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    As We Know

    Page 4
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      Betray my own fatigue, and loss

      Of time, that ever, with nervous, accurate fingers

      Cross-hatches the shade in the corner

      Of the piazza where I stand, and leave

      The lighted areas scarcely perforated, almost

      Pristine. Lovers in parked cars

      Undulated like the sensibility that refrigerates

      Me at those times: and who

      Could pick up the pieces, over and over?

      Yes, it was a fine gift that you sent

      Me, your book, wherein I could read

      The very syllables of your soul, as dark-arched

      And true as any word

      You ever grunted, and whose truant

      Punctuation resumed again the thread

      Of what is outside, outdoors, and brought

      It all ingeniously around to the beginning again

      As a fountain swipes and never misses

      The basin’s fluted edge. But how in

      Heck can I get it operating again? Only

      Yesterday it was in perfect working order

      And now the thing has broken down again.

      Autumn rains rust it. And their motion

      Attacks my credulity also, and all seems lost.

      Yet fences were not ever built to last:

      A year or two and all is blown away

      And no trace can be found.

      As a last blessing

      Bestow this piece of shrewd, regular knowledge

      On me who hungers so much for something

      To calm his appetite, not food necessarily—

      The pattern behind the iris that lights up

      Your almost benevolent eyelash: turn

      All this anxious scrutiny into some positive

      Chunk to counteract the freedom

      Of too much speculation. Tell me

      What is on your mind, and do not explain it away.

      “The egrets are beginning their annual migration.

      From the banks of the Hag River a desolate

      Convoy issues, like a directional pointing hand.

      There is a limit to what the wilderness

      Can accomplish on its own, and meanwhile,

      Back in civilization, you don’t seem to be

      Doing too well either: those flying

      Bits of newspaper and plastic bags scarce

      Bode better for him who sits and picks at

      The secret, when suddenly

      The meaning knocks him down, a light bulb

      Appears in a balloon above his head: it had nothing

      To do with what the others were thinking, what

      Energies they poured into the mould of their

      Collective statement. It was only

      As a refugee from all this that living

      Were possible if at all, but it cast no shadow,

      No reflection in the mirror, and was nervous

      And waifed, so strong was the shuttle

      Of accurate presentiment plying directly

      Between it and the discarded past. Playing

      A game is the only way to see it through, and have it

      Finally integral, but the matter is that

      This is somewhere else: its rails

      Run deep into the leafy wilderness, sink

      And disappear under moss and slime

      Long before the end is reached. It’s a crime,

      And meanwhile your velvet portrait presides,

      Benevolent as Queen Anne, over the scene

      Below, and at no point

      Do reality and your joyous truth coincide.”

      So sang one who was in prison, and the erosion

      Process duly left its mark

      On the wall:

      Only a wan, tainted shadow leaned

      Down from the place where it had been.

      The eroding goes on constantly in the brain

      Where its music is softest, a lullaby

      On the edge of a precipice where the whole movement

      Of the night can be seen:

      How it begins, undresses, and disappears

      In hollows before the level is seen to rise.

      And then we are in a full, static music,

      Violent and spongy as bronze, but

      There is no need, no chance to examine

      The accidents of the surface that stretches away

      Forever, toward the ultramarine gates

      Of the horizon of this tidal basin, and beyond,

      Pouring silently into the vast concern

      Of heaven, in which the greatest explanation

      Is but a drop in the bucket of eternity;

      Mon rêve.

      But why, in that case,

      Whispered the petitioner, pushing her

      Magenta lips close to the thick wire mesh

      That separated them, rubbing

      Her gloved hand athwart it as though

      Devoured now by curiosity, can God

      Let the eroding happen at all, since it is all,

      As you say, horizontal, without

      Beginning or end, and seamless

      At the horizon where it bends

      Into a past which has already begun? In

      Truth, then, if we are particles of anything

      They must belong to our conception

      Of our destiny, and be as complete as that.

      It’s like we were children again: the bicycle

      Sighs and the stars pecking at the sky

      Are unconstrained in spite of the distance:

      The blanket buries us in a joyous tumult

      Of indifference when night is

      Blackest

      So that we grow up again as we were taught to do

      Before that. With the increase of joy

      The sorrow is precipitated out, and life takes on

      An uncanny resemblance to the photograph of me

      That everybody said was terrible, only now it is real

      And cannot be photographed.

      It was nice of you to love me

      But I must be thinking about getting back

      Over the mountain

      That divides day from night:

      Visions more and more restless

      All now sunk in black of Egypt.

      The enduring obloquy of a gaze struck

      The new year, cracking it open

      At the point where people and animals, each busy

      With his own thoughts, wandered away

      In unnamed directions. If there is a fire,

      I thought, why single out the glares

      Impaling those least near it

      In such a way as to reflect them back

      On its solid edifice? But here

      In a tissue of starlight, each is alone and valid.

