The Memory of Fire Trilogy: Genesis, Faces and Masks, and Century of the Wind

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The Memory of Fire Trilogy: Genesis, Faces and Masks, and Century of the Wind Page 33

by Eduardo Galeano


  The sea is littered with coconut husks and boughs of sweet basil, and a breeze of voices sings as night falls:

  Opa ule, opa ule,

  opa é, opa é,

  opa opa, Yemayá.

  The black Virgin of Regla is also the African Yemayá, silvered goddess of the seas, mother of the fish and mother and lover of Shangó, the womanizing and quarrel-picking warrior god.

  (68 and 82)

  1697: Cap Français

  Ducasse

  Gold escudos in hard cash, doubloons, double doubloons, big-shot gold and little-shot gold, gold jewelry and dishes, gold from chalices and crowns of virgins and saints: Filled with gold are the arriving galleons of Jean-Baptiste Ducasse, governor of Haiti and chief of the French freebooters in the Antilles. Ducasse has humbled Cartagena with his gun salvos; he has reduced to dust the cliff ramparts of the fortress, colossal lions of rock that rear up from the sea, and has left the church without a bell and the governor without rings. To France goes the gold of the sacked Spanish colony. From Versailles, Ducasse receives the title of admiral and a bushy wig of snow-white rolls worthy of the king.

  Before becoming governor of Haiti and admiral of the royal fleet, Ducasse operated on his own, stealing blacks from Dutch slave ships and treasure from galleons of the Spanish fleet. Since 1691, he has been working for Louis XIV.

  (11 and 61)

  1699: Madrid

  Bewitched

  Although the herald has not blown his trumpet to announce it, the news flies through the streets of Madrid. The inquisitors have discovered who bewitched King Charles. The witch Isabel will be burned at the stake in the main plaza.

  All Spain has been praying for Charles II. On waking, the monarch has been taking his posset of powdered snake, infallible for giving strength, but in vain: The penis has continued in a state of stupefaction, unable to make children, and from the royal mouth froth and foul breath have continued to emerge, and not one word worth hearing.

  The curse did not come from a certain cup of chocolate with gallows bird’s testicles, as some witches of Cangas had claimed; nor from the talisman that the king wore round his neck, as the exorcist Fray Mauro believed. Someone suggested that the king had been bewitched by his mother with tobacco from America or benzoin pills; and it was even rumored that the palace maître d’hôtel, the duke of Castellflorit, had served the royal table a ham larded with the fingernails of a Moorish or Jewish woman burned by the Inquisition.

  The inquisitors have at last found the mess of pins, hairpins, cherrystones, and His Majesty’s blond hairs that the witch Isabel had hidden near the royal bedroom.

  The nose hangs down, the lip hangs down, the chin hangs down; but now that the king has been debewitched, his eyes seem to have lit up somewhat. A dwarf raises the candle to look at the portrait Carreño did of him years ago.

  Meanwhile, outside the palace there is no bread or meat, fish or wine, as if Madrid were a besieged city.

  (64 and 201)

  1699: Macouba

  A Practical Demonstration

  To put some gusto into his slaves’ work in this land of sluggishness and drowsiness, Father Jean-Baptiste Labat tells them he was black before coming to Martinique and that God whitened him as a reward for the fervor and submission with which he served his masters in France.

  The black carpenter of the church is trying to make a difficult dovetailing of a beam and cannot get the angle right. Father Labat draws some lines with a ruler and compass, and he orders: “Cut it here.”

  The angle is right.

  “Now I believe you,” says the slave, looking him in the eyes. “No white man could do that.”

  (101)

  1700: Ouro Prêto

  All Brazil to the South

  In the old days, the map showed Bahia close to the newly discovered mines of Potosí, and the governor general reported to Lisbon that this land of Brazil and Peru are all one. To turn the Paranapiacaba Mountains into the Andes cordillera, the Portuguese brought two hundred llamas to São Paulo and sat down to wait for the silver and gold to appear.

  A century and a half later, the gold has turned up. The riverbeds and streams on the slopes of the Espinhaço Mountains are full of shiny stones. The Sāo Paulo mamelukes found the gold when they were out hunting Cataguaz Indians.

  The wind spread the news all through Brazil, and a multitude responded. To get gold in the Minas Gerais region, all you had to do was gather a handful of sand or pull up a tuft of grass and shake it.

