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    Collected Poems, 1953-1993

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      The sea’s pale green seems evil.

      The shells seem pellets, the meals

      forced doses, Bahamian cooking

      as bitterly obsequious as

      the resentful wraiths that serve it.

      Vertigo is reading at the beach

      words a thousand miles away,

      is tasting Coppertone again,

      is closing one’s eyes once more against

      the mismatch of poverty and beauty.

      The beautiful sea is pale, it is

      sick, its fish sting like regrets.

      Perhaps it was the conch salad, or is

      the something too rich in Creation.

      You Who Swim

      You who in water move as one

      long rounded to this use, a stone

      that gently fails to sink, you tint

      as wind tints air this element.

      Androgynous, your round face shorn

      by bathing cap, you feign to drown.

      “The dead man’s float,” you say and smile,

      your lashes wet and animal.

      Soft teacher, otter, other, moth

      to the sunk sun, you play at death;

      the surface glitter slips, and air

      slices your throat with shards of glare.

      At night you rise beside me, face

      wet with the dark, your dim lips spaced

      to hold the bubble love. Your eyes

      are shut. We swim our dead men’s lives.

      Sunday in Boston

      The fags and their gay dogs are patrolling

      the Garden; on Boylston the blacks,

      hollow-backed, demonstrate styles of meander

      in this hearttown theirs by default.

      The winos on Commonwealth, wiser than wisdom,

      blink eyes pale as bottle bottoms;

      sun-pickled and lined fine as maps, their faces

      beam from within this particular nowhere.

      Pistachio George sits high. July beds bloom.

      The Ritz’s doorman sports his worn maroon.

      Above us like a nearer sky great Pei’s

      glass sheet, cerulean, clasps clouds to its chest.

      And, unapologetic in their pallor, girls

      in jigging halters and sordid shorts parade

      festive colorless flesh regathered from

      its Saturday spill, the bearded lover split.

      Brick Boston, city of students and drunks!

      In Godless, doggy righteousness we bask.

      The suburbs send us their stifling cars, and we

      in turn give back the hollow sound of bells.

      Raining in Magens Bay

      The sky, paid to be blue,

      yields at most patches of silver

      and then, salted with sun, rain

      (we can’t quite believe it)

      so heavy the branches of sea-grape

      afford no shelter. Run!

      The towel, the book, the sunglasses:

      save them, and save our fair skins

      from the pelting,

      bitter and chill, that dyes the arms

      of the bay the color of smoke

      and erases Outer Brass Island.

      Wait, there is a way,

      a way not to panic. The picnic

      by the cabañTa has not stopped cackling;

      its voices ricochet louder,

      wind-whipped, from lips

      an inch above the skin of water.

      They have gone swimming,

      and the lovers up the beach

      persist in embracing submerged.

      Come, the calm green is alive

      with drops, and soft; one’s shadow

      no longer lurks below like a shark.

      The way to get out of the rain

      is to get into the water.

      The way for rain to fall

      is mixed with sun, like salt.

      The way for man to be is mixed

      with sun and salt and sea and shadow.

      Leaving Church Early

      What, I wonder, were we hurrying to,

      my grandfather, father, mother, myself,

      as the last anthem was commencing? Were

      we avoiding the minister’s hand at the door?

      My mother shied, in summer, from being touched.

      Or was it my father, who thought life was grim

      and music superfluous, dodging the final hymn?

      Or could, I wonder now, the impetus

      that moved the small procession of us up

      and out, apologizing, from the pew

      have come from the ancient man, mysterious

      to me as an ancestor turned to ash,

      who held some thunders though, a tavern bully

      in his time and still a steadfast disliker

      of other people’s voices? Whatever the cause,

      we moved, bump and whisper, down

      the side aisle, while the organ mulled Stanza One,

      a quadruped herd, branded as kin, I

      the last of the line, adolescent, a-blush,

      out through the odor of piety and the scents

      (some purchased at Kresge’s, some given by God)

      my buxom country cousins harbored in

      their cotton dresses, to the sighing exit

      which opened on the upbeat as the choir

      in love of the Lord and imperfect unison

      flung its best self over the balcony.

      The lifted voices drifted behind us, spurned.

      Loose pebbles acknowledged our shoes.

      Our Buick, black and ’36, was parked

      in a hickory picnic grove where a quoit stake,

      invisible as Satan in the grass

      of Eden, might spear a tire “of the unwary,”

      as my grandfather put it. The interior

      of the auto hit us with an hour’s heat.

      We got in gear, our good clothes mussed,

      and, exonerated for the week, bounced home.

