Les Troyens
the city not yet shielded in ice the harbor not yet
frozen enough to walk across trees without leaves
prismatic the thing no one
thought would happen happened in a vast hall
I watch the walled city made rubble
prophecy everyone ignores
women who’d rather plunge knives
into their breasts than be raped by the Greeks
the supertitles in clipped language
American English it is a dress rehearsal daylight
outside impossible to banish
the day’s news from my mind Cassandre
ascends the bulwarks squints the famed skyline
of her city in wreckage
a heap of dirty wood dislodged stones
her soprano bombards the dark
no one believes the woman then
94 choristers are singing in horror
Cassandre kills herself
the women follow
Énée (it is his story
now) flees the burning city
through the wings
as everyone scrolls through their phones
when the final three acts premiered
the curtain rose on an ancient time
the work scarcely stageable
impossible music enormous orchestra
two full-scale ballets an empire holding on
in France theaters built
along the widened streets stripped of their shadows
while the dancers gyrated mimicking
the animal love
of the handsome refugee
and the noble Queen Didon
Énée seeks shelter water to drink a body to put his lust in
she is a stopping point
Didon drunk she is helpless she begs
the ships waiting
in the harbor with their hundred oarsmen
the curved bow
enormous white sails caught
in the stillness the wind’s power Didon
in a royal blue pant suit
Hillary had conceded the hour before
and so it was Hillary’s
rage I saw in Didon’s her great American mezzo
pushed to the limits
Source: Poetry (October 2019)