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    Collected Poems, 1953-1993

    Page 6
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    burning in memory like leaky furnace doors,

      minepits of honesty from which we escaped

      with dilated suspicions. Love us, dead thrones:

      sing us to sleep, awaken our eyes,

      comfort with terror our mortal afternoons.

      Bath After Sailing

      From ten to five we whacked the waves,

      the hostile, mobile black

      that lurched beneath the leeward winch

      as helplessly we heeled.

      Now, after six, I lie at ease,

      at ease in a saltless sea my size,

      my fingertips shrivelled as if dead,

      the sway of the sloop still haunting the tub.

      I can’t stop seeing the heartless waves

      the mirthless color of green tar

      sliding on themselves like ball-bearings,

      deep and opaque and not me,

      not me: I was afraid,

      afraid of heeling over in the wind

      and inhaling bubbling lead

      and sinking, opaque as stone.

      Lord, how light my feet,

      wed to their salt-soaked sneakers,

      felt on the dock, amid the mysterious

      steadiness of trees and air.

      I did not want, I had not wanted

      to die. I saw death’s face

      in that mass absorbed

      in shrugging off its timeless weight,

      the same dull mass blond Vikings scanned,

      impervious to all the sailor love

      thrust onto it. My shredded hand

      ached on the jib-sheet line.

      The boat would clumsily, broken

      wings flapping, come about,

      and the slickered skipper search

      the sea-face and find me gone,

      his surprise not total,

      and one wave much like the rest,

      a toppling ton, a rib of time,

      an urgent message from nothing to nothing.

      I thank you, God of trees and air,

      whose steeples testify

      to something steady slipped by chance

      upon Your tar-green sliding face,

      for this my mock survival.

      My children’s voices plumb my death.

      My rippling legs are hydra limbs.

      My penis, my representative,

      my emissary to darkness, survivor

      of many a plunge, flipflops

      sideways, alive and small

      and pallid in reprieve.

      Black sea, deep sea, you dangle

      beneath my bliss like a dreadful gamble.

      Mute, white as a swimming-pool cork,

      I float on the skin

      of sleepiness, of my sleep,

      of all sleep.…How much I prefer

      this microcosmic version

      of flirting with immersion.

      Topsfield Fair

      Animals seem so sad to be themselves—

      the turkey a turkey even to his wattle,

      the rabbit with his pink, distinctly, eyes,

      the prize steer humble in his stall.

      What are they thinking, the pouter pigeons,

      shaped like opulent ladies’ hats,

      jerking and staring in aisles of cages;

      what does the mute meek monkey say?

      Our hearts go out to them, then stop:

      our fellows in mortality, like us

      stiff-thrust into marvellous machines

      tight-packed with chemical commands

      to breathe, blink, feed, sniff, mate,

      and, stuck like stamps in species, go out of date.

      Pompeii

                     They lived, Pompeiians,

          as installments of flesh in slots of stone;

                     they died in postures preserved,

      by a ghoulish casting process, in the dank museum here.

          Outside the gates, living Pompeiian men

                     peddle antique pornography.

                     One feels this place

          was cursed before that noon in 79

            when lunching gluttons found

      their sturgeon mouths hot-stuffed with screaming ash.

          There’s not much to admire but the fact

                     of preservation, and the plumbing.

                     The plumbing lingers

          like a sour aftertaste—the loving conduits,

                     the phallic fountains, the three degrees,

      so technically astute, of public bath. These Romans

          enslaved their liquids well; pornography

                     became their monument.

      Sand Dollar

      This disc, stelliferous,

      survived the tide

      to tell us some small creature

      lived and died;

      its convex delicacy

      defies the void

      that crushed a vanished

      echinoid.

      Stoop down, delighted;

      hoard in your hand

      this sand-colored coin

      redeemed from the sand

      and know, my young sudden

      archaeologist,

      that other modes of being

      do exist.

      Behold the horizon.

      Vastness acts

      the wastrel with

      its artifacts.

      The sea holds lives

      as a dream holds clues;

      what one realm spends

      another can use.

      Washington

      Diagonal white city dreamed by a Frenchman—

      the nouveau republic’s Senecan pretension

      populated by a grid of blacks—

      after midnight your taxi-laced streets

      entertain noncommittal streetlight shadows

      and the scurry of leaves that fall still green.

