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    Can You Hear, Bird: Poems

    Page 4
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      Better to sleep on the docks

      than in the linen closet of privilege, always

      wondering what it was that woke you—I’ve known

      that routine too, like a serial killer

      with nothing on his mind, who couldn’t make eye contact

      with you for all the gold in Scotland Yard.

      You think of yourselves as having lived a life of amused tolerance,

      woozy with doubts, at times, but buoyed by your

      delusion that all this, guarded moments and all,

      is part of some life-affirming élan vital. Well,

      I’m here to tell you you’re as doomed as the hoariest

      chink or octoroon, or the “anthropophagi,

      and men whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders.”

      Would anyone like this oar? The special ends tomorrow.

      Often over the bluff-infested coasts a warm

      zephyr breathes. We forget about memorizing

      our parts and retreat to the dressing room,

      silly with relief and grief. What! Was it for this

      I squeezed the tubes of paint

      on your pristine palette, and is it

      that I am going to be rewarded by something

      other than a fatal sting? And the lads

      and lassies assure you that such is the case, that

      in any event no one ever escapes the swimming pool

      without being shriveled to a prunelike consistency.

      O beaters, how did you find my forest?

      What will you do if I stay here

      just for the hell of it? In any case

      it’s getting late, cat burglars are astir, and something

      smokelike in the wind. I’ll be

      off now, the tide is running, the ship

      writhing in the roads, and I must finish

      my diary by midnight, or be fated

      to continue this life into the next. O

      brothers, sisters, friends, catamites—

      it’s been a long and intelligent journey, hasn’t it?

      If I ever found myself here again I’d do something

      about fixing the holes in the landscape

      and healing the sick, though there’s about

      as much chance of that as finding a used lottery ticket in a dungheap.

      Tell you what—

      you continue on the road to House Beautiful

      and I’ll strain my eyes in their sockets looking

      for a single white wave of a hand in the distance

      as my train speeds by. I was told not to get

      into any of this, not to talk about where I came

      from, or my mission here, but I’m tempted

      to share a few secrets with you, though I guess I won’t.

      Remember me to those assholes the judge

      and the bailiff. Speak kindly of me to gossip columnists,

      praising the achievements I was once noted for, that are

      sprouting like Roquefort, or a zinc tree. OK,

      worry, I’ll catch up to you in a minute, once I’ve

      dusted off my shoes and finished adulating myself,

      adoring my stretched reflection in the funhouse mirror,

      and stopped handing out tracts that look like Chinese

      takeout menus. I’m both bogus

      and bold. Not to put too fine a point on it.

      Fascicle

      No one ever had to face such turmoil

      in these days of riots and student demonstrations.

      Don’t bet on it. “No one the governor recruits

      ever passes muster,” she said. “And painted rooms are bonny.”

      Nevertheless, I opened my attaché case.

      “It’s enough to fluster

      Hercule Poirot or Inspector Javert. Why,

      it almost seems as if we are arriving

      in a port of Cyprus, the damaged

      storm in ruins, past the mole

      and the breakwater to the incredible piles

      of volcanic tuff no one esteems, if indeed

      we’re here. Let’s see, my flotation mask

      is in order, ditto my Cypriot currency (dinars,

      no doubt—isn’t everybody?). My cocktail and ticket

      are perfect. Not so the drops of sweat beading my

      headband, but no one cares what you look like—

      it’s appearances that count. But here in this

      cultural demimonde I’ve been banished to, they’ll seize on anything:

      earrings, a trace of luster on the broad swath

      of evening, signed by a renowned couturier. If it weren’t

      for living, that is being alongside almost everything

      that happens and hearing thirdhand about the rest, we’d all

      have rotted at our moorings eons ago, sunk to the mucky

      bottom of this cretinous ocean. Say, did he tell you the one

      about the flea and the cabdriver picking his nose,

      or has he saved you for more august reunions,

      under a turtle moon, its starched sheaves heaving? In truth

      he knew not to what saint to address himself

      when the last panhandler buzzed into view.

      That were a churring time.” Beats me, I mean

      why we’re not to make more of it, if you

      know what I mean …

      Five O’Clock Shadow

      I

      Don’t just stand there, Kiki.

      You’re onstage. They’re all looking at you.

      “Along life’s weary path I glide …”

      Leda, when it came time

      to consider the swan’s suggestion, humbled

      her braces, brought success to heel.

      Tell her half the story.

      Then weeping on these shoals,

      like an enchantress extruded

      in bar light, overturned the fashion

      shoot, brought dumb heterodoxy

      out into the open:

      “For seven years I twisted the splint

      till the pain grew more or less correct.

