Negative Space

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by Luljeta Lleshanaku




  NEGATIVE SPACE

  also by luljeta lleshanaku

  Available from New Directions

  Child of Nature

  Fresco

  “The true mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible.”

  —OSCAR WILDE

  CONTENTS

  From Almost Yesterday (2012)

  Almost Yesterday

  Small-Town Stations

  The Unknown

  History Class

  Children of Morality

  Night Fishing

  Tobacco

  Used Books

  Negative Space

  Mine, Yours

  The End of Summer

  Via Politica

  The Deal

  In the Town of Apples

  Acupuncture

  First Week of Retirement

  A Conversation with Charles Simic

  The Business of Dying

  Metallic

  The Body’s Delay

  Two by Two

  Gloves

  I Came, I Saw, I Left . . .

  Index

  Transit Terminal

  Live Music

  Ramesses’s Last Journey

  From Homo Antarcticus (2015)

  Homo Antarcticus

  Something Bigger Than Us

  Menelaus’s Return

  The Railway Boys

  Metamorphosis

  January 1, Dawn

  Aging

  Fishermen’s Village

  Commit to Memory

  Cities

  Anatomical Cut

  Self-Portrait in Woven Fabrics

  Water and Carbon

  This Gesture

  The Stairs

  Lost in Translation

  A Perfect Day

  One’s Destiny

  Inside a Suitcase

  Things I Liked About Him

  Translator’s Acknowledgments

  Landmarks

  Cover

  from ALMOST YESTERDAY

  ALMOST YESTERDAY

  Strangers are building a new house next door.

  They shout, swear, cheer.

  Hammers and a bustle of arms.

  They whistle melodies

  bookended by hiccups.

  Their large window opens to the east.

  A lazy boy in sandals

  drags a bucket of water half his size.

  Sedative.

  The world holds its breath for one moment.

  The page turns.

  Trucks loaded with cement

  leave the symbol for infinity in the dirt.

  Along the wall, a plumb line measures the height

  like a medallion hanging into space

  or from someone’s neck whose face

  nobody bothers to look at.

  They started with the barn.

  This is how a new life begins—

  with an axiom.

  I remember my father

  returning sweaty from the fields

  at lunch break; he and mother

  coming out of the barn

  tidying their tangled hair in a hurry,

  both flushed, looking around in fear

  like two thieves.

  Their bedroom was cool and clean

  on the second floor of the house.

  I still ask myself: “Why in the barn?”

  But I also remember

  that the harvest was short that year,

  the livestock hungry;

  we were on a budget

  and switched the lights off early.

  I was twelve.

  My sleep deep, my curiosity numbed,

  tossed carelessly to the side

  like mounds of snow along the road.

  But I remember the barn clearly, as if it were yesterday,

  almost yesterday.

  You cannot easily forget what you watch with one closed eye—

  the death of the hero in the film,

  or your first eclipse of the sun.

  SMALL-TOWN STATIONS

  Trains approach them like ghosts,

  the way a husband returning after midnight

  slips under the covers,

  keeping his cold feet at a distance.

  A post office. A ticket booth. The slow clock hanging from a nail.

  Some of the passengers have been sitting in the same chairs for a while now.

  They know that you must wait for the moment

  and that the moment will not wait for you.

  Only a few get on; fewer get off.

  The man sitting on a bench

  kills time reading a local newspaper.

  Train platforms are all the same,

  except for the boy hiding behind the pole,

  the collar of his school uniform askew.

  He is not the firstborn, but the prodigal son,

  the chosen one for adventure and the parable of return.

  Fried dough, candy, mint sodas … !

  It’s the wandering vendor who stirs the thick air

  with his clumsy voice.

  His pockets are empty but deep.

  Dust clings freely

  on his sticky fingers, along with a strand of hair,

  and in the evening, sometimes,

  an entire city.

  You don’t forget small-town stations easily,

  the short stops with ordinary charm.

  If you pay attention to every detail,

  they will become our alibi for not arriving on time

  or for never arriving at all

  wherever we had set out to go.

  THE UNKNOWN

  When a child is born, we name it after an ancestor,

  and so the recycling continues. Not out of nostalgia,

  but from our fear of the unknown.

  With a suitcase full of clothes, a few icons, a knife with a shiny blade,

  the immigrant brought along names of places he came from

  and the places he claimed he named New Jersey, New Mexico,

  Jericho, New York, and Manchester.

  The same condition for the unknown above us:

  we named planets and stars after capricious, vengeful gods—

  Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Venus, Centaur—

  as if making a shield against the cosmos.

