By Bryce Morales
Yale College
Ñáñigo
Ñáñigo
Poems and images from a musical performance in Havana, Cuba
Ñáñigo
notice first the cigarette smoke
wisps to haze in the humid air—
brave the noon heat, earn your reward
next to you Fernando stands still
sweat descends from his curly hair
mid-July in Cayo Hueso
alleyways lined with art and verse
where a makeshift stage now takes shape
detouring from a roadside rut
a caravan of cats slinks past
above them cans swap hands; the crowd
awaits, imbibes, and chats until
sticks on hoe blades crack the timeline
conga clave voice and cowbell
rope the room in place of four walls
bleats of Black Matanzas practice
honor unforgotten trauma
pain of slaves of cane of escape
sing along, you know what it means
sweep out evil now Ireme
scan the captive crowd around you
bodies bounce to two beats at once
wordless knowledge their shared wavelength
feel the cycle meet then diverge
pulse and stress and sway and [clap clap]
outdoor dance floor: what a triumph
all the masks belong to costumes
vaccination names a dance move
lanky man with stick and red scarf
twists his hips and whips his bare arms
rhythm lifts the next dancing trope
bald and Black and blind and trembling
balancing around a stiff cane
a rasping elder grins agape
her mouth hosts only ghosts of teeth
About the artist
Bryce Morales is a senior in Branford College from Portsmouth, NH. He enjoys playing Latin percussion for La Orquesta Tertulia and is currently editor-in-chief of The Yale Literary Magazine.
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