Talking Over Chekov, Montauk Point

Peter Balakian

for aunt Nona

I breathe the clear Crimean air.
You tell me of a time that's lost,
a world of figs and gold leaf
where my father as a boy stood
knee-deep in the mussel shells.

We are drawn back to this place
like sea gulls to the scene of bait,
a hollow dune that catches
all the cast-up shells.

The gentle doctor of Crimea's shore
who took the sick into his arms
has left us with these lines:
"know why you live or everything
is wild grass."

The winding path that took us
here unwinds beneath the rolling
scrub. We cannot see its way;
bayberry and primrose are
all that pull us out.

My father still courses
with his hands through
the mire of my human veins,

knee-deep in the early tide,
I follow sultry undulations
of the day. It is Masha
that I hear—her heart becoming
stone beneath the froth.

I cast her droning from my chest
back to the sea where even algae drown.

I take the spade my father passes down,
unwrap the stethoscope
he left in his bag,

and write for my own race
what of the world we can replace.

University of Virginia Virginia Quarterly Review
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University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA 22903-3237
ISSN 2154-6932