Sunday, November 21, 2021

Window on Beings and Doings


Smooth is the skin of the woman who irons. 
Tall and bony, the man who repairs umbrellas.
 Plucked, the woman who sells chickens. 
In the inquisitor’s eyes shine demons.
 Coins lie behind the usurer’s eyelids. 
The watchmaker’s whiskers mark the hours.
 The janitor has keys for fingers.
 The prison guard looks like the prisoner and the psychiatrist looks crazed.
 The hunter becomes the animal he pursues. 
Time turns lovers into twins. 
The dog walks the man who walks him.
 The tortured tortures the dreams of the torturer.
 The poet flees from the metaphor in the mirror.

 --Eduardo Galeano
 from his book, Walking Words

 I heard Eduardo Galeano read from this book before I’d read anything he’d written. That’s fitting enough for an introduction to a poet. But in this age, it happened through my earphones on a bright sunny day as I walked up Forbes Avenue in Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh, listening to him being interviewed on All Things Considered, probably in 1993 when Walking Words was published.  I likely took a few more steps to try to find it at Squirrel Hill Books.

 Eduardo Galeano was a walking poet of the world. Born in Uruguay, his ancestors were Italian, Welsh, German and Spanish. He was an editor, journalist, novelist and poet. He wrote books like Walking Words, an amalgam of verse and tales from Latin American folk traditions, and uncompromising political books like Open Veins of Latin America. He was on death lists of several South American right wing governments. He also was considered the preeminent writer on international soccer, i.e. futbol. He died in 2015.

 As for the photo above, I’m the man this dog walks. His name is Howdy.

Update: RIP poet Robert Bly.  His death was announced Monday.

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