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    The Shape of the Journey: New & Collected Poems

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      them shed their dresses in apartments. See those

      steam pipes running along the ceiling. The rope.

      3

      I wanted to feel exalted so I picked up

      Dr. Zhivago again. But the newspaper was there

      with the horrors of the Olympics, those dead and

      perpetually martyred sons of David. I want to present

      all Israelis with .357 magnums so that they are

      never to be martyred again. I wanted to be exalted

      so I picked up Dr. Zhivago again but the TV was on

      with a movie about the sufferings of convicts in

      the early history of Australia. But then the movie

      was over and the level of the bourbon bottle was dropping

      and I still wanted to be exalted lying there with

      the book on my chest. I recalled Moscow but I could

      not place dear Yuri, only you Yesenin, seeing the Kremlin

      glitter and ripple like Asia. And when drunk you appeared

      as some Bakst stage drawing, a slain Tartar. But that is

      all ballet. And what a dance you had kicking your legs from

      the rope – We all change our minds, Berryman said in Minnesota

      halfway down the river. Villon said of the rope that my neck

      will feel the weight of my ass. But I wanted to feel exalted

      again and read the poems at the end of Dr. Zhivago and

      just barely made it. Suicide. Beauty takes my courage

      away this cold autumn evening. My year-old daughter’s red

      robe hangs from the doorknob shouting Stop.

      4

      I am four years older than you but scarcely an unwobbling

      pivot. It was no fun sitting around being famous, was it?

      I’ll never have to learn that lesson. You find a page torn

      out of a book and read it feeling that here you might find

      the mystery of print in such phrases as “summer was on the

      way” or “Gertrude regarded him somewhat quizzically.” Your

      Sagane was a fraud. Love poems to girls you never met living

      in a country you never visited. I’ve been everywhere to no

      particular purpose. And am well past love but not love poems.

      I wanted to fall in love on the coast of Ecuador but the girls

      were itsy-bitsy and showers are not prominent in that area.

      Unlike Killarney where I also didn’t fall in love the girls

      had good teeth. As in the movies the Latin girls proved to be

      spitfires with an endemic shanker problem. I didn’t fall in love

      in Palm Beach or Paris. Or London. Or Leningrad. I wanted to fall

      in love at the ballet but my seat was too far back to see faces

      clearly. At Sadko a pretty girl was sitting with a general

      and did not exchange my glance. In Normandy I fell in love but

      had colitis and couldn’t concentrate. She had a way of not paying

      any attention to me that could not be misunderstood. That is

      a year’s love story. Except Key West where absolutely nothing

      happened with romantic overtones. Now you might understand why

      I drink and grow fat. When I reach three hundred pounds there

      will be no more love problems, only fat problems. Then I will

      write reams of love poems. And if she pats my back a cubic yard

      of fat will jiggle. Last night I drank a hundred-proof quart

      and looked at a photo of my sister. Ten years dead. Show me a

      single wound on earth that love has healed. I fed my dying dog

      a pound of beef and buried her happy in the barnyard.

      5

      Lustra. Officially the cold comes from Manitoba;

      yesterday at sixty knots. So that the waves mounted

      the breakwater. The first snow. The farmers and carpenters

      in the tavern with red, windburned faces. I am in there

      playing the pinball machine watching all those delicious

      lights flutter, the bells ring. I am halfway through

      a bottle of vodka and am happy to hear Manitoba

      howling outside. Home for dinner I ask my baby daughter

      if she loves me but she is too young to talk. She cares

      most about eating as I care most about drinking. Our wants

      are simple as they say. Still when I wake from my nap

      the universe is dissolved in grief again. The baby is sleeping

      and I have no one to talk my language. My breath is shallow

      and my temples pound. Vodka. Last October in Moscow I taught

      a group of East Germans to sing “Fuck Nixon,” and we were

      quite happy until the bar closed. At the newsstand I saw a

      picture of Bella Akhmadulina and wept. Vodka. You would have

      liked her verses. The doorman drew near, alarmed. Outside

      the KGB floated through the snow like arctic bats.

      Maybe I belong there. They won’t let me print my verses. On the

      night train to Leningrad I will confess everything to someone.

      All my books are remaindered and out of print. My face in

      the mirror asks me who I am and says I don’t know. But stop

      this whining. I am alive and a hundred thousand acres of birches

      around my house wave in the wind. They are women standing

      on their heads. Their leaves on the ground today are small

      saucers of snow from which I drink with endless thirst.

      6

      Fruit and butter. She smelled like the skin of an apple.

      The sun was hot and I felt an unbounded sickness with earth.

      A single October day began to last a year. You can’t fuck

      your life away, I thought. But you can! Listening in Nepal

      to those peahens scream in the evening. Then, through the glade,

      lordly he enters, his ass a ten-foot fan, a painting by a crazed

      old master. Look, they are human. Heads the size of two knuckles.

