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    Signs & Wonders

    Page 2
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      She’ll leave this afternoon or this evening;

      she’ll change out of that sable-lined satin robe,

      put on something a bit more modish

      and less conspicuous, flag a taxi,

      and after zipping down on Fifth Avenue,

      she’ll meet a friend for drinks at the Century

      Club and then leave to catch a red-eye

      flight to the Netherlands on KLM.

      2/ John Koch at the New-York Historical Society: The Party

      Early evening: the summer party people

      meet in a large, airy, sparsely furnished room,

      sorting themselves into duets and trios

      for conversation.

      All except one, who leans out from a window:

      why, that one’s André, the long-lost friend whom I

      last saw years ago! Odd, to recognize him

      just from his posture,

      even before I turn to check the legend,

      Key to The Party : Number 8, A. Kimbrell,

      pianist. A student of Koch’s wife, Dora,

      (Number 3, speaking

      to another pianist and a model,

      Numbers 5 and 4.) With no one to talk to,

      self-reliant André ensconces himself

      in his own niche, while

      out of sight behind him, the conversations

      open, as old friends introduce their friends to

      recent strangers met in the elevator

      on their way up here;

      who, as the Key tells us, are painters, critics,

      dealers, models, pianists, wives and close friends:

      nobody famous but our host and his friend,

      Raphael Soyer.

      All now find themselves in a complex fiction,

      posed, disposed as couples adjoining threesomes

      linked to other couples by tightly rhyming

      postures and gestures;

      groups are dissolved and then reconstituted

      as the eye responds to the overlapping

      figures arranged according to the subtle

      rule of perspective.

      Yet it’s elegiac, this summer party,

      for, though the (mostly) young are clearly taken

      with one another and their situation,

      none has yet noticed

      how very cool the colors of the room are

      in the fading light, and how the wind that’s just

      stirred the lacy curtains has somehow also

      lengthened the shadows.

      All too soon, that moment of watches glanced at,

      looks exchanged; of thanking the host and hostess,

      as with a show of genuine reluctance

      guests make their exit.

      I can picture André, now turning back to

      find the party over, the room left vacant---

      ashtrays full, glasses empty. Another day

      of wine and poses.

      Facing outward, perhaps he had a glimpse of

      what lay ahead: law school, books read and written,

      works and days of environmental---not a

      piano’s---action.

      To Himself

      Though they seem always much to be desired,

      The lives we cannot live are far more wearing

      Than the one we do. If we feel ourselves mired

      In its contingencies, committed to sharing

      Our tatty picnic blanket with the uncaring,

      Or wasting treasure in defense of relations

      Forever in need of, or beyond, repairing;

      If we’ve grown bored with manning the feckless

      stations,

      It’s only that those other lives, our creations,

      Weightless themselves, oppress us until we falter;

      So, weakened by their effortless evasions,

      We learn this late that the only way to alter

      That situation is to leave off pursuing,

      And try to begin to do what we are doing.

      Brooklyn in the Seventies

      1/

      In all the years that I lived there, I doubt

      I once imagined there would come a time

      When I would learn that I had been priced out

      Of Brooklyn’s 19th-century sublime.

      Back then it seemed much likelier to me

      That I would see my small investment go

      Belly-up, taken by the undertow

      Of our increasing urban anomy

      Until the shrinking figures shrank to naught:

      A zero for the brownstone that I’d bought.

      2/

      Yet I persisted: property comes with

      The fictions by which it’s inhabited.

      I lived in not a brownstone but a myth

      About a brownstone, as I often said.

      Brooklyn was where I’d wanted to debut,

      The cozy safe but always edgy home

      I didn’t quite succeed in coming from,

      Although the Brooklynites I later knew

      Shared memories that helped me to restore

      A childhood that I hadn’t had before.

      3/

      For Brooklyn is, or was then, all about

      The joys of restoration and repair:

      A brownstone, once the fortified redoubt

      Of feuding gangsters or the unkempt lair

      Of junkies, went from shooting gallery

      To showcase in---let’s say eight years or ten

      Of tearing down and building up again,

      With never any kind of guarantee

      That spouse or partner would be standing by

      There at the end, if just to say good-bye.

      4/

      The other outcome happened quite a lot

      In those days. Many couples would discover

      That one was satisfied, the other not.

      The one who wasn’t would take on a lover,

      Or take off suddenly for parts unknown,

      Leaving the one who was self-satisfied

      And putting one’s now-outgrown self aside,

      For self-discovery meant moving on

      To find what would suffice and might fulfill:

      One couldn’t find oneself by keeping still.

