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    The Shape of the Journey: New & Collected Poems

    Page 28
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      A lovely woman in Minnesota owned a 100-year-old horse, 378

      A / quarter horse, no rider, 38

      A scenario: I’m the Star, Lauren, Faye, Ali, little stars, 164

      A whiff of that dead bird along the trail, 443

      After the “invitation” by the preacher she collapsed in the, 177

      After the passing of irresistible, 352

      After thirty years of work, 363

      Ah, yes. Fame never got anyone, 288

      Aieeee was said in a blip the size of an ostrich egg, 182

      All of those little five-dollar-a-week rooms smelling thick of, 209

      All those girls dead in the war from misplaced or aimed, 160

      Amid pale green milkweed, wild clover, 46

      An afterthought to my previous note; we must closely watch any self-, 221

      Anconcito. The fisheater. Men were standing on cork rafts, 228

      As a child, fresh out of the hospital, 356

      As a geezer one grows tired of the story, 432

      At dawn I squat on the garage, 45

      At 8:12 AM all of the watches in the world are being wound, 227

      At Hard Luck Ranch the tea is hot, 365

      At the strip club in Lincoln, Nebraska, 366

      August, a dense heat wave at the cabin, 341

      Awake: / the white hand of, 44

      Bear died standing up, 394

      Behind my back I have returned to life with much more surprise, 213

      Beware, o wanderer, the road is walking too, 374

      Come down to earth! Get your head out of your ass!, 372

      Concha is perhaps seven, 433

      Coyote’s bloody face makes me, 452

      Dear friend. It rained long and hard after a hot week and when I, 220

      Death thou comest when I had thee least in mind, said Everyman, 203

      Deep in the forest there is a pond, 89

      Dog, the lightning frightened us, dark house and both of us, 176

      Down in the bone myth of the cellar, 345

      Driving east on buddha’s birthday, 283

      Dusk over the lake, 31

      Dust followed our car like a dry brown cloud, 32

      Every year, when we’re fly-fishing for tarpon, 336

      Everywhere I go I study the scars on earth’s face, 373

      First memory, 278

      For my horse, Brotherinlaw, who had no character, 157

      For my mentor, long dead, Richard Halliburton, 338

      For the first time / far in the distance, 396

      For the first time the wind, 281

      Form is the woods: the beast, 9

      From the roof the night’s the color, 83

      Fruit and butter. She smelled like the skin of an apple, 202

      Ghazal in fear there might not be another, 171

      Go, my songs, 30

      Go to sleep. Night is a coal pit, 79

      God I am cold and want to go to sleep for a long time, 184

      Going in the bar last Sunday night I noticed that they were having, 222

      Great-uncle Wilhelm, Mennonite, patriarch, 21

      Hammering & drifting. Sea wrack. Cast upon & cast out, 293

      He climbed the ladder looking over the wall at the party, 190

      He Halts. He Haw. Plummets, 111

      He is young. The father is dead, 12

      He said the grizzly sat eating the sheep and when the bullet, 137

      He sings from the bottom of a well but she can hear him up, 149

      He thinks of the dead. But they, 27

      He waits to happen with the clear, 33

      Hear this touch: grass parts, 13

      Home again. It looked different for a moment, 375

      Hotei didn’t need a zafu, 326

      How can I be alone when these brain cells, 448

      How heavy I am. My feet sink into the ground and my knees, 411

      How long, stone, did it take, 43

      How much better these actual dreams, 449

      How the love of Tarzan in Africa haunted my childhood, 451

      I am four years older than you but scarcely an unwobbling, 200

      I am walked on a leash by my dog and am water, 158

      I can hear the cow dogs sleeping, 419

      I cleaned the granary dust off your photo with my shirtsleeve, 204

