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    Collected Poems, 1953-1993

    Page 9
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      Nothing is poorly made; nothing is dull:

      The Crabgrass thinks itself adorable.

          Cherish your work; take profit in the task:

      Doing’s the one reward a Man dare ask.

      The Wood confides its secrets to the plane;

      The Dovetail fits, and reconfirms the Grain.

      The white-hot writhing Steel is tonged and plunged,

      A-sizzle, into Form, all flecks expunged.

      The Linotyper leans above his keys,

      And feathers down a ton of journalese;

      Engraver and Apprentice, in their room

      Of acid baths and photophobic gloom,

      Transform to metal dots ten shades of gray,

      And herald Everyman’s beginning day.

          The Clergyman, beside the sighing bed,

      Strains for a sign of Credence from the dead.

      The Lawyer eagle-eyed for Falsehood’s glint,

      The Doctor bent on Hardening’s murmured hint,

      The Biochemist analyzing sera,

      The Astrophysicist alone with Lyra,

      The Archaeologist with pick and brush,

      The Nature-walker having heard a thrush—

      Attentiveness! The pinpoint is the locus

      Of Excellence in lands of softened focus.

          Applaud your Neighbor; admire his style

      That grates upon you like a bastard file.

      His trespasses resemble yours in kind;

      He, too, is being crowded from behind.

      Don’t kill; or, if you must, while killing, grieve.

      Doubt not; that is, until you can’t believe.

      Don’t covet Mrs. X; or if you do,

      Make sure, before you leap, she covets you.

          Like meat upon the table, we will spoil:

      Time is the troubled water; Faith, the oil.

      The curse of Tempo regulates the dance;

      To move necessitates Impermanence.

      So flow, flow outward; Heraclitus saw,

      In Nature’s crystalline, the fluid flaw:

      Our Guilt inheres in sheer Existing, so

      Forgive yourself your death, and freely flow.

          Transcendent Goodness makes elastic claims;

      The merciful Creator hid His Aims.

      Beware false Gods: the Infallible Man,

      The flawless formula, the Five-Year Plan.

      Abjure bandwagons; be shy of machines,

      Charisma, Ends that justify the Means,

      And oaths that bind the postulant to kill

      His own Self-love and independent Will.

      A Mussolini leads to Hitler; hate

      Apostles of the all-inclusive State.

          Half-measures are most human; Compromise,

      Inglorious and gray, placates the Wise.

      By messianic hopes is Mankind vexed;

      The Book of Life shows margin more than text.

      Ecclesiastes and our glands agree:

      A time for love, for work, for sleep, for tea.

      Organic drumbeats score our ancient nerves:

      Hark to their rhythms, conform to their curves.

          All wrong? Advice, however sound, depends

      Upon a meliorism Truth upends;

      A certain Sinkingness resides in things.

      The restless heart rejects what Fortune brings;

      The Ego, too athletic, grows perverse

      And muscle-builds by choosing worse and worse.

      Our bones are prison-bars, our flesh is cells:

      Where Suicide invites, Death-wish impels.

      Earthquake, Diseases, Floods, Eruptions, Drought,

      Black Comets, Starry Landslides, Wreck and Rout—

      Beneath a cliff of vast Indifference

      We light our frail fires, peg our poor tents.

      The sleepless mouse-gray hours gnaw and stress:

      “The Wisdom of the Earth is Foolishness.”

          Yet morning here, by Chilmark Pond, is fair.

      The water scintillates against the air,

      The grassy Earth spins seed from solar rage,

      And patiently denies its awful age.

          I am another world, no doubt; no doubt

      We come into this World from well without.

      The seasons lessen; Summer’s touch betrays

      A tired haste, a cool Autumnal trace.

      The playground dust was richer, once, than loam,

      And green, green as Eden, the slow path home.

      No snows have been as deep as those my sled

      Caressed to ice before I went to bed.

      Perhaps Senility will give me back

      The primitive rapport I lately lack.

