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    Selected Poems, 1956-1968

    Page 6
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      January 28 1 962

      My abandoned narcotics have

      abandoned me

      January 28 1962

      7 : 30 must have dug its

      pikes into your blue wrist

      January 28 1 962

      I shoved the transistor up my ear

      And putting down

      3 loaves of suicide (?)

      2 razorblade pies

      1 De Quincey hairnet

      (sic)

      a collection of oil

      (sic)

      6 lysol eye foods

      he said with considerable charm and travail:

      Is this all I give?

      One lousy reprieve

      at 2 in the morning?

      This?

      I'd rather have a job.

      I 9'

      I W A N T E D T O B E A D O C T O R

      The famous doctor held up Grandma's stomach.

      Cancer! Cancer! he cried out.

      The theatre was brought low.

      None of the internes thought about ambition.

      Cancer! They all looked the other way.

      They thought Cancer would leap out

      and get them. They hated to be near.

      This happened in Vilna in the Medical School.

      Nobody could sit still.

      They might be sitting beside Cancer.

      Cancer was present.

      Cancer had been let out of its bottle.

      I was looking in the skylight.

      I wanted to be a doctor.

      All the internes ran outside.

      The famous doctor held on to the stomach.

      He was alone with Cancer.

      Cancer! Cancer! Cancer!

      He didn't care who heard or didn't hear.

      It was his 87th Cancer.

      92 I

      O N H E A R I N G A N A M E

      L O N G U N S P O K E N

      Listen to the stories

      men tell of last year

      that sound of other places

      though they happened here

      Listen to a name

      so private it can burn

      hear it said aloud

      and learn and learn

      History is a needle

      for putting men asleep

      anointed with the poison

      of all they want to keep

      Now a name that saved you

      has a foreign taste

      claims a foreign body

      froze in last year's waste

      And what is living lingers

      while monuments are built

      then yields its final whisper

      to letters raised in gilt

      But cries of stifled ripeness

      whip me to my knees

      I am with the falling snow

      falling in the seas

      I am with the hunters

      hungry and shrewd

      I 93

      and I am with the hunted

      quick and soft and nude

      I am with the houses

      that wash away in rain

      and leave no teeth of pillars

      to rake them up again

      Let men numb names

      scratch winds that blow

      listen to the stories

      but what you know you know

      And knowing is enough

      for mountains such as these

      where nothing long remains

      houses walls or trees

      94 I

      S T Y L E

      I don't believe the radio stations

      of Russia and America

      but I like the music and I like

      the solemn European voices announcing jazz

      I don't believe opium or money

      though they're hard to get

      and punished with long sentences

      I don't believe love

      in the midst of my slavery I

      do not believe

      I am a man sitting in a house

      on a treeless Argolic island

      I will forget the grass of my mother's lawn

      I know I will

      I will forget the old telephone number

      Fitzroy seven eight two oh

      I will forget my style

      I will have no style

      I hear a thousand miles of hungry static

      and the old clear water eating rocks

      I hear the bells of mules eating

      I hear the flowers eating the night

      under their folds

      Now a rooster with a razor

      plants the haemophilia gash across

      the soft black sky

      and now I know for certain

      I will forget my style

      Perhaps a mind will open in this world

      perhaps a heart will catch rain

      Nothing will heal and nothing will freeze

      but perhaps a heart will catch rain

      I 95

      America will have no style

      Russia will have no style

      It is happening in the twenty-eighth year

      of my attention

      I don't know what will become

      of the mules with their lady eyes

      or the old clear water

      or the giant rooster

      The early morning greedy radio eats

      the governments one by one the languages

      the poppy fields one by one

      Beyond the numbered band

      a silence develops for every style

      for the style I laboured on

      an external silence like the space

      between insects in a swarm

      electric unremembering

      and it is aimed at us

      (I am sleepy and frightened)

      it makes toward me brothers

      g6 I

      G O E B B E L S A B A N D O N S H I S N O V E L

      A N D J O I N S T H E P A R T Y

      His last love poem

      broke in the harbour

      where swearing blondes

      loaded scrap

      into rusted submarines.

      Out in the sun

      he was surprised

      to find himself lustless

      as a wheel.

      More simple than money

      he sat in some spilled salt

      and wondered if he would find again

      the scars of lampposts

      ulcers of wrought-iron fence.

      He remembered perfectly

      how he sprung

      his father's heart attack

      and left his mother

      in a pit

      memory white from loss of guilt.