      I confess that here and there in my life, 370

      I couldn’t walk across that bridge in Hannibal, 159

      I don’t have any medals. I feel their lack, 198

      I forgot to say that at the moment of death Yesenin, 397

      I have to kill the rooster tomorrow. He’s being an asshole, 279

      I haven’t accepted the fact that I’ll never understand, 372

      I hedge when I say “my farm,” 427

      I imagined her dead, killed by some local maniac who, 151

      I just heard a loon-call on a TV ad, 353

      I know a private mountain range, 428

      I load my own shells and have a suitcase of pressed, 130

      I once thought that life’s what’s left over after, 379

      I sat on a log fallen over a river and heard, 438

      I shall commit suicide or die, 297

      I think of the twenty thousand poems of Li Po, 40

      I think that night’s our balance, 55

      I thought it was night but found out the windows were painted, 185

      I told the dark-haired girl to come down out of the apple, 146

      I traded a girl, 119

      I walked the same circular path today, 420

      I want a sign, a heraldic bird, or even an angel at midnight, 155

      I want to be worthy of this waking dream, 231

      I want to bother you with some recent nonsense; a classmate dropped, 219

      I want to die in the saddle. An enemy of civilization, 122

      I wanted to feel exalted so I picked up, 199

      I was commanded, in a dream naturally, 436

      I was commissioned in a dream by Imanja, 337

      I was hoping to travel the world, 430

      I was lucky enough to have invented a liquid heart, 180

      I was proud at four that my father called me Little Turd of Misery, 208

      I was sent far from my land of bears, 435

      I was walking because I wasn’t upstairs sitting, 294

      I went to Tucson and it gave, 367

      I will walk down to a marina, 327

      I won my wings! I got all A’s! We bought fresh fruit! The toilet, 223

      If I’m not mistaken, everyone seems to go back, 378

      If that bald head gets you closer to Buddha, 372

      If you laid out all the limbs from the Civil War hospital, 167

      If you love me drink this discolored wine, 60

      If you were less of a vowel or had a full stop in your, 168

      Imagine being a dog and never knowing what you’re doing. You’re, 210

      In Montana the badger looks at me in fear, 445

      In the best sense, 343

      In the Cabeza Prieta from a hillock I saw no human sign, 440

      In the end you are tired of those places, 99

      In the hotel room (far above the city) I said I bet you, 156

      In the next installment I’ll give you Crazy Horse and Anne Frank, 374

      In the pasture a shire, 28

      In the snow, that is. The “J” could have been, 277

      Inside people fear the outside; outside, the in, 375

      It certainly wasn’t fish who discovered water, 369

      It is an hour before dawn and even prophets sleep, 144

      It is difficult to imagine the wordless conversations, 371

      It is the lamp on the kitchen table, 292

      It was Monday morning for most of the world, 377

      It wasn’t until the sixth century that the Christians, 373

      It would surely be known for years after as the day I shot, 206

      I’ve emerged from the seven-going-on-eight divorces, 380

      I’ve known her too long, 14

      I’ve w
    asted too much moonlight, 363

      Jesus wants me for a sunbeam, I sang in Sunday, 377

      Just before dark, 383

      Just like today eternity is accomplished, 369

      Just seven weeks ago in Paris, 384

      Li Ho of the province of Honan, 47

      “Life’s too short to be a whore anymore,” 441

      Limp with night fears: hellebore, wolfsbane, 123

      Lin-chi says, having thrown away your head so long, 371

      Looking at a big moon too long, 399

      Lustra. Officially the cold comes from Manitoba, 201

      Man’s not a singing animal, 39

      Many a sharp-eyed pilot has noticed, 426

      Maps. Maps. Maps. Venezuela, Keewanaw, Iceland open up, 150