          Adulthood has its comforts: these entail

      Sermons and sex and receipt of the mail,

      Elimination’s homely paean, dreams’

      Mad gaiety, avoidance of extremes,

      The friendship of children, the trust of banks,

      Thoracic pangs, a stiffness in the shanks,

      Foretastes of death, the aftertaste of sin,

      In Winter, Whiskey, and in Summer, Gin.

          The marsh gives way to Pond, to Dunes, to Sea;

      Cicadas call it good, and I agree.

      At midpoint, center of a Hemisphere

      Too blue for words, I’ve grown to love it here.

      Earth wants me, it shall have me, yet not yet;

      Some task remains, whose weight I can’t forget,

      Some package, anciently addressed, of praise,

      That keeps me knocking on the doors of days.

          The time is gone, when Pope could ladle Wit

      In couplet droplets, and decanter it.

      Wordsworth’s sweet brooding, Milton’s pride,

      And Tennyson’s unease have all been tried;

      Fin-de-siècle sickliness became

      High-stepping Modernism, then went lame.

      Art offers now, not cunning and exile,

      But blank explosions and a hostile smile.

          Deepest in the thicket, thorns spell a word.

      Born laughing, I’ve believed in the Absurd,

      Which brought me this far; henceforth, if I can,

      I must impersonate a serious man.

      April–August 1968

      Chloë’s Poem

      When Chloë flies on silken wings

          She pulls the sky itself along,

      And every tugging moment brings

          The butterfly’s request: “Be strong.”

      Her several mouths are graciousness;

          Her many hands, discovery:

      A hurricane in each caress

          Is Chloë’s way of treating me.

      Minority Report

      My beloved land,

      here I sit in London

      exiled by success of sorts.

      I listen to Mozart

          in my English suit and weep,

                     remembering a Swedish film.

      But it is you,

          really you I think of:

                     your nothing streetcorners

                     your ugly eateries

                     your dear barbarities

                     and vacant lots

      (Brer Rabbit demonstrated:

                     freedom is made of brambles).

      They say over here you are choking

          to death on your cities and slaves,

                     but they have never smelled dry turf,

                     smoked Kools in a drugstore,

                     or pronounced a flat “a,” an honest “r.”


      Don’t read your reviews,

      you are the only land.

      Living with a Wife

      At the Piano

      Barefoot in purple pants

      and my ski sweater you

      play the piano most seriously

      Mozart fumbled with a grimace

      the lamplight fumbling unfelt

      in the down of your neck

      Kind field from which my progeny

      have fled to grow voices and fangs

      you are an arena where art

      like a badly killed bull swerves again

      Your bare foot lifts

      the lamplight pedals on

      my house is half music

      my wife holds no harm

      In the Tub

      You are a pond mirroring

      pink clouds there is moss

      where your white roots meet

      when you lift your arm to shave

      you are a younger kind of tree

      Silver you rise from the lead

      your swan arm seeks a towel

      magic has taken place because

      my Excalibur razor is dull

      and the water would boil a man

      Under the Sunlamp

      Neuter your hair tugged back

      harshly your face a shield

      of greased copper less sexy

      than a boy by Donatello

      too bright to look at long

      eyelids sealed in Urfreude

      metal locked in blinding earth

      During Menstruation

      My house is on fire red

      pain flickers on the walls wet

      flame runs downstairs eggs

      are hurled unripe from the furnace

      and a frown hurts like smoke

      Help I am sliding my cry

      stands helpless as Galileo

      at the side of moons revolving

      of unwinding novae burning

      flinging Tampax tubes of ash

      All the While

      Upstairs to my downstairs

      echo to my silence

      you walk through my veins shopping

      and spin food from my sleep

      I hear your small noises

      you hide in closets without handles

      you surprise me from the cellar

      your foot-soles bright black

      You slip in and out of beauty

      and imply that nothing is wrong

      Who sent you?

      What is your assignment?

