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    Selected Poems II (1976-1986)

    Page 7
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      and like them also a memory,

      and like them also two hands

      held open, and like them also

      the last hope of safety.

      Georgia Beach

      In winter the beach is empty

      but south, so there is no snow.

      Empty can mean either

      peaceful or desolate.

      Two kinds of people walk here:

      those who think they have love

      and those who think they are without it.

      I am neither one nor the other.

      I pick up the vacant shells,

      for which open means killed,

      saving only the most perfect,

      not knowing who they are for.

      Near the water there are skinless

      trees, fluid, grayed by weather,

      in shapes of agony, or you could say

      grace or passion as easily.

      In any case twisted.

      By the wind, which keeps going.

      The empty space, which is not empty

      space, moves through me.

      I come back past the salt marsh,

      dull yellow and rust-colored,

      which whispers to itself,

      which is sad only to us.

      A Sunday Drive

      The skin seethes in the heat

      which roars out from the sun, wave after tidal wave;

      the sea is flat and hot and too bright,

      stagnant as a puddle,

      edged by a beach reeking of shit.

      The city is like a city

      bombed out and burning;

      the smell of smoke is everywhere,

      drifting from the mounds of rubble.

      Now and then a new tower,

      already stained, lifts from the tangle;

      the cars stall and bellow.

      From the trampled earth rubbish erupts

      and huts of tin and warped boards

      and cloth and anything scavenged.

      Everything is the color of dirt

      except the kites, red and purple,

      three of them, fluttering cheerfully

      from a slope of garbage,

      and the women's dresses, cleaned somehow,

      vaporous and brilliant, and the dutiful

      white smiles of the child beggars

      who kiss your small change

      and press it to their heads and hearts.

      Uncle, they call you. Mother.

      I have never felt less motherly.

      The moon is responsible for all this,

      goddess of increase

      and death, which here are the same.

      Why try to redeem

      anything? In this maze

      of condemned flesh without beginning or end

      where the pulp of the body steams and bloats

      and spawns and multiplies itself

      the wise man chooses serenity.

      Here you are taught the need to be holy,

      to wash a lot and live apart.

      Burial by fire is the last mercy:

      decay is reserved for the living.

      The desire to be loved is the last illusion:

      Give it up and you will be free.

      Bombay, 1982

      Orpheus (1)

      You walked in front of me,

      pulling me back out

      to the green light that had once

      grown fangs and killed me.

      I was obedient, but

      numb, like an arm

      gone to sleep; the return

      to time was not my choice.

      By then I was used to silence.

      Though something stretched between us

      like a whisper, like a rope:

      my former name,

      drawn tight.

      You had your old leash

      with you, love you might call it,

      and your flesh voice.

      Before your eyes you held steady

      the image of what you wanted

      me to become: living again.

      It was this hope of yours that kept me following.

      I was your hallucination, listening

      and floral, and you were singing me:

      already new skin was forming on me

      within the luminous misty shroud

      of my other body; already

      there was dirt on my hands and I was thirsty.

      I could see only the outline

      of your head and shoulders,

      black against the cave mouth,

      and so could not see your face

      at all, when you turned

      and called to me because you had

      already lost me. The last

      I saw of you was a dark oval.

      Though I knew how this failure

      would hurt you, I had to

      fold like a gray moth and let go.

      You could not believe I was more than your echo.

      Eurydice

      He is here, come down to look for you.

      It is the song that calls you back,

      a song of joy and suffering

      equally: a promise:

      that things will be different up there

      than they were last time.

      You would rather have gone on feeling nothing,

      emptiness and silence; the stagnant peace

      of the deepest sea, which is easier

      than the noise and flesh of the surface.

      You are used to these blanched dim corridors,

      you are used to the king

      who passes you without speaking.

      The other one is different

      and you almost remember him.

