top of page
Search

Clarice Lispector: Monkeys

  • coletteofdakota
  • Jan 1, 2022
  • 3 min read

Clarice Lispector

Monkeys (Macacos)


THAT FIRST TIME WE HAD A MARMOSET IN THE HOUSE was around New Year's. WE had no running water and no maid, people were lining up to buy meat, the summer heat had exploded--and that was when, silent with bewilderment, I saw the present come into the house, already eating a banana, already examining everything with great speed and a long tail. He seemed more like a big monkey not yet fully grown, he had tremendous potential. He'd climb the laundry hanging on the clothes line, from where he'd holler like a sailor, and toss banana peels wherever they fell. And I was exhausted. Whenever I'd forget and wander absentmindedly into the laundry room, the big shock: that cheerful man was there. My youngest son knew, before I did, that I would get rid of that gorilla: "And what if I promise that one day the monkey's going to get sic and die, will you let him stay? and what if you knew that sooner or later he'll fall out the window anyway and die down there?" My feelings made me avert my gaze. The little-big monkey's happy and filthy lack of awareness made me responsible for his destiny, since he himself wouldn't take the blame. A girlfriend understood of what bitterness my acquiescence was made, what crimes fed into my dreamy manner, and crudely saved me: some boys from the favela showed up in a happy commotion, took away the laughing man, and for the lackluster New Year I at least got a monkey-free house.


A year later, I'd just been feeling a surge of joy, when right there in Copacabana I spotted the crowd. A man was seling little monkeys. I thought of the boys, of the joys they gave me for free, unrelated to the worries they also gave me for free, I imagined a circle of joy: "Whoever gets this must pass it on," and on and on, like a chain reaction running up a trail of gun-powder. And right on the spot I bought the one whose name would be Lisette.


She nearly fit in my hand. She was wearing the skirt, earrings, necklace and bracelet of a Bahian woman. And she had the air of an immigrant who lands still dressed in her country's traditional clothing. There was also an immigrant quality in her wide eyes.


As for this one, she was a miniature woman. She spent three days with us. She was so delicately built. And so incredibly sweet. More than just the eyes, her gaze was wide. At every movement, her earrings would tremble; her skirts was always neat, her red necklace shiny. She slept a lot, but was sober and tired when it came to eating. Her rare caresses were just light bites that left no mark.


On the third day we were in the laundry admiring Lisette and the way she was ours. "A little too gentle," I thought, missing my gorilla. And suddenly my heart replied very sternly: "But that's no sweetness. It's death" The harshness of the message left me speechless. Then I told the boys: "Lisette is dying." Looking at her, I then realized how far our love had gone. I rolled up Lisette in a napkin, went with the boys to the nearest emergency room, where the doctor couldn't see us because he was performing an urgent procedure on a dog. Another taxi--Lisette thinks we're on an outing, Mama--another hospital. There they gave her oxygen.


And with that breath of life, a Lisette we didn't know was suddenly revealed. Her eyes were much less wide, more secretive, more laughing, and her protruding and ordinary face had a certain ironic superiority; a little more oxygen, and she felt like saying that she could hardly stand being a monkey; she was indeed, and had a lot to say. Soon, however, she succumbed once more, exhausted. More oxygen and this time a serum injection to whose prick she reacted with an angry little swipe, her bracelet tinkling. The nurse smiled: "Lisette, dear, calm down!"


The diagnosis: She wasn't going to make it, unless she had oxygen nearby and, even the, it was unlikely. "Don't buy monkeys on the street," he scolded me shaking his head, "sometimes they're already sick." No, you had to buy a good monkey, to know where it came from, for at least five years of guaranteed love, you had to know what it had or hadn't done, as if you were getting married.


 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
Face

Heather Ann Martínez Face Reality So, you could say my best friend Marcus and I couldn’t wait for the summer. We loved swimming,...

 
 
 
Time

Andrew Miller Tea-Time August 11, 2020 Things aren’t made the way they used to be. Take time: time used to have a much nicer quality...

 
 
 
Hut

Ryūnosuke Akutagawa Birthing Hut Dedicated to Sakutarō Hagiwara A man was trimming reeds from the riverside, weaving a roof for the...

 
 
 

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post

Subscribe Form

Thanks for submitting!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

©2021 by Daphne Colette. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page