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    New Collected Poems

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      I am wakened by one of its branches

      crashing down, heavy as a wall, and then

      lie sleepless, the world changed.

      That is a life I know the country by.

      Mine is a life I know the country by.

      Willing to live and die, we stand here,

      timely and at home, neighborly as two men.

      Our place is changing in us as we stand,

      and we hold up the weight that will bring us down.

      In us the land enacts its history.

      When we stood it was beneath us, and was

      the strength by which we held to it

      and stood, the daylight over it

      a mighty blessing we cannot bear for long.

      POEM

      Willing to die,

      you give up

      your will, keep still

      until, moved

      by what moves

      all else, you move.

      BREAKING

      Did I believe I had a clear mind?

      It was like the water of a river

      flowing shallow over the ice. And now

      that the rising water has broken

      the ice, I see that what I thought

      was the light is part of the dark.

      THE COUNTRY OF MARRIAGE

      1.

      I dream of you walking at night along the streams

      of the country of my birth, warm blooms and the nightsongs

      of birds opening around you as you walk.

      You are holding in your body the dark seed of my sleep.

      2.

      This comes after silence. Was it something I said

      that bound me to you, some mere promise

      or, worse, the fear of loneliness and death?

      A man lost in the woods in the dark, I stood

      still and said nothing. And then there rose in me,

      like the earth’s empowering brew rising

      in root and branch, the words of a dream of you

      I did not know I had dreamed. I was a wanderer

      who feels the solace of his native land

      under his feet again and moving in his blood.

      I went on, blind and faithful. Where I stepped

      my track was there to steady me. It was no abyss

      that lay before me, but only the level ground.

      3.

      Sometimes our life reminds me

      of a forest in which there is a graceful clearing

      and in that opening a house,

      an orchard and garden,

      comfortable shades, and flowers

      red and yellow in the sun, a pattern

      made in the light for the light to return to.

      The forest is mostly dark, its ways

      to be made anew day after day, the dark

      richer than the light and more blessed,

      provided we stay brave

      enough to keep on going in.

      4.

      How many times have I come to you out of my head

      with joy, if ever a man was,

      for to approach you I have given up the light

      and all directions. I come to you

      lost, wholly trusting as a man who goes

      into the forest unarmed. It is as though I descend

      slowly earthward out of the air. I rest in peace

      in you, when I arrive at last.

      5.

      Our bond is no little economy based on the exchange

      of my love and work for yours, so much for so much

      of an expendable fund. We don’t know what its limits are—

      that puts it in the dark. We are more together

      than we know, how else could we keep on discovering

      we are more together than we thought?

      You are the known way leading always to the unknown,

      and you are the known place to which the unknown is always

      leading me back. More blessed in you than I know,

      I possess nothing worthy to give you, nothing

      not belittled by my saying that I possess it.

      Even an hour of love is a moral predicament, a blessing

      a man may be hard up to be worthy of. He can only

      accept it, as a plant accepts from all the bounty of the light

      enough to live, and then accepts the dark,

      passing unencumbered back to the earth, as I

      have fallen time and again from the great strength

      of my desire, helpless, into your arms.

      6.

      What I am learning to give you is my death

      to set you free of me, and me from myself

      into the dark and the new light. Like the water

      of a deep stream, love is always too much. We

      did not make it. Though we drink till we burst

      we cannot have it all, or want it all.

      In its abundance it survives our thirst.

      In the evening we come down to the shore

      to drink our fill, and sleep, while it

      flows through the regions of the dark.

      It does not hold us, except we keep returning

      to its rich waters thirsty. We enter,

      willing to die, into the commonwealth of its joy.

      7.

      I give you what is unbounded, passing from dark to dark,

      containing darkness: a night of rain, an early morning.

      I give you the life I have let live for love of you:

      a clump of orange-blooming weeds beside the road,

      the young orchard waiting in the snow, our own life

      that we have planted in this ground, as I

      have planted mine in you. I give you my love for all

      beautiful and honest women that you gather to yourself

      again and again, and satisfy—and this poem,

      no more mine than any man’s who has loved a woman.

      PRAYER AFTER EATING

      I have taken in the light

      that quickened eye and leaf.

