Eugenia Solo
By A. Frances Johnson
Published 12 February 2021
Sikka, Flores, January 1999
Eugenia Solo died in 1857.
The Catholics told her:
All good girls go to heaven
Does heaven have a capital Sister?
She asked, and was soundly slapped
And told: We have given you a name
A destiny, a decent God
Some exceptional consonants and vowels
What else could you want from us?
What in God's name?
Eugenia Solo wanted the Dutch to come
And put a von in front of her name
Von Solo, from one
The place of one
This was her island she told them proudly
A betel map of Flores
Tattooed on her thigh
So they took all her rubber, and silver and coffee
A fair exchange for a von
And a child she named Von Hans
And an illness without a name or cure
Eugenia Solo's name came from a mass
Mumbled in blood and soil
At the edge of the ocean
They built the graves too close to the cliff
The water ate around them
Leaving the deceased high up
On sandstone columns
Grassy tops, waving in the wind
Like hair
The crucifixes fell down eventually
To concuss those fish nibbling at the dead
One of the dead men she had loved
Eugenia Solo forgot her Sikka name
Forgot the name of her island
Because she was a dullard
Or so she thought
And came to believe that nothing had come before
She watched the missionaries
Draw numbers on the plaster feet
Of one hundred Marys
It was her job to find one hundred grottoes
To place them in one hundred sanctuaries
This she did with alacrity
Without a bonnet
Never learning to count