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    Hotel Lautréamont

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      But since it was night, no one knew or cared. The owl,

      For all his feathers, was a-cold. Peace lay in sections

      On the raised edge of a circus ring, where sawdust

      Conjures belly’s emptiness and the recent elections

      Are commented. Men prowl

      Beside the recently abandoned pier

      Sprung from any concept, from reckonings, crust

      Of someone else’s negligence, our cognizance.

      O skate too far away, or else backpack, backtrack

      Into the hay of an argument dimly seen, unscathed

      Like time. The more marbles to our monument

      The more the future won’t be any less real to us, enswathed

      In Hyperborean conundrums—that’s as may be. To bushwhack

      From here to Petaluma, then chance

      Failed irrigation canals, faults, is my soul’s sole integument.

      I FOUND THEIR ADVICE

      When you hear the language

      (not the spirit of the language) it unfolds like a shelf

      just to be equal with the level you have risen to.

      A change takes place. No longer are steel leviathans erected

      at points of entry to the city. The clouds have come down

      to be a part of what they and we so long dreaded.

      And we who cling in wonderment to a sheer surface

      like chains of bubbles, we who talk and lecture,

      know that it is half-past five, that what we were learning

      has begun.

      Who thought we weren’t learning because we hadn’t stopped learning,

      know all learning is going. In the silence, the dear gray

      crevices are scrutable as ever. But knowing

      time as a blur comforts us, seals us

      from inherited light, too fast and unsorted: who

      knows what organic matter is contained there,

      what difference to the environment?

      The last fires are banked, the strip-search is less precise.

      Now they just ask you what you’re doing here,

      or were doing here; it’s not a ceremonial

      but it doesn’t jostle. The garden, the atrium are included

      I’m afraid in the voice of praise, and the sleeping vines

      machined for this feeling that has to leave:

      willful, a chance for us.

      FRENCH OPERA

      Hi. I’m bob.

      The long flight is over

      and they have returned to the places

      where they live in the ground.

      The beloved past

      is near, cautiously optimistic:

      I’ve laid so much drawing over

      the empty, original square, that it

      almost ties figure

      to ground, plot to decaying

      character, last year with next.

      I’m like a keeper of drawings:

      they’re fragile, lonely sometimes,

      like best friends erected on the dark lace

      of the sometime sonatas. Only let me not

      checker my face with the derring-do of

      having once been somewhere, of

      having been brought down from the mountains

      to testify in court, and gone back up again,

      senseless, the stenographer reminds

      us. We’re trying to adhere

      to it, to give you some money to tell her

      you’re here. In the responsory we could make

      it go somewhere, round and round

      the track if you wish, but do we

      know where they teach? Do they sing?

      In French opera, Charpentier’s Julien,

      for example, the problem is always the listener’s:

      trying to make sense of it all and feel sorry

      for the characters and still keep faith

      in ourselves and what others are doing, industriously,

      nay, zealously, and the payoff

      is always in the next yard.

      Still, no building collapses.

      Reinforcements are on the way.

      There is a whole lot of colored

      imagery to sort out and sift away,

      being careful not to get any of it

      on one’s clothes. There are forklifts

      and fedoras. In short this is that

      old chapel scene you once wanted to know

      about, except that moving sands cover

      the boards then as always.

      You might wish to shift in your chair.

      A STIFLED NOTATION

      No one ever oversleeps

      until the time you are to improve your life, and then

      what’s one superstition more or less?

      The lives, I guess. And it’s best to be early

      about things, not drink too much,

      lest the pattern be seen in its undoing.

      The judges march backward up the steps.

      Well, you’ve solved this week’s problem,

      but the wind is wailing a little too enthusiastically

      as the garden takes up the fugue at a point

      where it’s impossible to be lonesome and valid anymore.

      The fishes swim, birds plod fustily

      with heaven-dividing cries, until the whole world seems soaked

      in the boredom of that sorrow you were promised,

      but also

      crazy with love and self-deception. Sometimes a charcoal sketch

      of a refrigerator is supposed to be the edge.

      How long you had no aim

      for no other stream.

      HAUNTED STANZAS

      It has been raining on and off for a week now:

      drip, drip. Already we are beginning to feel the effects of this,

      as life slides insensibly onward. In one corner

      a harpsichord is shelling peas. Watch out for rowboats!

      When the new series of etudes was published it

      caused quite a stir in the musical world.

