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    The Apple Trees at Olema


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      Robert Hass

      The Apple Trees at Olema

      New and Selected Poems

      For Brenda

      Contents

      New Poems

      July Notebook: The Birds

      Sleep like the down elevator’s

      In front of me six African men, each of them tall

      They are built like exclamation points, woodpeckers.

      Are you there? It’s summer. Are you smeared with the juice of cherries?

      After Coleridge and for Milosz: Late July

      For C.R.: What do you mean you have nothing?

      Late afternoons in June the fog rides in

      August Notebook: A Death

      1. River Bicycle Peony

      2. Sudden and Grateful Memory of Mississippi John Hurt

      3. You can fall a long way in sunlight

      4. Today his body is consigned to the flames

      Variations on a Passage in Edward Abbey

      The Bus to Baekdam Temple

      Song of the Border Guard

      September Notebook: Stories

      Everyone comes from a long way off

      Driving up 80 in the haze, they talked and talked.

      Alternatively:

      He found that it was no good trying to tell

      Names for involuntary movements of the body—

      The receptionist at the hospital morgue told him

      Setup without the punchline:

      Once there were two sisters called Knock Me and Sock Me;

      “Why?” he asked. “Because she was lonely,

      It is good to sit down to birthday cake

      Stories about the distribution of wealth:

      How Eldie Got Her Name

      Punchline without the setup:

      He had known, as long as he’d known anything,

      Because she, not her sister, answered the door,

      A Ballad:

      She looked beautiful, and looked her age, too.

      Two jokes walk into a bar.

      In the other world the girls were named Eleanor and Filina,

      Some of David’s Story

      Snowy Egret

      The Red Chinese Dragon and the Shadows on Her Body in the Moonlight

      From Field Guide

      On the Coast near Sausalito

      Fall

      Maps

      Adhesive: For Earlene

      Bookbuying in the Tenderloin

      Spring

      Song

      Palo Alto: The Marshes

      Concerning the Afterlife, the Indians of Central California Had Only the Dimmest Notions

      The Nineteenth Century as a Song

      Measure

      Applications of the Doctrine

      House

      In Weather

      From Praise

      Heroic Simile

      Meditation at Lagunitas

      Sunrise

      The Yellow Bicycle

      Against Botticelli

      Like Three Fair Branches from One Root Deriv’d

      Transparent Garments

      The Image

      The Feast

      The Pure Ones

      The Garden of Delight

      Santa Lucia

      To a Reader

      The Origin of Cities

      Winter Morning in Charlottesville

      Old Dominion

      Monticello

      Emblems of a Prior Order

      Weed

      Child Naming Flowers

      Picking Blackberries with a Friend Who Has Been Reading Jacques Lacan

      The Beginning of September

      Not Going to New York: A Letter

      Songs to Survive the Summer

      From Human Wishes

      Spring Drawing

      Vintage

      Spring Rain

      Late Spring

      Rusia en 1931

      Spring Drawing 2

      Calm

      Museum

      Novella

      Churchyard

      Conversion

      Human Wishes

      Tall Windows

      The Harbor at Seattle

      Paschal Lamb

      Duck Blind

      Quartet

      A Story About the Body

      In the Bahamas

      January

      The Apple Trees at Olema

      Misery and Splendor

      Santa Lucia II

      Cuttings

      Santa Barbara Road

      Berkeley Eclogue

      Privilege of Being

      Natural Theology

      Tahoe in August

      Thin Air

      Between the Wars

      On Squaw Peak

      From Sun Under Wood

      Happiness

      Our Lady of the Snows

      Dragonflies Mating

      My Mother’s Nipples

      The Gardens of Warsaw

      Layover

      Notes on “Layover”

      The Woods in New Jersey

      Iowa City: Early April

      A Note on “Iowa City: Early April”

      Sonnet

      Faint Music

      Forty Something

      Shame: An Aria

      Regalia for a Black Hat Dancer

      Jatun Sacha

      Frida Kahlo: In the Saliva

      English: An Ode

      The Seventh Night

      Interrupted Meditation

      From Time and Materials

      Iowa, January

      After Trakl

      Envy of Other People’s Poems

      A Supple Wreath of Myrtle

      Futures in Lilacs

      Three Dawn Songs in Summer

      The Distribution of Happiness

      Etymology

      The Problem of Describing Color

      The Problem of Describing Trees

      Winged and Acid Dark

      A Swarm of Dawns, a Flock of Restless Noons

      Breach and Orison

      The World as Will and Representation

      After the Winds

      For Czesław Miłosz in Kraków

      Time and Materials

      Art and Life

      Domestic Interiors

      Twin Dolphins

      Then Time

      That Music

      Czesław Miłosz: In Memoriam

      Horace: Three Imitations

      State of the Planet

      Poem with a Cucumber in It

      Drift and Vapor (Surf Faintly)

      “…White of Forgetfulness, White of Safety”

      I Am Your Waiter Tonight and My Name Is Dmitri

      A Poem

      Bush’s War

      Pears

      The Dry Mountain Air

      First Things at the Last Minute

      Poet’s Work

      Mouth Slightly Open

      Old Movie with the Sound Turned Off

      Ezra Pound’s Proposition

      On Visiting the DMZ at Panmunjon: A Haibun

      Consciousness

      Exit, Pursued by a Sierra Meadow

      September, Inverness

      Notes and Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      Other Books by Robert Hass

      Credits

      Copyright

      About the Publisher

      New Poems

      JULY NOTEBOOK: THE BIRDS

      Sleep like the down elevator’s

      imitation of a memory lapse.

      Then early light.

      Why were you born, voyager?

      one is not born for a reason,

      though there is a skein of causes.

      out of yellowish froth,

      cells began to divide, or so they say,

      and feed on sunlight,

      for no reason.