      Site, for me, of a secret parliament

      of which both sides agreed to concede

      and left the issue suspended in brandy,

      I think of you longingly, as a Yankee

      longs for Lee, sorry to have won,

      or as Ho Chi Minh mourns for Johnson.

      My capital, my alabaster Pandemonium,

      I rode your stunned streets with a groin

      as light and docile as a baby’s wrist,

      guilt’s senators laughing in my skull’s cloakroom,

      my hurried heart corrupt with peace,

      with love of my country, of cunt, and of sleep.

      Dream Objects

      Strangest is their reality,

      their three-dimensional workmanship:

      veined pebbles that have an underside,

      maps one could have studied for minutes longer,

      books we seem to read page after page.

      If these are symbols cheaply coined

      to buy the mind a momentary pardon,

      whence this extravagance? Fine

      as dandelion polls, they surface and explode

      in the wind of the speed of our dreaming,

      so that we awake with the sense

      of having missed everything, tourists

      hustled by bus through a land whose history

      is our rich history, whose artifacts

      were filed to perfection by beggars we fear.

      Midpoint

      I. Introduction

      ARGUMENT: The poet begins, and describes his beginnings. Early intimations of wonder and dread. His family on the Hill of Life in 1939, and his own present uncomfortable maturity. Refusing to take good advice, he insists on the endurance of the irreducible.

      Of nothing but me, me

      —all wrong, all wrong—

      as I cringe in the face of glory

      I sing, lacking
    another song.

      Proud mouths around me clack

      that the livelong day is long

      but the nip of night tugs back

      my would-be celebrant brain

      to the bricks of the moss-touched walk,

      the sweet cold grass that had no name,

      the arbor, and the wicker chair

      turned cavernous beneath the tapping rain.

      Plain wood and paint pressed back my stare.

      Stiff cardboard apples crayoned to sell

      (for nickels minted out of air)

      from orange crates with still a citrus smell:

      the thermometer: the broom:

      this code of things contrived to tell

      a timid God of a continuum

      wherein he was delimited.

      Vengeful, he applied his sense of doom

      with tricycle tires to coppery-red

      anthills and, dizzy in his Heaven, grieved

      above his crushed Inferno of the dead.

      A screen of color said, You are alive.

      A skin of horror floated at my feet.

      The corpses, comma-shaped, indicted, If

      a wheel from far above (in summer heat,

      loose thunders roamed the sky like untongued wagons)

      would turn, you’d lie squashed on the street.

      That bright side porch in Shillington:

      under the sun, beneath grape leaves,

      I feared myself an epiphenomenon.

      The crucial question was, Why am I me?

      In China boys were born as cherishing

      of their small selves; in buried Greece

      their swallowed spirits wink

      like mica lost in marble.

      Sickened by Space’s waste, I tried to cling

      to the thought of the indissoluble:

      a point infinitely hard

      was luminous in me, and cried I will.

      I sought in middling textures part-

      icles of iridescence, scintillae

      in dullish surfaces; and pictured art

      as my descending, via pencil, into dry

      exactitude. Behind the beaded curtain

      of Matter lurked an understanding Eye.

      Clint Shilling’s drawing lessons: in

      the sun he posed an egg on paper, and said

      a rainbow ran along the shadow’s rim—

      the rainbow at the edge of the shadow of the egg.

      My kindergarten eyes were sorely strained

      to see it there. My still-soft head

      began to ache, but docilely I feigned

      the purple ghosts of green in clumsy wax:

      thus was I early trained

      and wonder, now, if Clint were orthodox.

      He lived above a spikestone-studded wall

      and honed his mustache like a tiny ax

      and walked a brace of collies down our alley

      in Pennsylvania dusk

      beside his melodic wife, white-haired and tall.

      O Philadelphia Avenue! My eyes lift up

      from the furtive pencilled paper

      and drown, are glad to drown, in a flood

      of light, of trees and houses: our neighbors

      live higher than we, in gaunt

      two-family houses glaring toward our arbor.

      Five-fingered leaves hold horse chestnuts.