      Home: the fields, red, with acid rows of corn

      and sandstone corner-markers. The undertone

      of insect-hum, the birds too full to sing.

      A Sunday haze in Pennsylvania.

      My unchurched grandma stoops in the foursquare house,

      as we prattle in the door, like a burglar

      trapped in mid-theft, half-paralyzed, her frame

      hung in my memory between two tasks,

      about to do something, but what? A cream

      jug droops in her hand, empty or it would spill—

      or is it a potato-masher, or

      a wooden spoon? White-haired, stricken, she stares

      and to welcome us back searches for a word.

      What had we hurried back to? There could be

      no work: a mock-Genesiac rest reigned

      in the bewitched farmland. Our strawberries

      rotted in their rows unrummaged-for;

      no snorting, distant tractor underlined

      the rasp of my father’s pencil as he marked,

      with his disappointed grimace, math exams.

      The dogs smelled boredom, and collapsed their bones.

      The colors of the Sunday comics jangled,

      printed off-key, and my grandfather’s feet,

      settling in for a soliloquy, kicked up fuzz.

      My father stood to promenade his wounds.

      I lay down, feeling weak, and pulled a book

      across my eyes the way a Bedouin

      in waiting out a sandstorm drapes his sheet.

      The women clucked and quarrelled with the pots

      over who was cook. A foody fog

      arose. The dogs rose with it, and the day

      looked as if it might survive to noon.

      What is wrong with this picture? What is strange?

      Each figure tends its own direction, keeps

      the axis of its own theatric chore,

      scattered, anarchic, kept home by poverty,

      with nowhere else to go. A modern tribe

      would be aligned
    around “the television,”

      the family show-off, the sparkling prodigy

      that needs a constant watching lest it sulk and cease

      to lift into celebrity the arc

      of interlocked anonymous: we were not such.

      We spurned all entertainment but our misery.

      “Jesus,” my father cried, “I hate the world!”

      “Mother,” my mother called, “you’re in the way!”

      “Be grateful for your blessings,” Grandpa advised,

      shifting his feet and showing a hairless shin.

      “Ach,” Grandma brought out in self-defense,

      the syllable a gem of German indignation,

      its guttural edge unchipped, while I,

      still in the sabbath shirt and necktie, bent

      my hopes into the latest Nero Wolfe, imagining

      myself orchidaceous in Manhattan and

      mentally constructing, not Whodunit,

      but How to Get Out of Here: my dastardly plot.

      The rug, my closest friend, ignored

      my jabbing elbows. Geraniums raged on the sills.

      The furniture formed a living dismal history

      of heritage, abandonment, and purchase,

      pretension, compromise, and wear: the books

      tried to believe in a better world but failed.

      An incongruous painting told of dunes

      and a dab of unattainable sea.

      Outside, a lone car passed; the mailbox held

      no hope of visitation—no peacock magazine,

      wrapped in brown paper, rife with ads, would come

      to unremind us of what we were, poor souls

      who had left church early to be about

      the business of soaking ourselves in Time,

      dunking doughnuts let fall into the cup.

      Hot Pennsylvania, hazy, hugged the walls

      of sandstone two feet thick as other cells

      enfold the carcinomic hyperactive one; we were

      diseased, unneighborly, five times alone, and quick.

      What was our hurry? Sunday afternoon

      beckoned with radioed ball games, soft ice cream,

      furtive trips in the creaking auto, naps

      for the elderly, daydreams for the young,

      while blind growth steamed to the horizon of hills,

      the Lord ignoring His own injunction to rest.

      My book grew faint. My grandfather lifted his head,

      attentive to what he alone divined;

      his glasses caught the light, his nose

      reclaimed an ancient handsomeness.

      His wife, wordless, came and sat beside.

      My father swished his hips within his bath of humor

      and called his latest recognition to the other

      co-captain of dissatisfaction; my mother

      came to the living-room doorway, and told us off.

      She is the captive, we are the clumsy princes

      who jammed the casket with our bitter kisses.

      She is our prison, the rampart of her forehead

      a fiery red. We shake our chains, amused.

      Her myths and our enactment tickle better

      the underside of facts than Bible fables;

      here to this house, this mythy then, we hurried,

      dodging the benediction to bestow,

      ourselves upon ourselves, the final word.

      Envoi

      My mother, only you remember with me—

      you alone still populate that room.

      You write me cheerful letters mentioning Cher

      and Barbara Walters as if they were there with you,

      realer than the dead. We left church early

      why? To talk? To love? To eat? To be free

      of the world’s crass consensus? Now you read,

      you write me, Aristotle and Tolstoy

      and claim to be amazed, how much they knew.

      I send you this poem as my piece of the puzzle.