      After that life wanted life.

      You are awake now?

      I am awake now.


      In front of me six African men, each of them tall

      and handsome, all of them impeccably tailored;

      all six ordered Coca-Cola at dinner (Muslim,

      it seems, a trade delegation? diplomats?);

      the young American girl next to me

      is a veterinary assistant from DC;

      I asked her if she kept records

      or held animals. A little of both,

      she says. She ’s on her way to Stockholm.

      The young man in the window seat, also American,

      black hair not combed any time

      in recent memory, expensive Italian shirt,

      gold crucifix fastened to his earlobe,

      scarab tattooed in the soft skin

      between thumb and forefinger of his left hand,

      is reading a Portuguese phrasebook.

      A lover perhaps in Lisbon or Faro.

      There should be a phrase for this passenger tenderness,

      the flickering perceptions like the whitecaps

      later on the Neva, when the wind

      off the Gulf of Finland, roughens the surface

      of the river and spills the small petals

      of white lilacs on the gray stone

      of the embankment. Above it two black-faced gulls,

      tilted in the air, cry out sharply, and sharply.

      They are built like exclamation points, woodpeckers.

      Are you there? It’s summer. Are you smeared with the juice of cherries?

      The light this morning is touching everything,

      the grasses by the pond,

      and the wind-chivvied water,

      and the aspens on the bank, and the one white fir on its sunward side,

      and the blue house down the road

      and its white banisters which are glowing on top

      and shadowy on the underside,

      which intensifies the luster of the surfaces that face the sun

      as it does to the leaves of the aspen.

      Are you there? Maybe it would be best

      to be the shadow side of a pine needle

      on a midsummer morning

      (to be in imagination and for a while

      on a midsummer morning

      the shadow side of a pine needle).

      The sun has concentrated to a glowing point

      in the unlit bulb of the porchlight on the porch

      of the blue house down the road.

      It almost hurts to look at it.

      Are you there? Are you soaked in dreams still?

      The sky is inventing a Web site called newest azure.

      There are four kinds of birdsong outside

      and a methodical early morning saw.

      No, not a saw. It’s a boy on a scooter and the sun

      on his black helmet is concentrated to a point of glowing light.

      He isn’t death come to get us

      and he isn’t truth arriving in a black T-shirt

      chevroned up the arms in tongues of flame.

      Are you there? For some reason I’m imagining

      the small hairs on your neck, even though I know

      you are dread and the muse

      and my mortal fate and a secret.

      It’s a boy on a scooter on a summer morning.

      Did I say the light was touching everything?

      After Coleridge and for Milosz: Late July

      I didn’t go hiking with the others this morning

      on the dusty trail past the firehouse,

      past the massive, asymmetrical, vanilla-scented

      Jeffrey pine, among the spikes of buckbrush

      and the spicy sage and the gray-green ceanothus,

      listening to David’s descriptions of the terrifying

      efficiencies of a high mountain ecosystem,

      the white fir’s cost-benefit analysis

      of the usefulness of its lower limbs,

      the ants herding aphids—they store the sugars

      in the aphid’s rich excretions—on the soft green

      mesas of a mule ear leaf. I think of the old man’s

      dark study jammed with books in seven languages

      as the headquarters of his military campaign

      against nothingness. Immense egoism in it,

      of course, the narcissism of a wound,

      but actual making, actual work. one of the things

      he believed was that our poems could be better

      than our motives. So who cares why

      he wrote those lines about the hairstyle

      of his piano teacher in Wilno in the 1920s

      or the building with spumy baroque cornices

      that collapsed on her in 1942. David and the others

      would by now have reached the waterfall.

      There were things he could not have known

      as he sat beside her on the mahogany bench,

      that he could only have seen, or recomposed,

      remembering the smell of her powder,

      as a sixty-five-year-old man on another continent.

      Looking out a small window at an early spring rain:

      that, if she taught piano, she was an artistic girl,

      that she didn’t have family money, that she must have

      dreamed once of performing and discovered

      the limits of her gift and that her hair,

      piled atop her head and, thickly braided,

      wound about her beautifully shaped skull

      (which the boy with his worn sheaf of Chopin études

      would hardly have noticed) was formed

      by some bohemian elegance and raffishness

      in the style of her music-student youth, so that he,

      the poet at the outer edges of middle age,

      with what comes after that visible before him

      could think unbidden of her reddish Belle Epoque hair

      and its powdery faint odor of apricot

      that he had not noticed and of the hours

      she must have spent, thousands in a lifetime,

      tending to her braids, and think that the young,

      himself then with his duties and resentments,

      are always walking past some already perished

      dream of stylishness or beauty that survives

      or half-survives in the familiar and therefore tedious,

      therefore anonymous, outfitting of one ’s elders,

      and that her gentility would have required

      (the rain in green California may have let up

      a little and quieted to dripping in the ferns)

      the smallest rooms in the most expensive quarter

      of the city she could manage—he’d have recalled

      then rows of yellow bindings of French novels

      on her well-dusted shelves—and this was why

      he visited her in that gleaming parlor room

      on the Street of St. Peter of the Rock, and why,

      he would hear years later in a letter

      from a classmate, the stone that crushed her

      was not concrete or the local limestone,

      but pure chunks of white, carefully quarried

      Carerra marble. Something in him identified,

      must have, with the darkness he thought

      he was contending against. A child practicing

      holding its breath, as a form of power,

      a threat (but against whom? To extort

      what?). or a lover perfecting a version

      of the silent treatment from some strategy

      of anticipatory anger at the failure of love.

      So he may have had to rouse himself

      against the waste, against the vast stupidity

      and cruelty and waste and wasted pathos,

      to hear the music in which to say that he ’d noticed,

      after all the years, that her small body

     


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