      He says he is singing to you

      because he loves you,

      not as you are now,

      so chilled and minimal: moving and still

      both, like a white curtain blowing

      in the draft from a half-opened window

      beside a chair on which nobody sits.

      He wants you to be what he calls real.

      He wants you to stop light.

      He wants to feel himself thickening

      like a treetrunk or a haunch

      and see blood on his eyelids

      when he closes them, and the sun beating.

      This love of his is not something

      he can do if you aren't there,

      but what you knew suddenly as you left your body

      cooling and whitening on the lawn

      was that you love him anywhere,

      even in this land of no memory,

      even in this domain of hunger.

      You hold love in your hand, a red seed

      you had forgotten you were holding.

      He has come almost too far.

      He cannot believe without seeing,

      and it's dark here.

      Go back, you whisper,

      but he wants to be fed again

      by you. O handful of gauze, little

      bandage, handful of cold

      air, it is not through him

      you will get your freedom.

      The Robber Bridegroom

      He would like not to kill. He would like

      what he imagines other men have,

      instead of this red compulsion. Why do the women

      fail him and die badly? He would like to kill them gently,

      finger by finger and with great tenderness, so that

      at the end they would melt into him

      with gratitude for his skill and the final pleasure

      he still believes he could bring them

      if only they would accept him,

      but they scream too much and make him angry.

      Then he goes for the soul, rummaging

      in their flesh for it, despotic with self-pity,

      hunting among the nerves and the shards

      of their faces for the one thing

      he needs to live, and lost

      back there in the poplar and spruce forest

      in the watery moonlight, where his young bride,

      p
    ale but only a little frightened,

      her hands glimmering with his own approaching

      death, gropes her way towards him

      along the obscure path, from white stone

      to white stone, ignorant and singing,

      dreaming of him as he is.

      Letter from Persephone

      This is for the left-handed mothers

      in their fringed black shawls or flowered housecoats

      of the 'forties, their pink mule slippers,

      their fingers, painted red or splay-knuckled

      that played the piano formerly.

      I know about your houseplants

      that always died, about your spread

      thighs roped down and split

      between, and afterwards

      that struggle of amputees

      under a hospital sheet that passed

      for sex and was never mentioned,

      your invalid mothers, your boredom,

      the enraged sheen of your floors;

      I know about your fathers

      who wanted sons.

      These are the sons

      you pronounced with your bodies,

      the only words you could

      be expected to say,

      these flesh stutters.

      No wonder this one

      is nearly mute, flinches when touched,

      is afraid of caves

      and this one threw himself at a train

      so he could feel his own heartbeat

      once anyway; and this one

      touched his own baby gently

      he thought, and it came undone;

      and this one enters the trussed bodies

      of women as if spitting.

      I know you cry at night

      and they do, and they are looking for you.

      They wash up here, I get

      this piece or that. It's a blood

      puzzle.

      It's not your fault

      either, but I can't fix it.

      No Name

      This is the nightmare you now have frequently:

      that a man will come to your house at evening

      with a hole in him—you place it

      in the chest, on the left side—and blood leaking out

      onto the wooden door as he leans against it.

      He is a man in the act of vanishing

      one way or another.

      He wants you to let him in.

      He is like the soul of a dead

      lover, come back to the surface of the earth

      because he did not have enough of it and is still hungry

      but he is far from dead. Though the hair

      lifts on your arms and cold

      air flows over your threshold

      from him, you have never

      seen anyone so alive

      as he touches, just touches your hand

      with his left hand, the clean

      one, and whispers Please

      in any language.

      You are not a doctor or anything like it.

      You have led a plain life

      which anyone looking would call blameless.

      On the table behind you

      there are bread on a plate, fruit in a bowl.

      There is one knife. There is one chair.

      It is spring, and the night wind

      is moist with the smell of turned loam

      and the early flowers;

      the moon pours out its beauty

      which you see as beauty finally,

      warm and offering everything.

      You have only to take.