      But returning to her buttery appleness and autumn, my dead friend.

      We cannot give our lives over to women. Kneeling there under that

      vulgar sugar maple tree I couldn’t breathe and with a hundred

      variations of red above me and against my mouth. She said I’m

      going away to Oregon perhaps. I said that I’m going myself to

      California where I hear they sleep out every night. So that

      ended that and the fan was tucked neatly and the peahens’ screams

      were heard no more in the land and old ladies and old men slept

      soundly again and threw away their cotton earplugs and the earth

      of course was soaked with salt and August passed without a single

      ear of corn. Of course this was only one neighborhood. Universality

      is disgusting. But you had your own truly insurmountable horrors

      with that dancer, lacking all wisdom as you did. Your critic said

      you were “often revolted by your sensuality.” He means

      all of that endless fucking of course. Tsk tsk. Put one measure

      against another and how rarely they fuse, and how almost never is

      there any fire and how often there is only boredom and a craving

      for cigarettes, a sandwich, or a drink. Particularly a drink.

      I am drunk because I no longer can love. I make love and I’m

      writing on a blackboard. Once it was a toteboard, a gun handle

      until I myself became a notch. And a notch, to be obvious, is a

      nothing. This all must pass as a monk’s tale, a future lie.

      7

      Death thou comest when I had thee least in mind, said Everyman

      years ago in England. Can’t get around much anymore. So it’s

      really a terrible surprise unless like you we commit suicide.

      I
    worry some that the rope didn’t break your neck, but that

      you dangled there strangling from your body’s weight. Such

      physics can mean a rather important matter of three or four

      minutes. Then I would guess there was a moment of black peacefulness

      then you were hurtling in space like a mortar. Who can say

      if a carcass smiles, if the baggage is happy at full rest. The

      child drowns in a predictable puddle or inside the plastic bag

      from which you just took your tuxedo. The evening is certainly

      ruined and we can go on from there but that too is predictable.

      I want to know. I have no explanations for myself but if someone

      told me that my sister wasn’t with Jesus they would get an

      ass-kicking. There’s a fascinating tumor called a melanoma

      that apparently draws pigment from surrounding tissue until

      it’s black as coal. That fatal lump of coal tucked against the

      spine. And of all things on earth a bullet can hit human

      flesh is one of the least resistant. It’s late autumn and this

      is an official autumnal mood, a fully sanctioned event in which

      one may feel the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. But

      as poets we would prefer to have a star fall on us, (that meteor

      got me in the gizzard!), or lightning strike us and not while we’re

      playing golf but perhaps in a wheat field while we’re making

      love in a thunderstorm, or a tornado take us away outside of

      Mingo, Kansas, like Judy Garland unfortunately. Or a rainbow

      suffocate us. Or skewered dueling that mighty forces of anti-

      art. Maybe in sleep as a Gray Eminence. A painless sleep of course.

      Or saving a girl from drowning who turns out to be a mermaid.

      8

      I cleaned the granary dust off your photo with my shirtsleeve.

      Now that we are tidy we can wait for the host to descend

      presumably from the sky as that seems to exhaust the alternatives.

      You had a nice summer in the granary. I was out there with you

      every day in June and July writing one of my six-week wonders,

      another novel. Loud country music on the phonograph, wasps

      and bees and birds and mice. The horses looked in the window

      every hour or so, curious and rather stupid. Chief Joseph stared

      down from the wall at both of us, a far nobler man than

      we ever thought possible. We can’t lead ourselves and he led

      a thousand with a thousand horses a thousand miles. He was a god

      and had three wives when one is usually more than enough for

      a human. These past weeks I have been organizing myself into

      my separate pieces. I have the limberness of a man twice my age

      and this is as good a time as any to turn around. Joseph was

      very understanding, incidentally, when the Cavalry shot so many

      of the women and children. It was to be expected. Earth is

      full of precedents. They hang around like underground trees

      waiting for their chance. The fish swam around four years solid

      in preparation for August the seventh, 1972, when I took his life

      and ate his body. Just as we may see our own ghosts next to

      us whose shapes we will someday flesh out. All of this suffering

      to become a ghost. Yours held a rope, manila, straight from

      the tropics. But we don’t reduce such glories to a mudbath.

      The ghost giggles at genuflections. You can’t buy him a drink.

      Out in a clearing in the woods the other day I got up on a

      stump and did a little dance for mine. We know the most fright-

      ening time is noon. The evidence says I’m halfway there, such

      wealth I can’t give away, thirty-four years of seconds.