      Precision in the sun

      the elevators

      the pieces of iron

      broke whatever thous

      his pain had left

      like a whistle breaks

      a gang of sweating men.

      Ready to join the world

      yes yes ready to marry

      convinced pain a matter of choice

      a Doctor of Reason

      I 97

      he began to count the ships

      decorate the men.

      Will dreams threaten

      this discipline

      will favourite hair favourite thighs

      last life's sweepstake winners

      drive him to adventurous cafes?

      Ah my darling pupils

      do you think there exists a hand

      so bestial in beauty so ruthless

      that can switch off

      his religious electric Exlax light?

      H I T L E R T H E B R A I N - M O L E

      Hitler the brain-mole looks out of my eyes

      Goering boils ingots of gold in my bowels

      My Adam's Apple bulges with the whole head of Goebbels

      No use to tell a man he's a Jew

      I'm making a lampshade out of your kiss

      Confess! confess!

      is what you demand

      although you believe you're giving me everything

      gs I

      I T U S E S U S I

    &nbs
    p; Come upon this heap

      exposed to camera leer:

      would you snatch a skull

      for midnight wine, my dear?

      Can you wear a cape

      claim these burned for you

      or is this death unusable

      alien and new?

      In our leaders' faces

      (albeit they deplore

      the past) can you read how

      they love Freedom more?

      In my own mirror

      their eyes beam at me:

      my face is theirs, my eyes

      burnt and free.

      Now you and I are mounted

      on this heap, my dear:

      from this height we thrill

      as boundaries disappear.

      Kiss me with your teeth.

      A ll things can be done

      whisper museum ovens of

      a war that Freedom won.

      I 99

      M Y T E A C H E R I S D Y I N G

      Martha they say you are gentle

      No doubt you labour at it

      Why is it I see you

      leaping into unmade beds

      strangling the telephone

      Why is it I see you

      hiding your dirty nylons

      in the fireplace

      Martha talk to me

      My teacher is dying

      His laugh is already dead

      that put cartilage

      between the bony facts

      Now they rattle loud

      Martha talk to me

      Mountain Street is dying

      Apartment fifteen is dying

      Apartment seven and eight are dying

      All the rent is dying

      Martha talk to me

      I wanted all the dancers' bodies

      to inhabit like his old classroom

      where everything that happened

      was tender and important

      Martha talk to me

      Toss out the fake Jap silence

      Scream in my kitchen

      logarithms laundry lists anything

      Talk to me

      My radio is falling to pieces

      My betrayals are so fresh

      they still come with explanations

      100 1

      Martha talk to me

      What sordid parable

      do you teach by sleeping

      Talk to me

      for my teacher is dying

      The cars are parked

      on both sides of the street

      some facing north

      some facing south

      I draw no conclusions

      Martha talk to me

      I could burn my desk

      when I think how perfect we are

      you asleep me finishing

      the last of the Saint Emilion

      Talk to me gentle Martha

      dreaming of percussions massacres

      hair pinned to the ceiling

      I'll keep your secret

      Let's tell the milkman

      we have decided

      to marry our rooms

      1 101

      F O R M Y O L D L A Y T O N

      His pain, unowned, he left

      in paragraphs of love, hidden,

      like a cat leaves shit

      under stones, and he crept out in day,

      clean, arrogant, swift, prepared

      to hunt or sleep or starve.

      The town saluted him with garbage

      which he interpreted as praise

      for his muscular grace. Orange peels,

      cans, discarded guts rained like ticker-tape.

      For a while he ruined their nights

      by throwing his shadow in moon-full windows

      as he spied on the peace of gentle folk.

      Once he envied them. Now with a happy

      screech he bounded from monument to monument

      in their most consecrated plots, drunk

      to know how close he lived to the breathless

      in the ground, drunk to feel how much he loved

      the snoring mates, the old, the children of the town.

      Until at last, like Timon, tired

      of human smell, resenting even

      his own shoe-steps in the wilderness,

      he chased animals, wore live snakes, weeds

      for bracelets. When the sea

      pulled back the tide like a blanket

      he slept on stone cribs, heavy,

      dreamless, the salt-bright atmosphere

      like an automatic laboratory

      building crystals in his hair.

