In the last year of her young
life a strikingly beautiful
woman finds herself in the old
Hotel Monteleone, perusing a
guide to the port city downriver
from her native Minneapolis,
on a journey unaccompanied ex-
cept by her hostess, a friend
of the family. She is ill, but
her inscription in the endpa-
pers is firm, and continental.
Her name is Dorothea; her father
was a young teacher at Heidel-
berg, her mother, surviving far
beyond her, was of the third gen-
eration of the territory's first
fortunes. Family legend had it
that he died of consumption in
Paris, on the young couple's
honeymoon. Now, I reason this
out, more probably: there may
well have been no marriage, as
her conception took place, de-
spite all precaution. Her father
may well not have died. Yet she
became beautiful, even accept-
ing her position in society;
then, redeeming the cherished,
missing father, entered into
a second marriage, to a boys'
school teacher. If I do hold
her in my mind, it's not for
having met her. It's for be-
ing left my eyes.
'Old New Orleans' has been
compiled chiefly from an-
cient notarial acts, in ev-
ery case the history of each
old home has been searched
through these conveyance rec-
ords to establish original
ownership and the year of ac-
tual building. Therefore, if
blame for blasted tradition
is to be attached to anyone
it should be placed on the
shoulders of the notaries of
a century or more ago who set
down in their sear and yellowed
files the actual transactions ..
To steal a glance and, anxious, see
Him slipping into transparency -
The feathered helmet already in place,
Its shadow fallen across his face
(His hooded sex its counterpart) -
Unsteadies the routines of the heart.
If I reach out and touch his wing,
What harm, what help might he then bring?
But suddenly he disappears,
As so much else has down the years ...
Until I feel him deep inside
The emptiness, preoccupied.
His nerve electrifies the air.
His message is his being there.
Stanley Clisby Arthur
Old New Orleans:
A History of the Vieux Carré,
Its Ancient and Historical Buildings
Harmanson, 1936©
J.D. McClatchy
Mercury Rising
Mercury Dressing
Knopf, 2011©