      9

      What if I own more paper clips than I’ll ever use in this

      lifetime? My other possessions are shabby: the house half-

      painted, the car without a muffler, one dog with bad eyes

      and the other dog a horny moron. Even the baby has a rash on

      her neck but then we don’t own humans. My good books were

      stolen at parties long ago and two of the barn windows are

      broken and the furnace is unreliable and field mice daily

      feed on the wiring. But the new foal appears healthy though

      unmanageable, crawling under the fence and chased by my wife

      who is stricken by the flu, not to speak of my own body which

      has long suffered the ravages of drink and various nervous

      disorders that make me laugh and weep and caress my shotguns.

      But paper clips. Rich in paper clips to sort my writings which

      fill so many cartons under the bed. When I attach them I say

      it’s your job after all to keep this whole thing together. And

      I used them once with a rubber band to fire holes into the

      face of the president hanging on the office wall. We have freedom.

      You couldn’t do that to Brezhnev much less Stalin on whose

      grave Mandelstam sits proudly in the form of the ultimate

      crow, a peerless crow, a crow without comparison on earth.

      But the paper clips are a small comfort like meeting someone

      fatter than myself and we both wordlessly recognize the fact

      or meeting someone my age who is more of a drunk, more savaged

      and hag-ridden until they are no longer human and seeing

      them on the street I wonder how their heads which are only

      wounds balance on the top of their bodies. A manuscript of

      a novel sits in front of me held together with twenty clips.

      It is the paper equivalent of a duck and a company far away

      has bought this perhaps beautiful duck and my time is free again.

      10

      It would surely be known for years after as the day I shot

      a cow. Walking out of the house before dawn with the sky an icy

      blackness and not one star or cockcrow or shiver of breeze, the rifle

      barrel black and icy to the touch. I walked a mile in the dark

      and a flushed grouse rose louder than any thunderclap. I entered

      a neck of a woodlot I’d scouted and sat on a stump waiting for

      a deer I intended to kill. But then I was dressed too warmly

      and had a formidable hangover with maybe three hours of sleep so

      I slept again seeing a tin open-fronted café in Anconcito down

      on the coast of Ecuador and the eyes of a piglet staring at me as

      I drank my mineral water dazed with the opium I had taken for

      la turista. Crippled syphilitic children begging, one little boy

      with a tooth as long as a forefinger, an ivory tusk which would

      be pulled on maturity and threaded as an amulet ending up finally

      in Moscow in a diplomatic pouch. The boy would explore with his

      tongue the gum hole for this Russian gift. What did he know about

      Russia. Then carrying a naked girl in the water on my shoulders

      and her short hairs tickled the back of my neck with just the suggestion

      of a firm grip behind them so if I had been stupid enough to turn

      around I might have suffocated at eighteen and not written you

      any letters. There were bristles against my neck and hot breath

      in my hair. It must be a deer smelling my hair so I wheeled and shot.

      But it was a cow and the muzzle blast was blue in the gray light.

      She bawled horribly and ran in zigzags. I put her away with a shot

      to the head. What will I do with this cow? It’s a guernsey and she

      won’t be milked this morning. I knelt
    and stared into her huge eyeball,

      her iris making a mirror so I combed my hair and thought about the

      whole dreary mess. Then I walked backward through a muddy orchard

      so I wouldn’t be trailed, got in my car and drove to New York nonstop.

      11

      for Diane W.

      No tranquil pills this year wanting to live peeled as they

      described the nine throats of Cerberus. Those old greek names

      keep popping up. You can tell we went to college and our sleep

      is troubled. There are geographical equivalents for exotic tropes

      of mind; living peeled was the Desert Inn in Tucson talking with D.W.

      about love and art with so much pain my ears rung and the breath

      came short. And outside the fine desert air wasn’t fine anymore:

      the indians became kachina dolls and a girl was tortured daily

      for particular reasons. This other is our Akhmatova and often we want

      to hide from her – seasoned as she is in so many hells. But why paint

      her for one of the dead who knew her pungency of love, the unforgivable

      low-tide smell of it, how few of us bear it for long before reducing

      it to a civil act. You were odd for a poet attaching yourself

      to a woman no less a poet than yourself. It still starts with

      the dance. In the end she probably strangled you and maybe back

      in Ryazan there was a far better bird with less extravagant plumage.

      But to say I’m going to spend the day thinking wisely about

      women is to say I’m going to write an indomitably great poem before

      lunch or maybe rule the world by tomorrow dawn. And I couldn’t

      love one of those great SHES – it’s far too late and they are far

      too few to find anyway though that’s a driveling excuse. I saw one

      in a tree and on a roof. I saw one in a hammock and thigh-deep

      in a pond. I saw one out in the desert and sitting under a willow

      by the river. All past tense you notice and past haunting but not

      past caring. What did she do to you and did you think of her when

      your terrible shadow fell down the wall. I see that creature sitting

      on the lawn in Louveciennes, the mistress of a superior secret. We

     


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