In 1982, for a college trimester, I studied and did “service work” in the newly independent nation of Belize. Looking back, I don’t think the Belizeans much desired or needed my “service,” but the experience certainly served me well! I left for Central America as a farm girl who had rarely traveled beyond the borders of my home state. I returned full of amazement at the world and unsure of my privileged place in it.
This week I found myself traveling in memory back to Georgetown, the remote Garifuna village in the Belizean rainforest where I lived for a short seven weeks. This poem is the result of my time travels.
I want to thank Rafter Ferwa Jaffery for an imaginative remark at Wednesday’s Creatives’ Coffee that ended up altering my approach to the poem.
(Maybe you’ll join the fun at our next Coffee?)
LEGS Phyllis Cole-Dai Georgetown, Belize, 1982 See all the pretty little houses, how they stand like scoops of sorbet on stilts—lemon, melon, tangerine, plum. Maybe the huts are built with legs to guard against the threat of floods, though the sea is stranded hours from here and the river’s throat is parched. Or maybe the legs are meant to keep out the spiders, the vipers, the scorpions, the ants. Or to raise a patch of shade above the chore woman sweating rain beneath the floor, scrubbing your clothes on a steel washboard, cooking your meals of cassava bread and coffee, roasted iguana with coconut rice, pan-fried fish still wearing their heads. Or maybe you live high for the sake of the windows, flung wide to let in the breeze tossing the tops of the kapok trees. Or to give the steep wooden steps good reason to rise. Or maybe those legs are just for this: to allow the old house to roam at night while, bedded down safe within its walls, you hug your pillow and dream.
The Gentle Nudge
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Splendid !
Maybe houses on legs are an archetype of sorts....reminded me of Baba Yaga's house on chicken legs. I think it danced around, or turned in circles. I was fascinated as a child by that story as interpreted in Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition". Now there's something to explore!