      102 1

      F I N A L L Y I C A L L E D

      Finally I called the people I didn't want to hear from

      After the third ring I said

      I'll let it ring five more times then what will I do

      The telephone is a fine instrument

      but I never learned to work it very well

      Five more rings and I'll put the receiver down

      I know where it goes I know that much

      The telephone was black with silver rims

      The booth was cozier than the drugstore

      There were a lot of creams and scissors and tubes

      I needed for my body

      I was interested in many coughdrops

      I believe the drugstore keeper hated

      his telephone and people like me

      who ask for change so politely

      I decided to keep to the same street

      and go into the fourth drugstore

      and call them again

      I 103

      T H E O N L Y T O U R I S T I N H A V A N A

      T U R N S H I S T H O U G H T S H O M E W A R D

      Come, my brothers,

      let us govern Canada,

      let us find our serious heads,

      let us dump asbestos on the White House,

      let us make the French talk English,

      not only here but everywhere,

      let us torture the Senate individually

      until they confess,

      let us purge the New Party,

      let us encourage the dark races

      so they'll be lenient

      when they take over,

      let us make the esc talk English,

      let us all lean in one direction

      and float down

      to the coast of Florida,

      let us have tourism,

      let us flirt with the enemy,

      let us smelt pig-iron in our back yards,

      let us sell snow

      to under-developed nations,

      (Is it true one of our national leaders

      was a Roman Catholic?)

      let us terrorize Alaska,

      let us unite

      Church and State,

      let us not take it lying down,

      let us have two Governor Generals

      at the same time,

      let us have another official language,

      let us determine what it will be,

      1 04 I

      let us give a Canada Council Fellowship

      to the most origiral suggestion,

      let us teach sex in the home

      to parents,

      let us threaten to join the U.S.A.

      and pull out at the last moment,

      my brothers, come,

      our serious heads are waiting for us somewhere

      like Gladstone bags abandoned

      after a coup d'etat,

      let us put them on very quickly,

      let us maintain a stony silence

      on the St. Lawrence Seaway.

      Havana

      April 1961

      I 105

      M I L L E N N I U M

      This could be my little

      book about love

      if I wrote it-

      but my good demon said:

      "Lay off documents! "

      Everybody was watching me

      burn my books-

      ! swung my liberty torch

      happy as a gestapo brute;

      the only thing I wanted to save

    &nbs
    p; was a scar

      a burn or two-

      but my good demon said:

      "Lay off documents!

      The fire's not important!"

      The pile was safely blazing.

      I went home to take a bath.

      I phoned my grandmother.

      She is suffering from arthritis.

      "Keep well," I said, "don't mind the pain."

      "You neither," she said.

      Hours later I wondered

      did she mean

      don't mind my pain

      or don't mind her pain?

      Whereupon my good demon said:

      "Is that all you can do?"

      Well was it?

      Was it all I could do?

      There was the old lady

      eating alone, thinking about

      Prince Albert, Flanders Field,

      w6 1

      Kishenev, her lingers too sore

      for TV knobs;

      but how could I get there?

      The books were gone

      my address lists-

      My good demon said again:

      "Lay off documents!

      You know how to get there! "

      And suddenly I did!

      I remembered it from memory!

      I found her

      poring over the royal family tree,

      "Grandma,"

      I almost said,

      � � [j]

      "you've got it upside down-"

      "Take a look," she said,

      "it only goes to George V."

      � fB]�

      "That's far enough

      you sweet old blood!"

      11@ � �

      "You're right! " she sang

      �Wt�li.l�

      and burned the

      London Illustrated Souvenir

      I did not understand

      the day it was

      till I looked outside

      and saw a lire in every

      window on the street

      and crowds of humans

      crazy to talk

      and cats and dogs and birds

      smiling at each other!

      I 107

      A L E X A N D E R T R O C C H I , P U B L I C

      J U N K I E , P R I E Z P O U R N O U S

      Who is purer

      more simple than you?

      Priests play poker with the burghers,

      police in underwear

      leave Crime at the office,

      our poets work bankers' hours

      retire to wives and fame-reports.

      The spike flashes in your blood

      permanent as a silver lighthouse.

      I'm apt to loaf

      in a coma of newspapers,

      avoid the second-hand bodies

      which cry to be catalogued.

      I dream I'm

      a divine right Prime Minister,

      I abandon plans for bloodshed in Canada.

      I accept an O-B.E-

      Under hard lights

      with doctors' instruments

      you are at work

      in the bathrooms of the city,

      changing The Law.

      I tend to get distracted

      by hydrogen bombs,

      by Uncle's disapproval

      of my treachery

      to the men's clothing industry-

      lOS I

      I find mysel£

      believing public clocks,

      taking advice

      from the Dachau generation.

     


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