      I should die in the right page.”

      II

      Another time we were digging a fire trench.

      Along came a fireball,

      stopped, asked the time of day

      and went politely on his way.

      In the house they looked out:

      Yet another hour had come;

      the alcoves were deep with remembrance,

      remembered piety. A woman offered fruit

      mechanically. It’s just like the games of my day

      which no one can authenticate anymore:

      How many times do you kick the can?

      How long must you remain blindfolded?

      And we knew the flag was a friend,

      forgotten ceremony, nailed to the floor,

      climbing, tooth by tooth.

      From the Observatory

      When they had climbed the Valley of Thieves

      and rested at the aleatory base camp

      a horseshoe moon began to pierce the curtain of dreams.

      It seemed there was something wrong with everything.

      The greenhouse was ethereal and too far away.

      A gnat ignited the harbor; it rose up gold and sloppy,

      with too many seals to think about. The basement

      was a dirigible. The Home Counties bristled at suggestions

      of voyeurism and venery: “Was it for this you came?

      To watch us writhe and cringe? Are you happy,

      knowing the palace janissaries have subdued us?”

      The cult of personality issued conflicting commands

      that managed to puddle every surface.

      It’s like it was before the flood: Nothing

      is dry enough or wet enough. What’s needed is a sense

      of invitation, to this or some other domed picnic.

      But since we’re here, we might as well memorize the rules

      for future reference. All other details


      are as the exterior of this wall that reared us: ancient,

      trapped in an understanding of the present, where submarines

      gather, and eavesdroppers ply their trade.

      And the riddle

      unknotted itself; the second agreeable ordeal began.

      Fuckin’ Sarcophagi

      And when they had mounted it on the flatbed,

      the dogfish requested a commuter’s ticket. I’m no longer feeling

      any of it. Generations of toppled heads

      have come home to roost in my priory.

      The smell of doughnuts frying offers them minimal

      support.

      All those years with the tree’s rings growing around me,

      the leaves in my face, branches obstructing others,

      have learned me how one deaf animal forgets another

      in the rush to light. And there on the threshold it forgets

      its name, its very purpose. And allows septic deviance

      to whittle away at the formatted intertext.

      It’s as well the hygrometer was swallowed

      by a tusked creature, as we never came here at all.

      All those suds on the porch and the front walk

      only meant that baby likes to blow soap bubbles

      when not involved in anything more strenuous,

      such as teething. She sees through the holes in my coat

      imaginable dapper Dans who one day will become part and parcel

      of the AstroTurf.

      When I wonder weather it’s over between us, ever over,

      why, a shy spiral announces your cue:

      You too are to have nothing to do

      for the next five hours.

      Look, I’ve packed lunch …

      Betimes the bêtises fall where they may.

      Getting Back In

      Melodies of the past, fibers, tangled tracings …

      Getting back in is the easy part.

      Being stuck in today isn’t.

      What is this “today” you speak of so incessantly?

      It’s where the rubber meets the road and they discuss

      in one long fawning kiss. It’s the posse’s

      new poster child. It’s … My system was downloaded

      but bogus retorts are still coming out of it.

      It’s pleasures and palaces. A commitment.

      This is where the road tires and all vehicles

      instinctively lean toward some breakdown lane

      or other but there aren’t any. The police,

      of course, are aware of this but don’t let on.

      I see where someone was put in prison just for dreaming.

      Sixteen long years. And when they let them out,

      they go back to it. It’s as natural for them as copper moths

      or striped cabanas in the rain forest. You do have got to

      give credit to the organizers, though. Without them this whole thing

      would be as chaotic as a clambake. And us with no spirits,

      no place left to land. No airport wants us.

      And if we get juiced and relax everybody wants us

      for purposes of synchronicity. A single item is too many,

      but a pair is just fine, they say.

      Well, I’ve had it with the ’burbs.

      From where I sit I can see hundreds of freight cars,

      some of them painted bright colors, but mostly

      they are of a dark sort of color.

      It’s so lissom, the light! Rabbits everywhere …

      Gladys Palmer

      Do not go into Hawaii.

      Even the price tags are afraid.

      A bunch of wetsuits slapped a utility pole.

      Something like a pupil

      accosted me across from the mill.

      The new wave of hijackings

      resembles the others only in intensity. Otherwise, forget it.

      We sanded the floors

      and invited the ocean in.

      The yellow pages promised free ginseng,

      and a glorious spring morning

      eloped with a tired, dirty afternoon from the end of winter.

      Bubbles issued from people’s mouths

      before the solons could do anything about it.

      It was foul to be afoot then, or a trick knee.