  Names leap ahead like hunting hounds,

  with the belief they clear the road

  of the journey’s unexpected obstructions.

  And we call “destiny” our common unknown,

  a genderless, unconjugated, unspecified name.

  Its authority hangs on one shoulder

  like the tunic of a Roman senator

  leaving only one arm bare and free.

  HISTORY CLASS

  The desks in the front row were always empty.

  I never understood why.

  The second row was all smacking lips

  of those who recited the lessons by heart.

  In the middle were the timid ones

  who took notes and stole the occasional piece of chalk.

  And in the last row, young boys craning their heads

  toward the beauty marks on the blonde girls’ necks.

  I don’t remember the teacher’s name, the room,

  or the names of the portraits on the wall,

  except the irony clinging to the stump of his arm

  like foam around the Cape of Good Hope.

  When his healthy arm pointed out Bismarck,

  his hollow sleeve gestured in an unknown direction.

  We couldn’t tell which one of us was the target,

  making us question

  the tiniest bit of who we thought we were.

  Out of his insatiable mouth flew battle dates,


  names, causes. Never resolutions or winners.

  We could hardly wait for the bell

  to write our own history,

  as we already knew everything in those days.

  But sometimes his hollow sleeve

  felt warm and human, like a cricket-filled summer night.

  It hovered, waiting to land somewhere. On a valley or roof.

  It searched for a hero among us—

  not among the athletic or sparkly-eyed ones,

  but among those stamped with innocence.

  One day, each one of us will be that teacher

  standing before a seventeen-year-old boy

  or a girl with a beauty mark on her neck.

  And the desks in the front row will remain empty,

  abandoned by those who are always in doubt.

  They’re the missing arm of history

  that makes the other arm appear omnipotent.

  CHILDREN OF MORALITY

  It was the Europeans who taught indigenous people shame,

  beginning with the covering up of intimate parts.

  Other civilizations were luckier.

  Morality was handed to them ready-made from above,

  inscribed on stone tablets.

  Where I grew up, morality had a form, body, and name:

  Cain, unremorseful Mary Magdalene, Ruth, Delilah, and Rachel.

  Morality was easily pointed at by a seven-year-old’s ink-stained finger.

  Perfect examples of vice or virtue

  where time lays its eggs on a swamp.

  And so I received the first lessons in morality

  without chewing them like cough syrup;

  other things happened more abstractly

  and under a chaste roof.

  And strangely, even the second generation didn’t disappoint:

  their descendants became another Cain, another Ruth,

  another Mary Magdalene who never grew up.

  Clichés were simultaneously risky and protective for them,

  like trying to use dry snow to make an igloo.

  Now I know so much more about morality.

  In fact, I actually could be a moralist,

  pointing my index finger out as a rhetorical gesture.

  But without referring to anyone. Where did everyone go?

  A door opened by accident.

  Light broke through by force

  and, as in a dark room,

  erased their silver bromide portraits

  which were once flesh and bone.

  NIGHT FISHING

  He attends funerals. It’s his latest hobby.

  Nobody knows who he is

  or what connects him to the dead person.

  They shake his hand without asking questions

  (this isn’t a wedding

  where you must have an invitation).

  He doesn’t know the dead man’s name,

  if he’d been young or old, short or tall,

  what his job was, if he left any debts, and especially if,

  for him, death was an end or a beginning.

  (And why should he know this anyway?)

  He follows the row of backs turning toward the exit,

  their accidental brush

  against the marble angels’ welcoming wings.

  Names, dates are whispered,

  and koliva trembles in paper cups.*

  Headstones mark burial plots

  already reserved—

  clean and proud

  like blank checks.

  *

  When he was a child,

  he eavesdropped on a fisherman

  returning to the dock at midnight,

  his boat filled with bass he had sold

  before catching them.

  Crabs are an easy lure for bass at night

  and bass for the fisherman

  and the fisherman for the shore

  drawn to an artificial fly at the end of the line.

  Even the shore itself is a lure

  for the dark waters, high tides under a full moon,

  apotheosis of the universe.

  *

  “Suddenly, today, he got up before dawn.

  Didn’t have any pain anymore. Asked for something to eat.

  At that moment, it hit us that he would be gone.”

  “What did he ask for?”

  “Leftovers from dinner.”

  “Do you think he understood?”

  “What we don’t know makes us appreciate what little we have.”

  “Perhaps … do you know what happens to those on death row?

  I heard they can choose their last meal themselves

  before being tied to the electric chair.”

  “You don’t say!”

  *

  What is the difference between these people

  hurrying toward the exit of the graveyard

  and the ten brothers, Jacob’s sons, who threw Joseph into a pit,

  in the heart of the desert, leaving him

  at the mercy of the first merchant to pass by?

