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    New and Selected Poems

    Page 5
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    It’s supposed to be?

      The Little Tear Gland That Says

      Then there was Johann,

      the carousel horse—

      except he wasn’t really a carousel horse.

      He grew up in “the naive realism of the Wolffian school

      which without close scrutiny regards

      logical necessity and reality as identical.”

      On Sundays, his parents took him

      to the undertaker’s for cookies.

      “All these people flying in their dreams,”

      he thought.

      Standing before the Great Dark Night of History,

      a picture of innocence

      held together by his mother’s safety pins,

      short and bowlegged.

      Cool reflection soon showed

      there were openings among the signatories of

      death sentences . . .

      plus free high leather boots that squeak.

      On his entrance exam he wrote:

      “The act of torture consists of various strategies

      meant to increase the imagination

      of the Homo sapiens.”

      And then . . . the Viennese waltz.

      The Stream

      for Russ Banks

      The ear threading

      the eye

      all night long

      the ear

      on a long errand

      for the eye

      through the thickening

      pine

      white birch

      over no-man’s-land

      pebbles

      is it

      compact in their anonymity

      their gravity

      accidents of location

      abstract necessity

      water

      which takes such pains

      to convince me

      it is flowing

      •

      Summoning me

      to be

      two places at once

      to drift

      the length

      of its chill

      its ache

      hand white

      at the knuckles

      live bait

      the old hide-and-seek

      in and out

      of the swirl

      luminous verb

      carnivorous verb

      innocent as sand

      under its blows

      •

      An insomnia as big

      as the stars’

      always

      on the brink—

      as it were

      of some deeper utterance

      some harsher

      reckoning

      at daybreak

      lightly

      oh so lightly

      when she brushes

      against me

      and the hems of her long skirt

      go trailing

      a bit longer

      •

      Nothing

      that comes to nothing

      for company

      comes the way a hurt

      the way a thought

      comes

      comes and keeps coming

      all night meditating

      on what she asks of me

      when she doesn’t

      when I hear myself say

      she doesn’t

      Furniture Mover

      Ah the great

      the venerable

      whoever he is

      ahead of me

      huge load

      terrific backache

      wherever

      a chair’s waiting

      meadow

      sky

      beckoning

      he is the one

      that’s been

      there

      without instructions

      and for no wages

      a huge load

      on his back

      and under his arm

      thus

      always

      all in place

      perfect

      just as it was

      sweet home

      at the address

      I never even dreamed of

      the address

      I’m already changing

      in a hurry

      to overtake him

      to arrive

      not ahead

      but just as

      he sets down

      the table

      the thousand-year-old

      bread crumbs

      I used to

      claim

      I was part

      of his load

      high up there

      roped safely

      with the junk

      the eviction notices

      I used to

      prophesy

      he’ll stumble

      by and by

      No luck—

      oh

      Mr. Furniture Mover

      on my knees

      let me come

      for once

      early

      to where it’s vacant

      you still

      on the stairs

      wheezing

      between floors

      and me behind the door

      in the gloom

      I think I would

      let you do

      what you must

      Elegy

      Note

      as it gets darker

      that little

      can be ascertained

      of the particulars

      and of their true

      magnitudes

      note

      the increasing

      unreliability

      of vision

      though one thing may appear

      more or less

      familiar

      than another

      disengaged

      from reference

      as they are

      in the deepening

      gloom

      nothing to do

      but sit

      and abide

      depending on memory

      to provide

      the vague outline

      the theory

      of where we are

      tonight

      and why

      we can see

      so little

      of each other

      and soon

      will be

      even less

      able

      in this starless

      summer night

      windy and cold

      at the table

      brought out

      hours ago

      under a huge ash tree

      two chairs

      two ambiguous figures

      each one relying

      on the other

      to remain faithful

      now

      that one can leave

      without the other one

      knowing

      this late

      in what only recently was

      a garden

      a festive occasion

      elaborately planned

      for two lovers

      in the open air

      at the end

      of a dead-end

      road

      rarely traveled

      o love

      Note Slipped Under a Door

      I saw a high window struck blind

      By the late afternoon sunlight.

      I saw a towel

      With many dark fingerprints

      Hanging in the kitchen.

      I saw an old apple tree,

      A shawl of wind over its shoulders,

      Inch its lonely way

      Toward the barren hills.

      I saw an unmade bed

      And felt the cold of its sheets.

      I saw a fly soaked in pitch

      Of the coming night

      Watching me because it couldn’t get out.

      I saw stones that had come

      From a great purple distance

      Huddle around the front door.

      Grocery

      Figure or figures unknown

      Keep a store

      Keep it open

      Nights and all day Sunday

      Half of what th
    ey sell

      Will kill you

      The other half

      Makes you go back for more

      Too cheap to turn on the lights

      Hard to tell what it is

      They’ve got on the counter

      What it is you’re paying for

      All the rigors

      All the solemnities

      Of a brass scale imperceptibly quivering

      In the early winter dusk

      One of its pans

      For their innards

      The other one for yours—

      And yours heavier

      Classic Ballroom Dances

      Grandmothers who wring the necks

      Of chickens; old nuns

      With names like Theresa, Marianne,

      Who pull schoolboys by the ear;

      The intricate steps of pickpockets

      Working the crowd of the curious

      At the scene of an accident; the slow shuffle

      Of the evangelist with a sandwich board;

      The hesitation of the early-morning customer

      Peeking through the window grille

      Of a pawnshop; the weave of a little kid

      Who is walking to school with eyes closed;

      And the ancient lovers, cheek to cheek,

      On the dance floor of the Union Hall,

      Where they also hold charity raffles

      On rainy Monday nights of an eternal November.