      5/

      I knew two Sisters who had left their order,

      And when I asked what made them both decide

      To venture out into a world much weirder,

      “It was the stillness, mainly,” one replied,

      “People began to ask us what we thought

      Of clergy getting married and The Pill.

      We hadn’t thought much of such things, until

      They started asking us.”

      “Soon we were out

      And living here in Brooklyn, where you find us,”

      The other said, “Where other vows now bind us.”

      6/

      Yes, selves were in a frenzy of commotion,

      And those beyond their expiration dates

      Were being tossed despite years of devotion.

      So, whether by one’s doing or by fate’s,

      One found oneself in an unlikely place

      (And back then Brooklyn more than filled the bill

      For sheer unlikeliness) in Clinton Hill

      Or Bedford Stuyvesant, and with a face

      One hadn’t chosen, one was soon immersed

      In a role which one hadn’t yet rehearsed.

      7/

      The role may have been unimportant: all

      That mattered was it couldn’t be defended

      By older people: was what one might call

      Unscripted, improvised: and always ended

      At a goal which, once reached, would no more seem

      To be the end one had so long intended:

      “The coach stopped, the door opened, he descended.”

      Beyond such twaddle lay another theme,

      Rich with the still-unriddled mysteries

      Of life in Brooklyn in the Seventies.

      This Organizing Sol
    itude

      I have thought that my paintings of gorillas

      in some sense constituted an autobiography.

      —Miquel Barcelo

      1/

      Your Life in Letters asks a rearrangement

      Of that very thing---better look before you

      Leap: this can’t be done in stages,

      It’s yes or no, commitment or estrangement.

      I mean if, say, a year from now you’re bored, who

      Would even know where your cage is?

      No one, is who. And only feats of patience

      Will allow you access to those illuminations

      2/

      For which you’ve left life, family and Heimat.

      Sometimes a strange new character emerges

      When you’ve disposed of all the clutter:

      “Hello, it’s me! Yes, me! Where am I? I’m at

      No.——, Rue Morgue.” The poor concierge is

      Heard by M. Dupin to mutter,

      “What an ape…” It’s true that your decision

      May lead to changes that none of us can envision;

      3/

      Although each metamorphosis leaves traces

      Of the old order, once across the sill, a

      Transformation of your past is

      Bound to kick in. This usually effaces

      Whatever in you isn’t a gorilla

      Dreaming of your mountain fastness.

      The only issue after that is whether

      The forefinger and thumb will learn to work together.

      Theory Victorious

      You’ll know for certain that it’s happened when you

      See how the famished diner spurns his dinner

      Only to fall with relish on the menu---

      Then you’ll know Theory’s been declared the winner.

      II/ Some Romans

      On a Roman Perfume Bottle

      The Romans were not meek,

      And often the results

      Of their inventive labors,

      Towers and catapults,

      Went rumbling off to wreak

      Havoc on their neighbors;

      This tiny, cooled-down state

      Of a once-ardent passion

      Knows nothing of those wars;

      But served, in its own fashion,

      The imperious dictate

      Of Venus’s with Mars.

      Ara Pacis

      The white procession halts at the Altar of Peace

      To give thanks for war ended on such splendid terms,

      And someone deposits a shitstained lump of fleece

      On the high marble table where it writhes and squirms,

      Unquietly bleating, legs slipping and flailing,

      And any prayer of its will be unavailing.

      Ovid to His Book

      (Tristia, I/1)

      Off with you now, my little book, and go

      to the city I am barred from, to my woe---

      from Outer Nowhere all the way to Rome.

      ---Of course, I’m envious that I can’t come

      myself, and had to send you---poorly wrought,

      lacking revision’s second, better, thought

      and all refinement---on this hopeless mission

      to show an exile’s poems and condition.

      A purple jacket? Be sensible, my book,

      go for a serious, more somber look:

      forget your title page’s ornamented

      letters or hand-made paper, cedar-scented

      with deckled edges, trimmed in costly gold

      to keep away destructive dust and mold:

      you needn’t fear remaindering---nor is

      longevity the greatest of your worries.

      Books are well made when fortune’s favor pours

      down on their authors---as it won’t on yours.

      Since it’s my fortune you should keep in mind,

      display no polish of whatever kind:

      better that you seem rugged and unkempt,

      a ragamuffin with complete contempt

      for random stains and blots: each will appear,

      to those who notice it, an author’s tear.

      Go on your way now, book, and speak for me

      in places that I love, but cannot be,

      saluting those whom I have come to meet

      on metrical, if on no other, feet.