      Darkness was more perfect. Happiness no longer

      was a thing to hold on to, but became a great curve,

      listening instead. We don’t know what pressures

      you to behave as we do. We only do it out

      of fear and love, meddling like

      guardian angels with what does in fact concern us

      a little.

      Unbattered the storm plays, like a lion cub,

      the bolts tremendous, and the basement is still coming apart.

      I am less than enthused though a cautious display of differentiated

      levels would be the appropriate note here. The thing done,

      and the apron that came after.

      I am not prepared to give up my life for a few drawings.

      Nevertheless I want reassurance, as if this were the Mesozoic era and

      people saw themselves differently as so much meat and whiskers.

      I’m not sure I wouldn’t have been enchanted

      to have those advantages and see how women live when they’re away

      from men and don’t have to think about it.

      So the carpenter makes a list of

      whatever might be needed and the ritual

      gains in transparency from that.

      Even the little piles of dust in the schoolyard had their say

      and thought differently about it only they came to be in the end

      what navigators had never asked for: the whole planisphere

      pressed into one’s hand like currants.

      Who praises rigor?

      The ones who have less to lose. Who live

      in harm’s way and poetry is as a vice to them. Never

      mind, it is more meaningful that the settlers were unwearied,

      as, given our best days, we all are. So I feel connected,

      the car slithers forward, meanwhile

      let me lick your shirt. I have an honest proposition to make

      to you, one that I hope you’ll find rewarding: turn


      your back so as not to see the parade of prisoners escaping.

      It’ll do them good and it’ll do you good. You have it in your power

      to offer proof of the equations amid the alembics of the tower

      where the gas flares and your nerves buzz. Well?

      Shouldn’t you be off and running? Until another day, then.

      And he saddles his horse, which he called “Old Paint” (never

      knew why, except that its rough exterior was somewhat suggestive of old paint)

      and that was it. But I want to pray for you, whole

      afternoons-worth, I do. But sometimes the sledge is honest. It bears us away.

      LIVELONG DAYS

      Feather in your cap? Not from heeding

      the half-lit messages of other writers

      you cherish and would like to forget.

      I sat at my desk; the storm was brewing

      on an April morning. The sun still shone

      and the bud had blasted. There were shadows on the ground.

      Yet I sat, not doing, not worrying whether we’re living in it right.

      And when her younger sister found out who I was,

      why, that would take precedence. Certainly

      we’d all be here a while longer

      that would mean time to find out,

      to test the fiddle’s scrolled-up tensions

      in case everything came out all right.

      Those were the days for living in a sack,

      a loose one for answering the door in.

      The neighbors kept you up all night

      with whispering and indecisions. It was time to

      look into “Aunt Agatha’s Tried and True Recipes” just to see

      who was mulling it and if they could

      somehow get back to you once the joint was cold.

      Alas, these spoke only in terms appropriate to the occasion,

      too much so, in fact. Where was the residue

      of calm fear, the notices

      to convene with the lawn chairs, that prompted inspection of other

      recent ordinances? And the doormat wiggled like a ghost

      in the draft under the door but there was quite a lot to be said

      and none willing to go down, slog down if need be, the painted stair

      whose ends were invisible

      in this tide of sick summer light

      wherever feet chose to take one, here

      among the weeds and provisions, there in the rue,

      and make chaff of all we built, all we had constructed against.

      That is a way of being, it said. All right,

      I won’t argue, but show me the increment, fine as lint,

      apparently, that tips it, festoons

      a tree in the room, and finally delivers the book

      to a publisher just as the door is closing. I won’t envy it.

      If I had the wings of an angel something, or everything,

      would be slightly different, and you’d see: it would

      come out in play. The differences that make us inexact now would

      chase us into learning from that space, that pure longing

      for the pauses just past, multiplying like mythologies, apples.

      QUARTET

      Always

      because I saw the most beautiful

      name go down ahead of mine

      I’m banished to an asteroid

      perfect meld of soppy common sense

      with somewhere a loose connection

      only don’t make me think it

      always

      I’m figuring out what went just before

      with that which comes too late:

