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      Into the Ark

      An endless rain is just beginning.

      Into the ark, for where else can you go,

      you poems for a single voice,

      private exultations,

      unnecessary talents,

      surplus curiosity,

      short-range sorrows and fears,

      eagerness to see things from all six sides.

      Rivers are swelling and bursting their banks.

      Into the ark, all you chiaroscuros and half-tones,

      you details, ornaments, and whims,

      silly exceptions,

      forgotten signs,

      countless shades of the color gray,

      play for play’s sake,

      and tears of mirth.

      As far as the eye can see, there’s water and hazy horizon.

      Into the ark, plans for the distant future,

      joy in difference,

      admiration for the better man,

      choice not narrowed down to one of two,

      outworn scruples,

      time to think it over,

      and the belief that all this

      will still come in handy someday.

      For the sake of the children

      that we still are,

      fairy tales have happy endings.

      That’s the only finale that will do here, too.

      The rain will stop,

      the waves will subside,

      the clouds will part

      in the cleared-up sky,

      and they’ll be once more

      what clouds overhead ought to be:

      lofty and rather lighthearted

      in their likeness to things

      drying in the sun—

      isles of bliss,

      lambs,

      cauliflowers,

      diapers.

      Possibilities

      I prefer movies.

      I prefer cats.

      I prefer the oaks along the Warta.

      I prefer Dickens to Dostoyevsky.

      I prefer myself liking people

      to myself loving mankind.

      I prefer keeping a needle and thread on hand, just in case.

      I prefer the color green.

      I prefer not to maintain

      that reason is to blame for everything.

      I prefer exceptions.

      I prefer to leave early.

      I prefer talking to doctors about something else.

      I prefer the old fine-lined illustrations.

      I prefer the absurdity of writing poems

      to the absurdity of not writing poems.

      I prefer, where love’s concerned, nonspecific anniversaries

      that can be celebrated every day.

      I prefer moralists

      who promise me nothing.

      I prefer cunning kindness to the overtrustful kind.

      I prefer the earth in civvies.

      I prefer conquered to conquering countries.

      I prefer having some reservations.

      I prefer the hell of chaos to the hell of order.

      I prefer the Grimms’ fairy tales to the newspapers’ front pages.

      I prefer leaves without flowers to flowers without leaves.

      I prefer dogs with uncropped tails.

      I prefer light eyes, since mine are dark.

      I prefer desk drawers.

      I prefer many things that I haven’t mentioned here

      to many things I’ve also left unsaid.

      I prefer zeros on the loose

      to those lined up behind a cipher.

      I prefer the time of insects to the time of stars.

      I prefer to knock on wood.

      I prefer not to ask how much longer and when.

      I prefer keeping in mind even the possibility

      that existence has its own reason for being.

      Miracle Fair

      The commonplace miracle:

      that so many common miracles take place.

      The usual miracle:

      invisible dogs barking

      in the dead of night.

      One of many miracles:

      a small and airy cloud

      is able to upstage the massive moon.

      Several miracles in one:

      an alder is reflected in the water

      and is reversed from left to right

      and grows from crown to root

      and never hits bottom

      though the water isn’t deep.

      A run-of-the-mill miracle:

      winds mild to moderate

      turning gusty in storms.

      A miracle in the first place:

      cows will be cows.

      Next but not least:

      just this cherry orchard

      from just this cherry pit.

      A miracle minus top hat and tails:

      fluttering white doves.

      A miracle (what else can you call it):

      the sun rose today at three fourteen A.M.

      and will set tonight at one past eight.

      A miracle that’s lost on us:

      the hand actually has fewer than six fingers

      but still it’s got more than four.

      A miracle, just take a look around:

      the inescapable earth.

      An extra miracle, extra and ordinary:

      the unthinkable

      can be thought.

      The People on the Bridge

      An odd planet, and those on it are odd, too.

      They’re subject to time, but they won’t admit it.

      They have their own ways of expressing protest.

      They make up little pictures, like for instance this:

      At first glance, nothing special.

      What you see is water.

      And one of its banks.

      And a little boat sailing strenuously upstream.

      And a bridge over the water, and people on the bridge.

      It appears that the people are picking up their pace

      because of the rain just beginning to lash down

      from a dark cloud.

      The thing is, nothing else happens.

      The cloud doesn’t change its color or its shape.

      The rain doesn’t increase or subside.

      The boat sails on without moving.

      The people on the bridge are running now

      exactly where they ran before.

      It’s difficult at this point to keep from commenting.

      This picture is by no means innocent.

      Time has been stopped here.

      Its laws are no longer consulted.

      It has been relieved of its influence over the course of events.

      It has been ignored and insulted.

      On account of a rebel,

      one Hiroshige Utagawa

      (a being who, by the way,

      died long ago and in due course),

      time has tripped and fallen down.