      May my brain be bright with praise

      of what I eat, in the brief blaze

      of motion and of thought.

      May I be worthy of my meat.

      HER FIRST CALF

      Her fate seizes her and brings her

      down. She is heavy with it. It

      wrings her. The great weight

      is heaved out of her. It eases.

      She moves into what she has become,

      sure in her fate now

      as a fish free in the current.

      She turns to the calf who has broken

      out of the womb’s water and its veil.

      He breathes. She licks his wet hair.

      He gathers his legs under him

      and rises. He stands, and his legs

      wobble. After the months

      of his pursuit of her, now

      they meet face to face.

      From the beginnings of the world

      his arrival and her welcome

      have been prepared. They have always

      known each other.

      KENTUCKY RIVER JUNCTION

      to Ken Kesey & Ken Babbs

      Clumsy at first, fitting together

      the years we have been apart,

      and the ways.

      But as the night

      passed and the day came, the first

      fine morning of April,

      it came clear:

      the world that has tried us

      and showed us its joy

      was our bond

      when we said nothing.

      And we allowed it to be

      with us, the new green

      shining.

      Our lives, half gone,

      stay full of laughter.

      Free-hearted men

      have the world for words.

      Though we have been

      apart, we have been together.

      Trying to sleep, I cannot

      take my mind away.

      The bright day

      shines in my head

    &n
    bsp; like a coin

      on the bed of a stream.

      You left

      your welcome.

      MANIFESTO: THE MAD FARMER LIBERATION FRONT

      Love the quick profit, the annual raise,

      vacation with pay. Want more

      of everything ready-made. Be afraid

      to know your neighbors and to die.

      And you will have a window in your head.

      Not even your future will be a mystery

      any more. Your mind will be punched in a card

      and shut away in a little drawer.

      When they want you to buy something

      they will call you. When they want you

      to die for profit they will let you know.

      So, friends, every day do something

      that won’t compute. Love the Lord.

      Love the world. Work for nothing.

      Take all that you have and be poor.

      Love somebody who does not deserve it.

      Denounce the government and embrace

      the flag. Hope to live in that free

      republic for which it stands.

      Give your approval to all you cannot

      understand. Praise ignorance, for what man

      has not encountered he has not destroyed.

      Ask the questions that have no answers.

      Invest in the millennium. Plant sequoias.

      Say that your main crop is the forest

      that you did not plant,

      that you will not live to harvest.

      Say that the leaves are harvested

      when they have rotted into the mold.

      Call that profit. Prophesy such returns.

      Put your faith in the two inches of humus

      that will build under the trees

      every thousand years.

      Listen to carrion—put your ear

      close, and hear the faint chattering

      of the songs that are to come.

      Expect the end of the world. Laugh.

      Laughter is immeasurable. By joyful

      though you have considered all the facts.

      So long as women do not go cheap

      for power, please women more than men.

      Ask yourself: Will this satisfy

      a woman satisfied to bear a child?

      Will this disturb the sleep

      of a woman near to giving birth?

      Go with your love to the fields.

      Lie easy in the shade. Rest your head

      in her lap. Swear allegiance

      to what is nighest your thoughts.

      As soon as the generals and the politicos

      can predict the motions of your mind,

      lose it. Leave it as a sign

      to mark the false trail, the way

      you didn’t go. Be like the fox

      who makes more tracks than necessary,

      some in the wrong direction.

      Practice resurrection.

      A MARRIAGE, AN ELEGY

      They lived long, and were faithful

      to the good in each other.

      They suffered as their faith required.

      Now their union is consummate

      in earth, and the earth

      is their communion. They enter

      the serene gravity of the rain,

      the hill’s passage to the sea.

      After long striving, perfect ease.

      THE ARRIVAL

      Like a tide it comes in,

      wave after wave of foliage and fruit,

      the nurtured and the wild,

      out of the light to this shore.

      In its extravagance we shape

      the strenuous outline of enough.

      A SONG SPARROW SINGING IN THE FALL

      Somehow it has all

      added up to song—

      earth, air, rain and light,

      the labor and the heat,

      the mortality of the young.

      I will go free of other

      singing, I will go

      into the silence

      of my songs, to hear

      this song clearly.

      THE MAD FARMER MANIFESTO: THE FIRST AMENDMENT

      1.