      invitation to a pool party

      where the hors-d’oeuvres are free

      as well as the first drink but not

      the later ones

      this was pretty late in the season

      for me I told a tired invisible guest

      but one must invade new premises

      scout new locations

      from time to time I said he seemed

      to agree

      that my date hadn’t been seen in some time

      oh well I was trying to lose her suppose

      we go upstairs and just have a look round

      flash bulbs popping

      I said

      well anyway as it is baked so shall it endure

      and the co-ordinated midriffs be here

      at 10:30 sharp no one moves

      before every hand is on stage I

      think I know what that meant he said

      there’d be no more coffee and doughnuts

      before this smooth introduction I believe I’m

      one of your friends of course he said make room for Miss Scott

      I suppose it’s idle of me to worry

      how other people will take the cold

      it belongs to each of us like a blanket

      and like fear doesn’t go away

      though it does go away in the evening

      and return in the morning

      and each of us deals with it

      like bowels or bladder like

      it or not I said we is each

      a machine for milling or sorting whatever

      gets digested or eliminated there’s no

      planning to stop for a while

      taking a brief vacation

      taking in some theater or old film

      it’s useless because bad

      we pronounced ourselves part of the

      joint agreement

      and indeed I just meant to come back for a moment

      to make sure I hadn’t left anything behind

      and lo and behold I am the central protagonist

      in this cabana and all that was

      going to be hid from me is hid

      and everything looks quite normal

      and so I shall approve the document

      there’s no earthly reason not to

      is there

      I said and he said no it’s all past in the weather

      and no matter what private associations are

      set in motion by this train of thought no

      change can ever be the result

      I saw where he was leading

      and it was centuries before I could disentangle

      my sense of what I thought was right from the legal

      obligation to bind everything into a sheaf

      to recognize myself on your mirror

      when we both returned to the dark pond

      agreeing it best to nourish the affection

      with toasts and witty consolation

      rather than undertake a new epic

      that might get bogged down in production

      anything rather than those covered wagons

      converging on a new day and he said I’m with you

      I can’t understand what the cue cards

      mean about it snowing outside the sanitarium

      solarium and is it true I am to spend my entire life meddling

      with someone else’s desires and then piecing

      everything together just before it all blows up and I can

      say yes once I had the meaning of it it was pretty good

      and now all can see the meaning in it and I have forgotten

      it all but it all still seems pretty good I guess he said

      And now I cannot remember how I would have had it. It is not a conduit (confluence?) but a place. The place, of movement and an order. The place of old order. But the tail end of the movement is new. Driving us to say what we are thinking. It is so much like a beach after all, where you stand and think of going no further. And it is good when you get to no further. It is like a reason that picks you up and places you where you always wanted to be. This far. It is fair to be crossing, to have crossed. Then there is no promise in the other. Here it is. Steel and air, a mottled presence, small panacea and lucky for us. And then it got very cool.

      OEUVRES COMPLÈTES

      Everyone seemed pleased, even the then-invisible statisticians


      who brought us to this pass. My barometer is working well;

      a drop of milk in the scudding blue thinks so.

      Maybe if I were shorter

      the sky would stand up to greet me contemptuously

      in that endearing way it sometimes has. My train is being flagged down.

      Surely it’s time to go where they want us to go.

      I was never big on reading

      though I enjoyed singing when I knew the words

      which wasn’t that often. And you, you sang with me

      in the evenings for a while, and Minnie and Joe the goat joined in.

      It was as impossible to enjoy the unseemliness of that present

      as it was not to forget it, to cover it with showers

      once spring had come. Once spring had come

      the gigantic tail of a horse projected beyond the barn door.

      The tail, I mean the tale, was beginning for us again

      in ways too complicated to scrutinize, but we did come up with a set of questions.

      Then the interviewer said that was all for that day.

      The vice-president looked tired.

      Back in my shack at low tide

      I rehearsed the speech I would never have occasion to deliver.

      Once I put pebbles in my mouth

      though it lent no conviction to the list of wildflowers I was annotating.

      I would say that on the whole it has been a good experience,

      but I would also say that everything has been a good experience.

      I touched needles, and learned how they were sharp.

      Later I became a sharp dresser

      having mastered the art of mix and match.

      I think I’m going home now, to tea, it’s sleepy:

      just say maybe sir, ask the right gent

      about it, he always gets it right

      and then we’re on the right track, which is always a relief,

      isn’t it? But I have something to tell you.

      It was wrong of you to play this far, first; and when you had finished

      you should not have raised your eyes to the sea that blinded us

      through the open doors, even as you thought you had married it

      and were obliged to. Or something. At this rate none of us will get our

      sponge in time, while the river overflows with fish.

      Be careful of that puddle.

      If they knew we had indulged each other—but what earthly

      use does anything have? Why are we here? I’ll tell you:

      it’s so the little naked man can run out into the grass

      that towers over him, sprayed with dewdrops,

     


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