ever did we bring it up

  She lied to the recruiting officer

  Or maybe we did bring it up

  Oh, Gethsemane, Gethsemane

  In the Buda apartment under the Castle

  In the shelter with the old ladies

  Who kissed my cheeks to smithereens

  During the bloody storm of autumn 1956

  Countering a country’s will my mother waited

  For the Russians to invade us again

  How often oh how often

  She boarded a ship – a ship? rather a little

  Dinghy from the pennies and blood money10

  she cobbled together from the one-party state

  With the generous support of Department III/I

  She boarded a ship

  So she could touch the ancient land

  From which all power flowed

  And the legend manufacturers come into operation11

  The only landscape that she feels good in

  The only land that would open up before her

  The only one that is still organic

  From which her organs had been built

  The hills the mountain the orange-red sand of the coast

  And where she arrives as a secret agent

  No longer seeing simply recording like a machine

  Orange trees mating in the fragrance of the sea

  Eucalypti cyclamens anemones oleanders and orchids

  The cascade of flowers before the bunkers

  And jasmines parched by the smouldering heat

  The hot and stormy quarrels and fights

  The balm of hatred on the deep wound of the heart

  And from the starting point again

  From A to B and then from B to A

  And so on ad infinitum

  My mother is a countryless derelict

  Well what kind of person is this

  Beautiful beautiful perishing

  Delightful even while dying

  Majestic demonic and angelic

  Tumbling into pain

  Even morphine should not ease it

  One by one she surrenders her limbs to death

  She looks in your eyes she has nothing to hide

  A whizzing of the winds from the universe

  Defenceless blinded chaotic dogged

  Tender hysterical calm elated

  Persecuted among the persecutors

  Who can heal with her hands

  And washes the tub with Sterogenol

  Again on the flimsy little raft

  Amid muddy clay-grey waves

  Drowning on a single slippery beam

  Which Charybdis spat out of her maw

  And there on the opposite shore for a moment – but no


  No no no no no

  Not even for a moment –

  The harassed soul

  If we consider not even for a moment

  But maybe maybe after all

  For a single moment after arrival

  Near the blue-eyed Father-god

  She calmed down for a single moment

  Her soul subsided

  She arrived

  Kiryat Sefer shemoneh12

  The address on the envelope

  Benumbed by pain nose running from hay fever

  Selling out its homeland sad soul

  Chatting with women border guards in no-man’s land

  And constantly on the alert lest she’ll be caught

  She got the hang of an ugly wooden office jargon

  That can’t be shared with anyone else

  Because she yearned as an outcast

  To return to the world from which she strayed

  That’s how she arranged her travels

  Sehr praktisch sehr geschickt sehr what else can I say

  Thinking it over after the fact

  No matter how inexplicable it is still somehow understandable

  If only I knew how that somehow was

  She wasn’t no she never was sly

  She was not the sly Odysseus

  She didn’t plug her ears with wax

  She was beguiled right away

  Perhaps

  Near the floating golden cupola

  Which never was hers

  In any sense not even like a

  Not even as much as a

  Specks of dust dancing in the light

  For but a single wee little moment

  When in her snow-white dress

  Standing on the hills

  She looked toward the sun-beaten city

  Where she’d been born13

  Bruria

  she spun she wove she knit

  she knit she spun she wove

  her fate she jabbed she stabbed

  the Monster that is beyond the mountain

  lost in the distance beyond the sea

  I don’t look at the photo

  I want to conjure it up from memory

  behind the women

  six-headed Scylla with a triple row of teeth

  which she put in a glass of water at night

  I’ve got to look at it all the same I’ve got to

  go there and I’ve got to look at it

  the golden cupola swimming under the clouds

  the shouting women

  who are running toward the Monster

  to divert its attention

  from that which is unattainable

  strands colours

  die in shoes

  she collected colours every drop of hers

  good little girl

  who on the sea of Galilee

  in the spring of ’25 or ’26

  was lured by a man

  into a cabin on a boat and

  he lured her into the cabin and

  struggled to explain

  all at once memory starts to heave

 

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