      Though years sneak by like children

      you stay as unaccountable

      as the underwear set to soak

      in the bowl where I brush my teeth

      À l’École Berlitz

      Mademoiselle Printemps, my sometimes instructress,

      with whom I slowly form pained sentences

      (Je n’y en ai pas vu,

      par exemple, ou

      À quelle heure vous ětes-vous couchée hier soir?),

      at the end of one lesson

      let down her French, and we faced

      each other naked, I stripped

      of the strange tongue that stiffly cloaks

      each cretin utterance in dignity,

      and she exposed in all her English vowels,

      as luminous and slow as skin,

      her consonants curling like bits of fleece,

      the sense of her sentence as stunning and clear

      as a tear-filled surrender.

      “I am interested in doing translation,”

      she said, and I couldn’t think of a word. Not one.

      South of the Alps

      Signorina Angeli, veteran of Vogue

      and a New York marriage, had a heavy foot

      between Milan and Como.

                                              The speedometer swung

      to 160 kilometers per hour,

      pressed through, trembling, and clung

      like a locust husk that cannot let go.

                               Presto, troppo presto!

      the sides of our Alfa Romeo hissed

      at aquavita trucks we narrowly missed.

      Less fluidly, in middle distance, villages

      in red hats slowly turned to gaze

      like groups of streetcorner pensioners

      who had seen worse ruins than ours.

      Green Alps, bearing aqueducts,

                               drew dreamily near—

                               a quattrocento paradise

      extending its wings to bear us away.

      Her chatting lover occupied the death seat. As

      I cringed behind him, I felt my face

      on the edge of explosion, my tender teeth

      strewn in a stew of glass, my spine

      a row of dominoes, my ghostless flesh

      an interval of metal; and I saw her eyes

      suspended in the rearview mirror,

      immaculately calm:

                                              fringed jewels flattered

      by the velvet hypnosis of her task.

                     She was an icon nailed

      to the blank wall of our blinding speed:

      her nose stiletto-straight, her nostrils

      nice as a skull’s, her lips downdrawn

      upon the candy of her pout—

      reversed details that linked

      in clever foldout to the real:

      to the empress oval of her tight-pulled hair,

      her ear’s pearl curve, her hands

      at rest, with tips of nacre, on the wheel.

      Beauty, deep in hock to time,

      is reckless with its assets; I,

      a cowardly word-hoarder, hugged my wish

      to smudge more proofs with dubious

      corrections. She was clean copy,

                     her future a back issue.

      Of course I adored her, though my fate

      was a midge on her wrist she could twitch away;

      the Old Testament said truly: fear

      is love and love is rigid-making fear.

      A traffic circle. The lake. We slowed.

      Acknowledging my grazie, Signorina showed

      on her smiling jaw a small mole Vogue

      had airbrushed out.

                               Her mother—

      who calls the Pope “Montini” and considers

      him a Communist—had had the marriage annulled.

      Hence, she is still “Signorina.”

      We ate, she, I, and her beau,

                     above Lake Como

                     in green air so

      soft we were not dizzy though

      the lake was a little sky below,

      the motorboats blunt comets.

                     The wine

      was Piedmontese and suave; the breeze

      like a nerved-up gambler fidgeted with chips

      of sunlight on the faded tablecloth.

                     Bella, troppo bella.

      Her hand fell heavy on my arm and grasped.

      “Tell me—why doesn’t anything last?”

      A Bicycle Chain

      Left lying in the grass,

                                              unconnected to anything,

      rusted and disjunct,

                                              it becomes itself.

      Dangled, it will stiffly dance,

         �
    ��                                    parodying legs,

      or curl upon itself in balky knots

                                              nothing like string’s.

      Neither liquid nor rigid,

                                              it returns its metal

      to organic semi-looseness: consult

                                              a snake’s skeleton

      in a museum case, or watch

                                              a python’s differential curve

      parabolize in oozy increments

                                              behind safe glass.

      Think of Insecta

                               rigged and riveted together,

      of protein atoms

                               lightninged into viral chains,

      of language’s linked lines.

                                              The thing is weighty

      with its ancient seedtime secret,

                                              articulation.

      Tossing and Turning

      The spirit has infinite facets, but the body

      confiningly few sides.

                                              There is the left,

      the right, the back, the belly, and tempting

      in-betweens, northeasts and northwests,

      that tip the heart and soon pinch circulation

      in one or another arm.

                                              Yet we turn each time

     


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