A translation of Konstantin Cavafy’s “I was asking about the quality”
For Felicia, Kipper, Oscar, and Kevin.
And for Ted and Barron, in memoriam
I came out
of the office
where I had been
hired in another shitty, low-paying job
(My weekly pay was nothing more
than fifty dollars a week, most from tips).
With my waitress shift over, I came out
at seven and walked slowly. I fell out
into the street, handsome, but compelling.
It felt as if I had finally reached the full potential
of my own beauty (I’d turned
sixteen the previous month).
I kept wandering all around
the newly-cemented streets,
the quiet and old black alleys, past
the cemetery leading to our home.
But then, as I’d paused in front of a clothing store
where some skirts were on sale
(polyester, cheap), I saw this face
inside—a girl—whose eyes urged me
to come inside. So, I entered—
pretending I was looking
for embroidered handkerchiefs.
I was asking about the quality—
of her handkerchiefs—how much
they cost—in a whispery voice breaking open
with desire—and accordingly came her
shop-girl answers—rote, memorized—but beneath her
words, her eyes kept ablaze: Yes.
Mine, too, were a psalm of consent.
We kept talking about the handkerchiefs,
but all the while our one and only goal was this:
to brush each other’s hands—quickly—
over the handkerchiefs—to lean
our faces and lips
nearer to each other, as if
by accident. We moved quickly,
cautiously, yet deliberately—
in case her grandfather—sitting in
the back—were to suspect something.
Copyright © 2025 by Robin Coste Lewis. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on May 19, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.