      To those who ask of you, “How is our Ovid?”

      say that although I haven’t yet recovered

      my health and happiness, I’m pleased to give

      thanks to the god by whose gift I still live.

      Say what you need to and then say no more:

      say nothing of what I’m being punished for---

      how long do you imagine I’d survive

      if I were to lead off The News at Five?

      When biting words offend you, just recall

      the best defense is often none at all,

      and if you’d really have my exile end,

      go find us both an influential friend,

      someone who sighs to think of my removal,

      and when he reads you gives his tears’ approval,

      silently praying Caesar will relent

      his anger and reduce my punishment---

      we trust the gods won’t make that one atone,

      for seeking to ease my loss, with his own,

      and that the Prince will soon be quieted

      so I may die at home in my own bed!

      But when you have complied with my directive,

      You’ll still find some who’ll say that you’re defective.

      If critics must consider the circumstance

      and time of any act, you have a chance:

      one needs, in order to compose in measure,

      a mind at rest in solitude and leisure,

      not one that’s clouded over with its fear

      because the executioner draws near!

      A judge who understands this will applaud,

      and reading, pardon---though the work be flawed:

      put Homer in a pickle great as mine

      and watch his genius suddenly decline!

      So have no care for the best-seller list,

      and give no thought to readers who resist

      your many charms: my fortunes must be raised

      before anything I write will be praised!

      When I was fortunate, I hungered for

      stardom, celebrity, and much, much more;

      it now suffices that I do not hate

      the poems that have brought me to this state,

      the cleverness I suffer for---and from!

      So go in my place now and visit Rome

      as I would do, and walk about, and look

      upon its wonders---would I were my book!

      Don’t think, because you come here from abroad,

      you’ll pass among the populace ignored!

      I fear my notoriety may hurt you;

      if any guardian of female virtue

      finds you, because of me, fit for rejection,

      offer your title page for his inspection:

      “That work you think I am---which I am not,

      The Art of Love, deserved the thumps it got!”

      Do you suppose I’ll send you, book of mine,

      to Caesar’s home high on the Palatine?

      I beg forgiveness of that lofty site---and

      of its deities---but I am still frightened:

      the blast that struck me issued from that hill!

      Some of its gods, I know, are merciful,

      but how can I not shudder with alarm

      merely to think of those that did me harm?

      The dove you wounded, hawk, now quakes with dread

      whenever feathers rustle overhead;

      delivered from the wolf’s embrace, the lamb

      is loath to leave the sheepfold and its dam;

      the Sea of Icarus assumed the name

      of that young lad who flew too near the flame:

      beware, my book, observe the bottom feeders,

      be
    satisfied with ordinary readers.

      From here, I can’t be sure which will prevail,

      whether you should rely on oars or sail;

      just let the situation be your guide:

      if you come near him when he puts aside

      the business of the day, and clemency,

      the thought of it, supplants his rage at me;

      if someone, as you shake with doubt and fear,

      whispers an introduction in his ear,

      approach---and on a day more fortunate

      than your own master, you’ll improve his state,

      for if my wound’s not fatal, it can be

      cured only by the one who wounded me.

      My fears are numerous, my hopes are scant,

      so do not injure what you would advance---

      don’t rouse the sleeping lion in his den,

      or give him cause to punish me again.

      But let’s not think of that, dear little tome;

      rather, let’s think of you, soon to be home,

      back at the townhouse, in the studio

      upon your shelf, and with you, in a row,

      your brothers all in chronologic order,

      the products of my diligence and ardor.

      Most of them show their titles openly

      for anyone at all who passes by:

      There are, however, three that shun the light,

      maneuvering to keep far out of sight,

      huddled together at a safe remove:

      they teach---who doesn’t know?---the art of love.

      I recommend you stay away from those,

      that, like Telegonus or Oedipus,

      slew their own father. If you have affection

      for your parent, fly from their seduction!

      Beside them stand my Metamorphoses,

      survivors of my fortune’s exequies;

      what I owe them, I hope you may amend:

      my daily funeral here at world’s end.

      I bid you tell them now that my own fate

      resembles one of them in his changed state,

      no more as I once was---and now much less,

      with sorrow in the place of happiness.

      I’ve more to tell you, book, if you should ask,

      but that would only keep you from your task,

      and if I filled you up with all my trouble,

      the one who carried you would be bent double;

      and you, if all that you did was repine,

      would not be recognized as one of mine!

      The road is long---hurry, while I bemoan

      abidance in this land far from my own.

      Three Sonnets from the Romanesco of G.G. Belli

      1/ The Good Soldiers

     


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