  In any case, the living cannot wait to leave and turn away.

  Their backs a single starless fabric

  like fishing nights,

  or like a low cloud of gunpowder

  in a temporary ceasefire zone.

  *

  *Koliva: boiled wheat used liturgically, mainly at funerals, in the Eastern Orthodox church.

  TOBACCO

  Here, everyone smokes.

  In the evening, every wife

  recognizes her respective husband

  by the faraway glow of his cigarette

  at the end of a cobblestone street.

  When the pulse of the glow increases, the wives

  feel the storm rushing in and hurry to the fire to cook dinner.

  But when the glow is scarce and lazy

  like the dying fluorescence of a jellyfish on the sand,

  they know they should be quiet and leave the men alone.

  At the café

  where three people smoke around a table

  the fourth cannot refuse a cigarette.

  (You cannot stand outside a shamanic fire,

  where despair

  is offered with a hand over the heart).

  When they talk about women,

  the ash of the half-burned cigarette

  hangs expectantly

  and a thick yellow ribbon of smoke

  encircles them like the police tape

  at the scene of a crime.

  Later, one husband

  starts to share how he has just punished his son

  by sending him into the mountains with the sheep for two weeks.

  Then he goes quiet. His hands dig into his pockets

  as he waits for approval, but he only gets tobacco crumbs.

  A cigarette.

  There’s always a man behind it,

  a man once a shepherd who detested his own father

  and now savors the solemnity

  of being hated in return.

  My uncle, too, smokes nonstop.

  His ashtray is a navel

  stuffed with the fibers of each day

  aging on his body.

  Outside in the yard

  rain and snow make haste

  to wipe out whatever discarded cigarette butts

  as though they were spent shells

  from a civil war devoid of glory.

  USED BOOKS

  On one of those mornings

  when all the clocks’ hands point to the nadir

  and graying snow neutralizes heart burn,

  the only sound is the ringing of the doorbell:

  a book ordered weeks ago left on the front steps.

  The postman doesn’t need confirmation.

  Geography III, a used book by Elizabeth Bishop.

  Packaged carefully. The address clearly printed on the box

  and the portrait of a stern politician on three stamps.
>
  A previous owner

  has marked several lines, placing

  his own geography next to her words:

  “… my poor old island’s still

  un-rediscovered, un-renameable.

  None of the books has ever got it right.”

  Who was this reader? A man or woman?

  Maybe lying in bed, without anyone around,

  heavily underlining, several places in red,

  or commenting in blue while

  waiting at an airport for a delayed flight.

  But the loops that circle words are isobars—

  one needs to have reached rock-bottom to understand these marks.

  And now it’s my turn to add my own geography.

  There’s hardly any space left, not even for shadows.

  The black ring of a coffee cup and the careless ash of a cigarette

  are my only traces. My fear of clarity.

  A future reader might be my daughter (or one of my nieces)

  who could prefer darkness and the scent of pencil lead.

  She’s left to dog-ear the pages, tear the corners with her lips,

  and unknowingly a blonde strand of hair drops onto the page.

  And yet another reader

  will not leave any traces at all

  but simply sell the book to a map collector

  and thus create their own geography,

  their own religion.

  Indeed, none of us will read it to the end,

  running away from it abruptly the way one evacuates a house,

  leaving everything suspended:

  the cat scratching the cabinets for food, an abandoned shoe,

  the faucet’s thin trickle, beds still warm,

  the TV screen broadcasting a regularly scheduled film,

  and time, which needs an audience to exist.

  NEGATIVE SPACE

  1.

  I was born on a Tuesday in April.

  I didn’t cry. Not because I was stunned. I wasn’t even mad.

  I was the lucky egg, trained for gratitude

  inside the belly for nine months straight.

  Two workers welded bunk beds at the end

  of the delivery room. One on top of the other.

  My universe might have been the white lime ceiling,

  or the embodiment of Einstein’s bent space

  in the aluminum springs of the bed above

  that curved toward the center.

  Neither cold, nor warm.

  “It was a clear day,” my mother told me.

  It’s hard to believe

  there were a few romantic evenings

  when I was conceived, a buzz in the retina

  and red-laced magma

  decadently peeling off

  a silver candlestick.

  Infants’ cries and milk fever

  turned to salt from the stench of bleach—

  abrasive, unequivocal.

  With a piece of cloth wrapped on the end of a stick,

  the janitor casually extends the negative space

  of the black-and-white-tiled floor

  like a mouth of broken teeth, a baleen of darkness

 

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