      We know the truth of it, the past, how strange,

      how many corners wouldn’t bear describing,

      the angles of it, how busy we were forgiving—

      we had no time, of course, we have no time

      to do all the forgiving that we must do.

      Another Dog’s Death

      For days the good old bitch had been dying, her back

      pinched down to the spine and arched to ease the pain,

          her kidneys dry, her muzzle white. At last

      I took a shovel into the woods and dug her grave

      in preparation for the certain. She came along,

      which I had not expected. Still, the children gone,

          such expeditions were rare, and the dog,

      spayed early, knew no nonhuman word for love.

      · · ·

      She made her stiff legs trot and let her bent tail wag.

      We found a spot we liked, where the pines met the field.

          The sun warmed her fur as she dozed and I dug;

      I carved her a safe place while she protected me.

      I measured her length with the shovel’s long handle;

      she perked in amusement, and sniffed the heaped-up earth.

          Back down at the house, she seemed friskier,

      but gagged, eating. We called the vet a few days later.

      They were old friends. She held up a paw, and he

      injected a violet fluid. She swooned on the lawn;

          we watched her breathing quickly slow and cease.

      In the wheelbarrow up to the hole, her fur took the sun.

      Dream and Reality

      I am in a room.

      Everything is white, the walls

      are white, there are no windows.

      There is a door.

      I open it, and neatly

      as a shadow a coating of snow

      falls door-shaped into the room.

      I think, Snow, not surprised

      it is inside and outside both,

      as with an igloo.

      I move through the open door

      into the next room; this, too, is

      white and windowless and perfect.

      I think, There must be more than this.

      This is a dream.

      · · ·

      My daughter finds bones

      on the marshes. I examine them:

      deer heads with sockets round as

      cartoon eyes, slender jaws broken.

      There are tiny things, too,

      no bigger than a pulled tooth,

      and just that white—burrs of bone,

      intricate, with pricking flanges

      where miniature muscles attached.

      She says, Those are mouse jaws.

      Indeed: I see teeth like rows

      of the letter “i” in diamond type.

      She tells me, I find them

      in the cough balls of owls.

      And this is reality.

      Dutch Cleanser

      My grandmother used it, Dutch Cleanser,

      in the dark Shillington house,

      in the kitchen darkened by the grape arbor,

      and I was frightened of the lady on the can.

      Why was she carrying a stick?

      Why couldn’t we see her face?

      Now I, an aging modern man,

      estranged, alone, and medium gray,

      I tip Dutch Cleanser onto a sponge,

      here in this narrow bathroom,

      where the ventilator fan has to rumble

      when all I want to switch on is light.

      · · ·

      The years have spilled since Shillington,

      the daily Eagles stacked in the closet

      have burst the roof! Look up,

      Deutsche Grossmutter—I am here!

      You have changed, I have changed,

      Dutch Cleanser has changed not at all.

      The lady is still upholding the stick

      chasing dirt, and her face

      is so an
    gry we dare not see it.

      The dirt she is chasing is ahead of her,

      around the can, like a minute hand

      the hour hand pushes around.

      Rats

      A house has rotten places: cellar walls

      where mud replaces mortar every rain,

      the loosening board that begged for nails in vain,

      the sawed-off stairs, and smelly nether halls

      the rare repairman never looks behind

      and if he did would, disconcerted, find

      long spaces, lathed, where dead air grows a scum

      of fuzz, and rubble deepens crumb by crumb.

      Here they live. Hear them on their boulevards

      beneath the attic flooring tread the shards

      of panes from long ago, and Fiberglas

      fallen to dust, and droppings, and dry clues

      to crimes no longer news. The villains pass

      with scrabbly traffic-noise; their avenues

      run parallel to chambers of our own

      where we pretend we’re clean and all alone.

      The Melancholy of Storm Windows

      We touch them at the raw turns

      of the year—November,

      with its whipped trees and cellar sky,

      and April, whose air

      promises more than the earth

      seems willing to yield.

      They are unwieldy, of wood, and their panes

      monotonously ask the same question—Am I clean?

      No, the answer is.

      They fit less well, we feel, each year.

      But the weather lowers,

      watery and wider than a tide,

      and if a seam or leak of light shows, well,

      nothing’s perfect under Heaven.

      Our mortal shell,

      they used to call the body.

      In need of paint, they heave

      up from the cellar and back down again

      like a species of cloud,

      shedding a snow of flakes and grime.

      They rotate heavy in our hands; the screwdriver

      stiffly twirls; the Windex swipes evaporate

      in air ominous of coming worse

      or, at winter’s end, of Easter entombment,

     


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