ecclectica

Chagall Dips His Brush

by Laurie Block

When Chagall came to Paris he grew thin.
Dressed in black, he tucked his daily bread
and the paper under his armpit,
spent his free nights in argument 
and cognac at small round tables,
made love to tragic singers 
with bloodred lips and nowhere to go.
He changed his name.  

When Chagall landed in Paris
he lost himself like an animal loses the forest.
With nothing to cling to, his senses swam 
over the horizon.  This was not his October.
The clouds hung off kilter,
no bells rang true, the stars 
and bread and women all smelled wrong.

Chagall closed his eyes.  Gazing at Russia,
he bit his lip until the blood ran,
until he could taste the wounded wet clay
of Vitebsk, the strong humorous suck 
of his boots beside the well, the gutteral cluck
of savage slavic chickens and big-assed Babas
who could not, would not keep still
no matter how many teeth remained to chew.  My god 
they complained, they specialized in opera,  
in suffering that was splendid and joyous and fresh daily.
You could taste their trouble, oy, oy, 
you could sing along.

The Evil Eye, a pinch of salt and people 
counting on garlic and prayer and next year,
who knows, the Messiah or the Czar 
descending sure as sunset in boots.
Every house a place of honour and whitewash,
lye soap, children scrubbed and miserable as potatoes  
with eyes open in the dark and song,
the ungovernable voice rising 
behind unpainted shutters.  A call for bread and justice,

the cry of freedom and young love on the run, 
rolling around in the rhubarb,
inventing itself yet again.  A new century,
the new man going underground.

Chagall was no hero.  In Paris,
he still believed in the order of material things.
Among his rags and brushes he pictured the revolution 
as a dance with no end, the heart-rending reel 
after perfection, a blind brutal stomp 
with babies asleep and butterflies on their eyelids,
the unexpected delicacy and exquisite blue sadness 
as night fell on the Bois and the boulevard and his feet 
kept time, the sweetness of the sacred instrument 
as he made his peace with the earth.

In Paris, memory struck a single bell 
like a boat sounding midnight waters 
for rocks, for signs of the submerged city 
with its glistening swimmers.
Chagall at the wheel of this wet woolen world
heads east across a night sky 
alive with drunken chairs and ecstatic roosters, 
with sacred scrolls and stories of love 
salvaged from burning buildings,
he paints his way home.  In Paris, 
Chagall joined the parade of passionate faces 
with jewelled beards and starry eyes. 
He was human, he was animal,
he didn't need the sun
to find the road back home.