I He was intoxicated by the scent of the coffee dancing in the morning to his mother’s humming. II Then a blacksmith - his father - taught him how to hammer form out of chaos in the muddle of force and a sweaty anvil. III Now if he wished to see the sunness of Sun and the greenness of Tree he would summon the specter of an Arab maiden - Fatma - who was once Berber to come write on his face with her soothing finger: “Salam, my anguished lover.” IV When green-eyed Fatma comes the wreaths of coffee Would come with her writing in the air; and all the songs of history would come marching too, in battle array, like an army dressed in civilian clothes for a dance in Rio. V Fatma’s hair – a still cascade of thin goldeness, a tide of watery fire, a flight motionless of a million birds who speak in tongues and laugh to the stone unlettered of his fidgety cenotaph .