Map Maker [excerpt]

Map Maker [excerpt] by Kwame Dawes

Map Maker [excerpt]
III It is harder, though, to chart the smell of a country, the concentric mixing of the mud-washed market with its brown earth-heavy scent of vegetables bleeding; yams, like elephantine fingers, white and seeping where the knife cuts; the impotent regularity of lime green okras; the glowing violet of obscene garden eggs. How do you sketch the rotting scent of a mammal's carcass dangling from rusty hooks, trying to suck in the salt sea spray to preserve itself from the crawl of maggots? How do you write the city's stench, the gutters breeding mosquitoes as huge as wasps, giddy drunk and brazen like flies? This earth defies the cartographer's even lines, the tidy predictability of shapes, the neat names with precise capitals, no smudge, no uncertainty of the hand. It is hard to tell that the land has shifted, blooming new contours. The charts cannot change as fast as the ironic jungle. We have come this way before, I am certain, but the landmarks are not exactly what they were. The river is now a bow, now a crescent where once it was straight, or so it seemed. The natives ask no questions; they sniff the air, move their eyes, and live. The cartographer, I know, understands the fiction of this telling, the lines are myths, dream-stories in the faces of his crew. The only constant is the psychotic lament of Wagner and a bloody warrior from the Warrau soldier who has followed the scent of this march for weeks like a breeze. The notes of music are caught in the foliage. On the way back, they have only just begun to drop like shed leaves in the blackened creeks of this hinterland.
Poet: Kwame Dawes
Source: @Carol Peters
Books: @AbeBooks

The charts cannot change as fast as the ironic jungle

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