      In the distance you hear dogs barking.

      Your door is either half open

      or half closed.

      It stays that way and you cannot wake.

      Orpheus (2)

      Whether he will go on singing

      or not, knowing what he knows

      of the horror of this world:

      He was not wandering among meadows

      all this time. He was down there

      among the mouthless ones, among

      those with no fingers, those

      whose names are forbidden,

      those washed up eaten into

      among the gray stones

      of the shore where nobody goes

      through fear. Those with silence.

      He has been trying to sing

      love into existence again

      and he has failed.

      Yet he will continue

      to sing, in the stadium

      crowded with the already dead

      who raise their eyeless faces

      to listen to him; while the red flowers

      grow up and splatter open

      against the walls.

      They have cut off both his hands

      and soon they will tear

      his head from his body in one burst

      of furious refusal.

      He foresees this. Yet he will go on

      singing, and in praise.

      To sing is either praise

      or defiance. Praise is defiance.

      The Words Continue Their Journey

      Do poets really suffer more

      than other people? Isn't it only

      that they get their pictures taken

      and are seen to do it?

      The loony bins are full of those

      who never wrote a poem.

      Most suicides are not

      poets: a good statistic.

      Some days though I want, still,

      to be like other people;

      but then I go and talk with them,

      these people who are supposed to be

      other, and they are much like us,

      except that they lack the sort of thing

      we think of as a voice.

      We tell ourselves they are fainter

      than we are, less defined,

      that they are what we are defining,

      that we are doing them a favor,

      which makes us feel better.

      They are less elegant about pain than we are.

      But look, I said us. Though I may hate your guts

      individually, and want never to see you,

      though I prefer to spend my time

      with dentists because I learn more,

      I spoke of us as we, I gathered us

      like the members of some doomed caravan

      which is how I see us, traveling together,

      the women veiled and singly, with that intumed

      sight and the eyes averted,

      the men in groups, with their moustaches

      and passwords and bravado

      in the place we're stuck in, the place we've chosen,

      a pilgrimage that took a wrong turn

      somewhere far back and ended

      here, in the full glare

      of the sun, and the hard red-black shadows

      cast by each stone, each dead tree lurid

      in its particulars, its doubled gravity, but floating

      too in the aureole of stone, of tree,

      and we're no more doomed really than anyone, as we

      together, through this moon terrain

      where everything is dry and perishing and so

      vivid, into the dunes, vanishing out of sight,

      vanishing out of the sight of each other,

      vanishing even out of our own sight,

      looking for water.

      Heart Test With an Echo Chamber

      Wired up at the ankles and one wrist,

      a wet probe rolling over my skin,

      I see my heart on a screen

      like a rubber bulb or a soft fig, but larger,

      enclosing a tentative double flutter,

      the rhythm of someone out of breath

      but trying to speak anyway; two valves opening

      and shutting like damp wings

      unfurling from a gray pupa.

      This is the heart as television,

      a softcore addiction

      of the afternoon. The heart

      as entertainment, out of date


      in black and white.

      The technicians watch the screen,

      looking for something: a block, a leak,

      a melodrama, a future

      sudden death, clenching

      of this fist which goes on

      shaking itself at fate.

      They say: It may be genetic.

      (There you have it, from science,

      what God has been whispering all along

      through stones, madmen and birds' entrails:

      hardness of the heart can kill you.)

      They change the picture:

      now my heart is cross-sectioned

      like a slice of textbook geology.

      They freeze-frame it, take its measure.

      A deep breath, they say.

      The heart gasps and plods faster.

      It enlarges, grows translucent,

      a glowing stellar

      cloud at the far end

      of a starscope. A pear

      made of smoke and about to rot.

      For once the blood and muscle

      heart and the heart of pure

      light are beating in unison,

      visibly.

      Dressing, I am diaphanous,

      a mist wrapping a flare.

      I carry my precarious

      heart, radiant and already

     


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