  With gold has come hunger. The price of a cat or a dog in the camps is 115 grams of gold, which is what a slave gets for two days’ work.

  (33 and 38)

  1700: St. Thomas Island

  The Man Who Makes Things Talk

  Lugubrious bells and melancholy drums are sounding in this Danish island of the Antilles, a center for contraband and piracy. A slave walks up to the execution stake. Vanbel, the big boss, has condemned him because this black fellow turns on rain when he feels like it, kneeling before three oranges, and because he has a clay idol that answers all his questions and clears him of all doubts.

  Smiling from ear to ear and with his eyes fixed on the stake surrounded by firewood, the condemned man approaches.

  Vanbel intercepts him: “So you won’t be chatting with your doll anymore, you black sorcerer!”

  Without looking at him, the slave answers softly: “I can make that cane of yours talk.”

  “Stop!” Vanbel cries to the guards. “Unbind him!”

  And before the waiting crowd he throws him his cane.

  “Do it,” he says.

  The slave kneels. With his hands, he fans the cane stuck in the ground, makes a few turns around it, kneels again, and strokes it.

  “I want to know,” says the master, “whether the galleon that’s due here has sailed yet. When it will arrive, who is aboard, what has happened …”

  The slave takes a few steps backward.

  “Come closer, sir,” he suggests. “It will tell you.”

  His ear close to the cane, Vanbel hears that the ship sailed some time ago from Helsingør, in Denmark, but that on reaching the tropics a storm broke its small topsail and carried off the mizzensail. Vanbel’s neck quivers like a frog’s belly. The onlookers see him turn white.

  “I don’t hear anything,” says Vanbel as the cane proceeds to tell him the names of the captain and the sailors.

  “Nothing!” he screams.

  The cane whispers to him: The ship will arrive in three days. Its cargo will make you happy, and Vanbel explodes, tears off his wig, shouts: “Burn that Negro!”

  He roars: “Burn him!”

  He howls: “Burn that sorcerer!”

  (101)

  Bantu People’s Song of the Fire

  Fire that men watch in the night,

  in the deep night.

  Fire that blazest without burning, that shinest

  without blazing.

  Fire that fliest without a body.

  Fire without heart, that knowest not

  home nor hast a hut.

  Transparent fire of palm leaves:

  a man invokes thee without fear.

  Fire of the sorcerers, thy father, where is he?

  Thy mother, where is she?

  Who has fed thee?

  Thou art thy father, thou art thy mother,

  Thou passest and leavest no trace.

  Dry wood does not engender thee,

  thou hast not cinders for daughters.

  Thou diest and diest not.

  The errant soul turns into thee, and no one

  knows it.

  Fire of the sorcerers, Spirit

  of the waters below and the air above.

  Fire that shinest, glowworm that lightest up

  the swamp.

  Bird without wings, thing without body, Spirit

  of the Force of Fire.

  Hear my voice:

  a man invokes thee

  without fear.

&nbs
p; (134)

  1700: Madrid

  Penumbra of Autumn

  He could never dress himself alone, or read fluently, or stand up by himself. At forty, a little old man without descendants, he lies dying surrounded by confessors, exorcists, courtiers, and ambassadors who dispute the throne.

  The doctors, defeated, have removed the newly dead doves and the sheep’s entrails from on top of him. Leeches no longer cover his body. They are not giving him rum to drink or the water of life brought from Malaga, because nothing is left but to wait for the convulsion that will tear him from the world. By the light of torches a bleeding Christ at the head of the bed presides over the final ceremony. The cardinal sprinkles holy water from the hyssop. The bedchamber smells of wax, of incense, of filth. The wind beats at the shutters of the palace, badly fastened with cord.

  They will take him to the Escorial morgue, where the marble coffin with his name on it has awaited him for years. That was his favorite journey, but it is some time since he visited his own tomb or even stuck his nose outside. Madrid is full of potholes and garbage and armed vagabonds; and the soldiers, who keep alive on the thin soup of the monasteries, do not put themselves out to defend the king. The last times that he dared to go out, the Manzanares washerwomen and the street urchins ran after the carriage and hurled insults and stones at it.

  Charles II, his bulging eyes red, trembles and raves. He is a small piece of yellow flesh that runs out beneath the sheets as the century also runs out, and so ends the dynasty that conquered America.

  (201 and 211)

  (End of the first volume of Memory of Fire)

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