Robert Desnos in Havana, 1928
The birds with fiery plumage perched
like epaulets on the general's statue
And fountains where girls sun their legs
dipping their toes in the cool ripples
And the shadows of men deep as wells
into which some men fall
A man in a purple suit descends
the gangplank of an ocean liner
Carrying a steel suitcase down the boulevard
searching for a single elusive mermaid
And finding them everywhere
lounging in swimming pools by the sea
Or dozing atop water towers on towels
or rising like Venus from the claw-foot tub in a tenement
A postman on this zigzag street
is delivering envelopes filled with stars
Not stars of tinfoil or paper but the real thing
hissing with radioactivity
Glittery as the diamond dust from Angola
that the lady chauffeurs sprinkle in their hair
When they crash the masquerade ball at the Club Aureole
the intersection of high finance and high jinks
Or visit certain kiosks where aliases are sold like lottery tickets
neighborhoods in which even the mermaids disguise
themselves
Nurses and housewives concealing their gills
under breezy dresses
And ushers with glinting scales lurking
in the gloom of theaters
And tall widows prowling the fish market
with glazed eyes
A calypso dancer weeps mercury tears
scanning the Caribbean with a spyglass
From the penny arcade where the orphans pitch coins
and the whores stand like sentinels one to a doorway
Awaiting sailors off cargo ships
and off-duty detectives and even a few of those travelers