      The gutter runs with golden water

      from Flickinger’s ice plant. Telephone wires hunt

      through the tree crowns under orders

      to find the wider world

      the daily Eagle and the passing autos

      keep hinting the existence of. And girls

      stroll toward Lancaster Avenue and school

      in the smoke of burning leaves, in the swirl

      of snow, in the cruel

      brilliance that follows, in the storm of buds that marries

      earth to the iron sky and brings renewal

      to the town so wide and fair from quarry

      to trolley tracks, from Kenhorst to Mohnton,

      from farmers’ market to cemetery,

      that a boy might feel himself point N

      in optics, where plane ABCD—

      a visual phenomenon—

      converges and passes through to be

      (inverted on the other side,

      where film or retina receives it)

      a kind of afterlife,

      knife-lifted out of flux

      and developed out of time:

      the night sky, with a little luck,

      was a camera back, the constellations

      faint silver salts, and I the crux

      of radii, the tip of two huge cones,

      called Empyrean and Earth,

      that took their slant and spin from me alone.

      I was that N, that white-hot nothing, yet

      my hands, my penis, came also into view,

      and as I grew I half unwilling learned

      to seem a creature, to subdue

      my giant solipsism to a common scale.

      Reader, it is pure bliss to share with you

      the plight of love, the fate

      of death, the need for food,

      the privileges of ignorance, the ways

      of traffic, competition, and remorse.

      I look upon my wife, and marvel that

      a woman, competent and good,

      has shared these years; my children, protein-fat,

      echo my eyes and my laugh: I am disarmed

      to think that my body has mattered,

      has been enrolled like a red-faced farm-

      boy in the beautiful country club

      of mankind’s copulating swarm.

      I did not expect it; humble

      as a glow-worm, my boneless ego asked

      only to witness, to serve as the hub

      of a wheeling spectacle that would not pass.

      My parents, my impression was,

      had acted out all parts on my behalf;

      their shouting and their silences

      in the hissing bedroom dark

      scorched the shadows; a ring of ashes

      expanded with each smoldering remark

      and left no underbrush of fuel

      of passion for my intimidated spark.

      My mother’s father squeezed his Bible

      sighing, and smoked five-cent cigars

      behind the chickenhouse, exiling the smell.

      His wife, bespectacled Granma,

      beheaded the chickens

      in their gritty wire yard

      and had a style of choking during dinner;

      she’d run to the porch, where one of us

      would pound her on the back until her inner

      conflict had resolved. Like me, she was nervous;

      I had sympathetic stomach cramps.

      We were, perhaps, too close,

      the five of us. Our lamps

      were dim, our carpets worn, the furniture

      hodgepodge and venerable and damp.

      And yet I never felt that we were poor.

      Our property included several stray

      cats, one walnut tree, a hundred feet or more

      of privet hedge, and fresh ice every other day.

      The brothers pressing to be born

      were kept, despite their screams, offstage.

      The fifth point of a star, I warmed

      to my onliness, threw tantrums,

      and, for my elders’ benison, performed.

      Seven I was when to amuse them

      I drew the Hill of Life.

      My grandfather, a lusty sixty-some,

      is near the bottom, beside

      the Tree to God, though twice twelve years

      in fact would pass before he, ninety, died,

      of eating an unwashed peach.

      His wife, crippled but chipper, stepped

      above him downward and, true, did not precede

      him up that Tree, but snored and slept

      six seasons more before her speechless spirit

      into unresi
    sted silence crept.

      A gap, and then my father, Mr.

      Downdike of high-school hilarity,

      strides manful down the dry, unslippery

      pencil line. My mother is at the peak—

      eleven days short of thirty-five—

      and starting up the lonely slope is me,

      dear Chonny. Now on the downward side

      behold me: my breath is short,

      though my parents are still alive.

      For conscientious climbing, God gave me these rewards:

      fame with its bucket of unanswerable letters,

      wealth with its worrisome market report,

      rancid advice from my critical betters,

      a drafty house, a voluptuous spouse,

      and quatre enfants—none of them bed-wetters.

      From Time’s grim cover, my fretful face peers out.

      Ten thousand soggy mornings have warped my lids

      and minced a crafty pulp of this my mouth;

      and yet, incapable of being dimmed,

      there harbors still inside me like the light

      an anchored ketch displays, among my ribs,

      a hopeful burning riding out the tide

      that this strange universe employs

      to strip itself of wreckage in the night.

      “Take stock. Repent. The motion that destroys

      creates elsewhere; the looping sun

      sees no world twice.” False truths! I vouch for boys

      impatient, inartistically, to get things done,

      armored in speckled cardboard

     


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