      The man and the woman wondered:

      Shit, what about the lost amulet?

      What about it? Closer than the side

      of this week’s truncheon, communicable

      as today’s newspaper, yet everybody

      got a piece to take home: The difference was significant.

      I told the truth (it’s best), but unfortunately I was the truth.

      Come along, we’ll forget till tomorrow

      feet over these smooth pebbles, the prisoner’s

      last question.

      Heavenly Arts Polka

      She wasn’t having one of her strange headaches tonight.

      Whose fault is it? For a long time I thought it was mine,

      blamed myself for every minor variation in the major upheaval.

      Then …

      It may have been the grass praying

      for renewal, even though it meant their death,

      the individual blades, and, as though psychic,

      a white light hovered just above the lake’s layer

      like a photograph of ectoplasm.

      Those are all fakes, aren’t they?

      In slow-moving traffic a man acts like he’s going to be hit

      by the stream of cars coming at him from both directions.

      Like a cookie cutter, a streamroller lops the view off.

      There are nine sisters, nine deafening knocks on the door,

      nine busboys to be bussed—er, tipped. And in the thievery

      of my own dreams I can see the square like a crystal,

      the only imaginary thing we were meant to have,

      now soiled, turned under

      like a frayed shirt collar

      a mother stitches for her son who’s away at school,

      mindful he may not care, may wear

      another’s scarlet-and-sulfur raiment

      just so he take part in the academy fun.

      And later, after the twister, slowly

      we mixed drinks of the sort

      that may be slopped only on script-girls, like lemonade.

      Who knows what the world’s got up its sleeve

      next brunch, as long as you will be a part of me and all what I am doing?

      Hegel

      Like a coffee table, the chair slides

      across the polished floor—its aides have brushed its sides

      again. How it shines! Hugs are interspersed with kisses;

      the scrofulous interfaces with the electric clock.

      It certainly is midnight

      and for once it was early.

      She said she had “dishpan hands”—no one

      quite understood what she was talking about, yet issues

      were skirted, no questions raised. Now when a peacock

      stares out of the barnyard, no one mistakes it for a Christmas-tree ornament,

      goes up to it and says, I liked you better in felt,

      or was it at the Rangoon racetrack? But a bird

      always has the last word.

      I Saw No Need

      I saw no need to paint the sky,

      to cheer the runners passing by,

      to let the lovely forest bleed.

      I saw no need.

      I saw no need to argue writs

      with one who in a courtroom sits.

      I saw the folly princes breed,

      who saw no need.

      I saw no need to cancel love—

      Heavens, what was I thinking of?

      I cannot read what others read.

      I see no need.

      I know the earth is out of whack.

      I pine for boys whose name is Jack

      who never pause to spill their seed.

      They see no need.


      And when visible day is done

      all start to run. Stand up

      to it. They stand up to you.

      Hey, you never know.

      I came upon a birch tree once,

      a softly swaying silver dunce

      in whose black branches mist had spread,

      and gazed, and left it there for dead.

      I saw no need t’explain myself

      as others have concerning pelf.

      This ditty bland seduces me.

      Enough! I’ll leave it by the tree,

      the idling birch.

      I saw no need to go to church

      yet wearily I there did lurch

      from time to time, and in the end

      I felt its body like a friend.

      Soon I forgot my mission’s itch

      and at the same time ceased to bitch.

      Ineffable beauty where are you

      I said I’m coming for you

      and even if we don’t match up

      eventually we’ll catch up

      one to the other, comparing notes

      or jotting down our favorite quotes.

      All passion’s spent; the evening dew

      comes transitorily into view.

      Tomorrow it will evaporate

      and morning tigers seal its fate.

      So, when it comes to choosing sides,

      You be the one who’s using guides.

      Refreshed, I’ll to my perch return

      and leave these cherries in the urn.

      I, Too

      Happy thoughts weren’t made to last,

      but it is their compactness that eludes us.

      The built-in obsolescence of every nanny, every pram,

      is a force from God that issues from us.

      How could we not like it, watching it emanate

      like a breath of witch hazel

      or a grayish-purple shroud?

      Something has got to be done to the way we feel

      before we get completely numb, like a colossus

      floundering in its own wake.

      See these hands?

      Really we must make it up to them

      or they’ll take credit for everything we’ve accomplished

      which they will anyway.

      And what’s-his-face can sit on his porch burping

      uninterruptedly—propriety isn’t hardy in this zone,

      but that’s not his problem. In fact

      he doesn’t have a problem. We, who see

      around corners, into strongboxes, must wear

      the guilt of our glancing. It’s another appurtenance,

     


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