      March 5: first day without a fire, 331

      Mind follow the nose, 90

      More lion prints in our creek bed, 368

      My favorite stump straddles a gully a dozen, 434

      My left eye is blind and jogs like, 10

      My soul grew weak and polluted during captivity, 442

      My zabuton doubles as a dog bed. Rose sleeps, 368

      Naturally we would prefer seven epiphanies a day and an earth, 215

      Near a brown river with carp no doubt pressing their, 132

      New Matrices, all ice. Fixed here and solidly, 232

      New music might, that sucks men down in howls, 170

      No tranquil pills this year wanting to live peeled as they, 207

      Not a new poem for Helen, 75

      Not here and now but now and here, 366

      Not how many different birds I’ve seen, 453

      Not those who have lived here and gone, 87

      Nothing is the same to anyone, 299

      Now changed. None come to Carthage. No cauldrons, all love, 134

      Now this paste of ash and water, 85

      O Atlanta, roseate dawn, the clodhoppers, hillbillies, rednecks, 145

      O BLM, BLM, and NFS, 424

      O happy day! Said overpowered, had by it all and transfixed, 153

      O she buzzed in my ear “I love you” and I dug at, 174

      O that girl, only young men, 425

      O to use the word wingéd as in bird or victory or airplane for, 224

      O triple sob – turned forty, 282

      O well, it was the night of the terrible jackhammer, 191

      Of the hundred swans in West Bay, 84

      On the fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost I rose early, 187

      On this back road the land, 16

      Once and for all there’s no genetic virtue, 378

      Once and for all to hear, I’m not going to shoot anybody, 166

      Once I saw a wolf tread a circle in his cage, 26

      One part of the brain attacks another, 364

      Our minds buzz like bees, 363

      Our pup is gravely ill, 365

      Out in an oak-lined field down the road, 369

      Overlooking the Mississippi, 381

      Peach sky, 413

      Poor little blind boy lost in the storm, 365

      Praise me at Durkheim Fair where I’ve never been, hurling, 138

      Returning at night, 18

      Rich folks keep their teeth, 348

      Sam got tired of the way life fudged the big issues, 379

      Says Borges in Ficciones, “I’m in hell.

      I’m dead,” and the dark, 140

      Says he, “Ah Edward I too have a dark past of manual labor,” 135

      She called from Sundance, Wyoming, and said the posse had, 188

      She / pulls the sheet of this dance, 247

      She said in LA of course that she’d be reincarnated as an Indian princess, 446

      Shoju sat all night in the graveyard, 364

      Six days of clouds since, 290

      Sleeping from Mandan to Jamestown, 295

      Some eco-ninny released, 422

      Some sort of rag of pure language, no dictums but a bell, 148

      Someone is screaming almost in Morse, 120

      Sometimes a toothpick is the most important thing, 376

      Song, / angry bush, 22

      Song for Nat King Cole and the dog who ate the baby, 169

      Song, I am unused to you, 48

      Spring: despondency, 286

      Standing at the window at night, 37

      Stuffing a crow call in one ear, 296

      Sunday, with two weeks of heat lifting from us in a light rain, 412

      Talked to the God of Hosts about the Native American, 370

      Ten thousand pointless equations left just after dawn, 373

      That dew-wet glistening wild iris, 421

      That great tree covered with snow, 34

      That heartless finch, botulinal. An official wheeze passes through, 142

      That her left foot is smaller if only slightly, 161

      That hot desert beach in Ecuador, 330

      That the housefly is guided in flight by a fly brain diminishes, 192

      That’s a dark trough we’d hide in. Said his, 172

      The alfalfa was sweet and damp in fields where shepherds, 131

      The blond girl, 346

      The boots were on the couch and had, 121

      The boy stood in the burning house.