      It might well be simply a trifling prank,

      an antic on the scale of just a couple of galaxies,

      let us, however, just in case,

      add one final comment for the record:

      For generations, it’s been considered good form here

      to think highly of this picture,

      to be entranced and moved.

      There are those for whom even this is not enough.

      They go so far as to hear the rain’s spatter,

      to feel the cold drops on their necks and backs,

      they look at the bridge and the people on it

      as if they saw themselves there,

      running the same never-to-be-finished race

      through the same endless, ever-to-be-covered distance,

      and they have the nerve to believe

      that this is really so.

      THE END AND THE BEGINNING

      1993

      Sky

      I should have begun with this: the sky.

      A window minus sill, frame, and panes.

      An aperture, nothing more,

      but wide open.

      I don’t have to wait for a
    starry night,

      I don’t have to crane my neck

      to get a look at it.

      I’ve got the sky behind my back, at hand, and on my eyelids.

      The sky binds me tight

      and sweeps me off my feet.

      Even the highest mountains

      are no closer to the sky

      than the deepest valleys.

      There’s no more of it in one place

      than another.

      A mole is no less in seventh heaven

      than the owl spreading her wings.

      The object that falls in an abyss

      falls from sky to sky.

      Grainy, gritty, liquid,

      inflamed, or volatile

      patches of sky, specks of sky,

      gusts and heaps of sky.

      The sky is everywhere,

      even in the dark beneath your skin.

      I eat the sky, I excrete the sky.

      I’m a trap within a trap,

      an inhabited inhabitant,

      an embrace embraced,

      a question answering a question.

      Division into sky and earth—

      it’s not the proper way

      to contemplate this wholeness.

      It simply lets me go on living

      at a more exact address

      where I can be reached promptly

      if I’m sought.

      My identifying features

      are rapture and despair.

      No Title Required

      It has come to this: I’m sitting under a tree

      beside a river

      on a sunny morning.

      It’s an insignificant event

      and won’t go down in history.

      It’s not battles and pacts,

      where motives are scrutinized,

      or noteworthy tyrannicides.

      And yet I’m sitting by this river, that’s a fact.

      And since I’m here

      I must have come from somewhere,

      and before that

      I must have turned up in many other places,

      exactly like the conquerors of nations

      before setting sail.

      Even a passing moment has its fertile past,

      its Friday before Saturday,

      its May before June.

      Its horizons are no less real

      than those that a marshal’s field glasses might scan.

      This tree is a poplar that’s been rooted here for years.

      The river is the Raba; it didn’t spring up yesterday.

      The path leading through the bushes

      wasn’t beaten last week.

      The wind had to blow the clouds here

      before it could blow them away.

      And though nothing much is going on nearby,

      the world is no poorer in details for that.

      It’s just as grounded, just as definite

      as when migrating races held it captive.

      Conspiracies aren’t the only things shrouded in silence.

      Retinues of reasons don’t trail coronations alone.

      Anniversaries of revolutions may roll around,

      but so do oval pebbles encircling the bay.

      The tapestry of circumstance is intricate and dense.

      Ants stitching in the grass.

      The grass sewn into the ground.

      The pattern of a wave being needled by a twig.

      So it happens that I am and look.

      Above me a white butterfly is fluttering through the air

      on wings that are its alone,

      and a shadow skims through my hands

      that is none other than itself, no one else’s but its own.

      When I see such things, I’m no longer sure

      that what’s important

      is more important than what’s not.

      Some People Like Poetry

      Some people—

      that means not everyone.

      Not even most of them, only a few.

      Not counting school, where you have to,

      and poets themselves,

      you might end up with something like two per thousand.

      Like—

      but then, you can like chicken noodle soup,

      or compliments, or the color blue,

      your old scarf,

      your own way,

      petting the dog.

      Poetry—

      but what is poetry anyway?

      More than one rickety answer

      has tumbled since that question first was raised.

      But I just keep on not knowing, and I cling to that

      like a redemptive handrail.

      The End and the Beginning

      After every war

      someone has to tidy up.

      Things won’t pick

      themselves up, after all.

      Someone has to shove

      the rubble to the roadsides

      so the carts loaded with corpses

      can get by.

      Someone has to trudge

      through sludge and ashes,

      through the sofa springs,

      the shards of glass,

      the bloody rags.

      Someone has to lug the post

      to prop the wall,

      someone has to glaze the window,

      set the door in its frame.

      No sound bites, no photo opportunities,

      and it takes years.

      All the cameras have gone

      to other wars.

      The bridges need to be rebuilt,

      the railroad stations, too.

      Shirtsleeves will be rolled

      to shreds.

      Someone, broom in hand,

      still remembers how it was.

      Someone else listens, nodding

     


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