Halfway up the stairs we paused, seeing our frozen selves one foot above the other, mirrored on the wall. Reflected flesh being able to complete the step and take another, we found at last the famous painting by Henri Rousseau. A Customs man, they said, could never show the truths of savage life that real travelers would know.
The sleeping gypsy smiles, his breathing slow.
Beside him lurks a lion, tail suspended, Skin and sinews bursting in his ragged mane. Will the silence of the gypsy’s lute be ended? What slake of water could his shattered urn retain?
Purpose, certain as the cudgel in the gypsy’s hand, is absent from the light that blanks the desert sky, that bathes the beasts upon time’s lapping sand And gazes, timeless, through a lion’s eye.