      “. . . it is not too soon to provide by every

      possible means that as few as possible shall be

      without a little portion of land. The small

      landholders are the most precious part of a state.”

      Jefferson, to Reverend James Madison, October 28, 1785.

      That is the glimmering vein

      of our sanity, dividing from us

      from the start: land under us

      to steady us when we stood,

      free men in the great communion

      of the free. The vision keeps

      lighting in my mind, a window

      on the horizon in the dark.

      2.

      To be sane in a mad time

      is bad for the brain, worse

      for the heart. The world

      is a holy vision, had we clarity

      to see it—a clarity that men

      depend on men to make.

      3.

      It is ignorant money I declare

      myself free from, money fat

      and dreaming in its sums, driving

      us into the streets of absence,

      stranding the pasture trees

      in the deserted language of banks.

      4.

      And I declare myself free

      from ignorant love. You easy lovers

      and forgivers of mankind, stand back!

      I will love you at a distance,

      and not because you deserve it.

      My love must be discriminate

      or fail to bear its weight.

      PLANTING TREES

      In the mating of trees,

      the pollen grain entering invisible

      the domed room of the winds, survives

      the ghost of the old forest

      that stood here when we came. The ground

      invites it, and it will not be gone.

      I become the familiar of that ghost

      and its ally, carrying in a bucket

      twenty trees smaller than weeds,

      and I plant them along the way

      of the departure of the ancient host.

      I return to the ground its original music.

      It will rise out of the horizon

      of the grass, and over the heads

      of the weeds, and it will rise over

      the horizon of men’s heads. As I age

      in the world it will rise and spread,

      and be for this place horizon

      and orison, the voice of its winds.

      I have made myself a dream to dream

      of its rising, that has gentled my nights.

      Let me desire and wish well the life

      these trees may live when I

      no longer rise in the mornings

      to be pleased by the green of them

      shining, and their shadows on the ground,

      and the sound of the wind in them.

      THE WILD GEESE

      Horseback on Sunday morning,

      harvest over, we taste persimmon

      and wild grape, sharp sweet

      of summer’s end. In time’s maze

      over the fall fields, we name names

      that went west from here, names

      that rest on graves. We open

      a persimmon seed to find the tree

      that stands in promise,

      pale, in the seed’s marrow.

      Geese appear high over us,

      pass, and the sky closes. Abandon,

      as in love or sleep, holds

      them to their way, clear,

      in the ancient faith: what we need

      is here. And we pray, not

      for new earth or heaven, but to be

      quiet in heart, and in eye

      clear. What we need is here.

      THE SILENCE

      Though the air is full of singing

      my head is loud


      with the labor of words.

      Though the season is rich

      with fruit, my tongue

      hungers for the sweet of speech.

      Though the beech is golden

      I cannot stand beside it

      mute, but must say

      “It is golden,” while the leaves

      stir and fall with a sound

      that is not a name.

      It is in the silence

      that my hope is, and my aim.

      A song whose lines

      I cannot make or sing

      sounds men’s silence

      like a root. Let my say

      and not mourn: the world

      lives in the death of speech

      and sings there.

      ANGER AGAINST BEASTS

      The hook of adrenaline shoves

      into the blood. Man’s will,

      long schooled to kill or have

      its way, would drive the beast

      against nature, transcend

      the impossible in simple fury.

      The blow falls like a dead seed.

      It is defeat, for beasts

      do not pardon, but heal or die

      in the absence of the past.

      The blow survives in the man.

      His triumph is a wound. Spent,

      he must wait the slow

      unalterable forgiveness of time.

      AT A COUNTRY FUNERAL

      Now the old ways that have brought us

      farther than we remember sink out of sight

      as under the treading of many strangers

      ignorant of landmarks. Only once in a while

      they are cast clear again upon the mind

      as at a country funeral where, amid the soft

      lights and hothouse flowers, the expensive

      solemnity of experts, notes of a polite musician,

      persist the usages of old neighborhood.

      Friends and kinsmen come and stand and speak,

      knowing the extremity they have come to,

      one of the their own bearing to the earth the last

      of his light, his darkness the sun’s definitive mark.

      They stand and think as they stood and thought

     


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