      Set it up, 234

      The brain opens the hand which touches that spot, clinically, 139

      The child crawls in widening circles, backs to the wall, 183

      The clouds swirling low past the house and, 175

      The color of a poppy and bruised, the subalpine green that, 136

      The dawn of the day we arrived, Abel Murrietta, 376

      The earth is almost round. The seas, 86

      The four seasons, the ten oaths, the nine colors, three vowels, 371

      The girl’s bottom is beautiful as Peacock’s dancing bear, 377

      The hound I’ve known for three years, 366

      The last and I’m shrinking from the coldness of your spirit: that, 226

      The little bull calf gets his soft pink, 423

      The mad have black roots in their brains, 80

      The masques of dream – monk in his, 287

      The mirror tastes him, 20

      The monk is eighty-seven. There’s no fat, 370

      The mushrooms helped again: walking hangdoggedly to the granary, 216

      The night is thin and watery; fish in the air, 141

      The resplendent female “elegant trogon,” 444

      The rising sun not beet, 391

      The rivers of my life, 303

      The soul of water. The most involved play. She wonders if she, 211

      The sound of the dog’s pawsteps move away, 376

      The sun had shrunk to a dime, 82

      The sun’s warm against the slats of the granary, 49

      The wallet is as big as earth, 447

      The wars: we’re drawn to them, 70

      The well pit is beneath where the pump shed burned, 363

      The world is wrenched on her pivot, shivering. Politicians, 375

      There are no calls from the outside, 285

      There are no magic numbers or magic lives, 65

      There was a peculiar faint light from low in the east, 193

      There’s something I’ve never known, 355

      These corners that stick out and catch on things, 181

      These last few notes to you have been a bit somber like biographies, 218

      These losses are final – you walked out of the grape arbor, 186

      These simple rules to live within – a black, 328

      Things to paint, 284

      This adobe is no protection against the flossy, 370

      This amber light floating strangely upward in the woods – nearly, 152

      This bronze ring punctures, 41

      This is all it is, 229

      This is cold salt, 35

      This matted and glossy photo of Yesenin, 197

      This morning I felt strong and jaunty in my mail-order, 379

      This nadir: the wet hole, 92

      This other speaks of bones, blood-wet, 19


      This song stays, 91

      Through the blinds, 29

      Thus the poet is a beached gypsy, the first porpoise to whom it, 214

      Time eats us alive, 364

      Time gets foreshortened late at night, 368

      To answer some of the questions you might ask were you alive and, 217

      To move into it again, as it was, 88

      Today the warblers undulate, 429

      Today we’ve moved back to the granary again and I’ve anointed, 212

      Took my own life because I was permanently crippled, 380

      Trees die of thirst or cold, 36

      Try as you might there’s nothing, 431

      Unbind my hair, she says. The night is white and warm, 129

      Unwearied / the coo and choke, 42

      Up at the Hard Luck Ranch, 367

      Walking back on a chill morning past Kilmer’s Lake, 53

      Walking the lakeshore at first moonlight I can see, 374

      Way up a sandy draw in the foothills, 367

      We were much saddened by Bill Knott’s death, 147

      We’re nearing the end of this homage that often resembles a, 225

      What are these nightmares, 335

      What happens when the god of spring, 289

      What if I own more paper clips than I’ll ever use in this, 205

      What if it were our privilege, 334

      What in coils works with riddle’s logic, Riemann’s, 173

      What will I do with seven billion cubic feet of clouds, 154

      When she dried herself on the dock a drop of water, 163

      When she walked on her hands and knees in the Arab, 162

      Who could knock at this door left open, repeat, 165

      Who could put anything together that would stay in one place, 179

      Who is it up to if it isn’t up to you, 439

      Who remembers Wang Chi, “the real human like, 374

      Why did this sheep die? The legs are thin, stomach hugely, 143

      With each shot, 364

      With these dire portents, 340

      Wondering what this new light is, before he died he walked, 189

      Yes yes yes it was the year of the tall ships, 133

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      Jim Harrison is the author of twenty books, numerous screenplays, and served for several years as the food columnist for Esquire magazine. His work has been translated into twenty-two languages and produced as four feature-length films. As a young poet he co-edited Sumac magazine and earned a National Endowment for the Arts grant and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Mr. Harrison divides his time between northern Michigan and southern Arizona.

      BOOKS BY JIM HARRISON

      Poetry

      Plain Song

      Locations

      Outlyer & Ghazals

      Letters to Yesenin

     


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