Spain frightened you. Spain

Where I felt at home. The blood-raw light,

The oiled anchovy faces, the African

Black edges to everything, frightened you.

Your schooling had somehow neglected Spain.

The wrought-iron grille, death and the Arab drum.

You did not know the language, your soul was empty

Of the signs, and the welding light

Made your blood shrivel. Bosch

Held out a spidery hand and you took it

Timidly, a bobby-sox American.

You saw right down to the Goya funeral grin

And recognized it, and recoiled

As your poems winced into chill, as your panic

Clutched back towards college America.

So we sat as tourists at the bullfight

Watching bewildered bulls awkwardly butchered,

Seeing the grey-faced matador, at the barrier

Just below us, straightening his bent sword

And vomiting with fear. And the horn

That hid itself inside the blowfly belly

Of the toppled picador punctured

What was waiting for you. Spain

Was the land of your dreams: the dust-red cadaver

You dared not wake with, the puckering amputations

No literature course had glamorized.

The juju land behind your African lips.

Spain was what you tried to wake up from

And could not. I see you, in moonlight,

Walking the empty wharf at Alicante

Like a soul waiting for the ferry,

A new soul, still not understanding,

Thinking it is still your honeymoon

In the happy world, with your whole life waiting,

Happy, and all your poems still to be found.