      Progress Report

      And how are the rats doing in the maze?

      The gray one in a baggy fur coat

      Appears dazed, the rest squeeze past him

      Biting and squealing.

      A pretty young attendant has him by the tail.

      She is going to slit him open.

      The blade glints and so do the beads

      Of perspiration on her forehead.

      His cousins are still running in circles.

      The damp, foul-smelling sewer

      Where they nuzzled their mother’s teat

      Is what they hope to see at the next turn.

      Already she’s yanked his heart out,

      And he doesn’t know what for?

      Neither does she at this moment

      Watching his eyes glaze, his whiskers twitch.

      Winter Night

      The church is an iceberg.

      It’s the wind. It must be blowing tonight

      Out of those galactic orchards,

      Their Copernican pits and stones.

      The monster created by the mad Dr. Frankenstein

      Sailed for the New World,

      And ended up some place like New Hampshire.

      Actually, it’s just a local drunk,

      Knocking with a snow shovel,

      Wanting to go in and warm himself.

      An iceberg, the book says, is a large drifting

      Piece of ice, broken off a glacier.

      The Cold

      As if in a presence of an intelligence

      Concentrating. I thought myself

      Scrutinized and measured closely

      By the sky and the earth,

      And then algebraized and entered

      In a notebook page blank and white,

      Except for the faint blue lines

      Which might have been bars,

      For I kept walking and walking,

      And it got darker and then there was

      A flicker of a light or two

      Far above and beyond my cage.

      Devotions

      for Michael Anania

      The hundred-year-old servants

      Are polishing the family silver,

      And recalling the little master dressed as a girl

      Peeing in a chamber pot.

      Now he is away hunting with Madame.

      The reverend dropped by this afternoon

      And inquired amiably after them.

      His pink fingers were like squirming piglets.

      Even the Siamese cats like to sit and gaze,

      On days when it rains and the fire is lit,

      At the grandfather with waxed mustache-tips

      Scowling out of the heavy picture frame.

      They were quick to learn respect

      And what is expected of them, these former

      Farm boys and girls stealing glances

      At themselves in spoons large and small.

      Cold Blue Tinge

      The pink-cheeked Jesus

      Thumbtacked above

      The cold gas stove,

      And the boy sitting on the piss pot

      Blowing soap bubbles

      For the black kitten to catch.

      Very peaceful, except

      There’s a faint moan

      From the next room.

      His mother’s asking

      For some more pills,

      But there’s no reply.

      The bubbles are quiet,

      And kitten is sleepy.

      All his brothers and sisters

      Have been drowned.

      He’ll have a long life, though,

      Catching mice for the baker,

      And the undertaker.

      The Writings of the Mystics

      On the counter among many

      Much-used books,

      The rare one you must own

      Immediately, the one

      That makes your heart race

      As you wait for small change

      With a silly grin

      You’ll take to the street,

      And later, past the landlady

      Watching you wipe your shoes,

      Then, up to the rented room

      Which neighbors the one

      Of a nightclub waitress

      Who’s shaving her legs

      With a door partly open,

      While you turn to the first page

      Which speaks of a presentiment

      Of a higher existence

      In things familiar and drab . . .

      In a house soon to be torn down,

      Suddenly hushed, and otherworldly . . .

      You have to whisper your own name,

      And the words of the hermit,

      Since it must be long past dinner,

      The one they ate quickly,

      Happy that your small portion

      Went to the three-legged dog.

      Window Washer

      And again the screech of the scaffold

      High up there where all our thoughts converge:

      Lightheaded, hung

      By a leather strap,

      Twenty stories up

      In the chill of late November

      Wiping the grime

      Off the pane, the many windows

      Which have no way of opening,

      Tinted windows mirroring the clouds

      That are like equestrian statues,

      Phantom liberators with sabers raised

      Before these dark offices,

      And their anonymous multitudes

      Bent over this day’s

      Wondrously useless labor.

      Gallows Etiquette

      Our sainted great-great-

      Grandmothers

      Used to sit and knit

      Under the gallows.

      No one remembers what it was

      They were knitting

      And what happened when the ball of yarn

      Rolled out of their laps

      And had to be retrieved.

      One pictures the hooded executioner

      And his pasty-faced victim

      Interrupting their grim business

      To come quickly to their aid.

      Confirmed pessimists

      And other party poopers

      Categorically reject

      Such far-fetched notions

      Of gallows etiquette.

      In Midsummer Quiet

      Ariadne’s bird,

      That lone

      Whippoorwill.

      Ball of twilight thread

      Unraveling furtively.

      Tawny thread,

      Raw, pink the thread end.

      A claw or two also


     


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