      You can stand up to breathe

      And the garment falling around you is history,

      Someone’s, anyway, some perfectly accessible,

      Reasonable assessment of the recent past, which

      With its pattern dips into the shadow of the folds

      To re-emerge and be striking on the crest

      Of them somewhere, and thus serves

      Twice over, as plan and decoration,

      A garden plunged in sun seen through a fixed lattice

      Of regrets and doubts, pinned there

      For a variety of good reasons, alive, stupid

      As a sail stunned in a vast haze,

      Perfect for you. And you rise

      Imperfect and beautiful as a second, a continent

      Whose near coast alone can be seen, but

      Which makes up for that in the strength of the confusion

      Building behind it, and is at rest.

      And I’ll tell you why:

      The elaborate indifference of some people, of some person

      Far out on the curve

      Is always rescued by another person

      And this will be some forgotten day three years ago

      At today’s prices. The tensions, overlaid,

      Superimposed, produ
    ce an effect of “character”

      And quizzical harmony, like the outdoors.

      But on death’s dark river,

      On the demon’s charcoal-colored heaths

      Where the luscious light never falls, but fluffy

      Cinders are falling everywhere, the persons

      Gesture hurriedly at each other from a distance.

      Surely this is no time to play dumb, or dead, but

      A directive has not been issued.

      At the plant they know no more about it than you do

      Here, and in the dump behind

      They are singing of something else, trilling surely

      But no one any longer can make any sense of it.

      It is as though you had paid the bills

      But the sun keeps writhing: “For this

      I gave apples unto the tawny couch-grass, kept ledgers

      In my time, as you do in yours?

      That a badger with a trumpet on a far tussock

      May rake in the calls, and none of it

      Ever gets distributed to the poor, which I had stipulated

      As being part of the deal? And who are we poor workers?

      Not much surely, but we were

      Just getting over the shock of dispossession

      When this happened, and now this on top of it.

      Who is any the wiser? What are we to make of

      What now appears to be our lot, though we did nothing

      To deserve it? Our efforts were in some way

      Directed at a greater good, though we never forgot

      Our own interests, as long as they harmed no one.

      And now we are cast out like a stone. Surely

      The sun knows something I do not know

      Although I am the sun.”

      And slowly

      The results are brought in, and are found disappointing

      As broken blue birds’-eggs in a nest among rushes

      And we fall away like fish from the Grand Banks

      Into the inky, tepid depths beyond. It is said

      That this is our development, but no one believes

      It is, but no one has any authority to proceed further.

      And we keep chewing on darkness like a rind

      For what comfort it can give in the crevices

      Between us, like those between your eyes

      When you speak sideways to me, and I cannot

      Hear you, though farther out there are those

      Who hear you and are encouraged, and their effort

      Brightens on the side of the mountain.

      “I haven’t seen him since I’ve been here”—and I,

      All liking and no indifference, transfixed

      By the macaronic, like a florist, weary and slippy-eyed,

      Athwart blooms, compose, out of what the day provides,

      Mindful of teasing and subtle pressures put,

      Yet careful to seize the pen first. “What

      Have you been up to?” Well, this time has been very good

      For my working, the work is progressing, and so

      I assume it’s been good for you too, whose work

      Is also doubtless coming along, indeed, I know so

      From the sudden aging visible in both of us, tired

      And cozy around the eyes, as the work prepares to take off.

      Anyway, I am the author. I want to

      Talk to you for a while, teach you

      About some things of mine, some things

      I’ve put away, more still that I remember

      With a tinge of sadness, even

      Regret around the sunset hour, that puts these

      Things away, jettisons ’em, pulls the plug

      On ’em, the carpet out from under their feet:

      Even such, they say, as stand in narrow lanes

      Wanly soliciting passersby, but without much

      Hope of interest. Nevertheless, the

      Things I want to visit with you about

      Are important to me. I’ve kept them so long!

      Zephyrs are one. How

      Idly they played around me, around

      My wrists, even in the bygone time!

      And pictures—

      Pictures of capes and peninsulas

      With big clouds moving down on them,

      Pressing with a frightening weight—

      And shipwrecks barely seen (sometimes

      Not seen at all) through the snow

      In the foreground, and howling, ravenous gales

      In the background. Almost all landscapes

      Are generous, well proportioned, hence

      Welcome. We feel we have more in common with a

      Landscape, however shifty and ill-conceived,

      Than with a still-life: those oranges

      And apples, and dishes, what have they to do

      With us? Plenty, but it’s a relief

      To turn away from them. Portraits, on the other

      Hand, are a different matter—they have no

      Bearing on the human shape, their humanitarian

      Concerns are foreign to us, who dream

      And know not we are humane, though, as seen

      By others, we are. But this is about people.

      Right. That’s why landscapes are more

      Familiar, more what it’s all about—we can see

      Into them and come out on the other side. With

      People we just see another boring side of ourselves,

      One we may not know too well, but on the other

      Hand why should we be interested in it? Better

      The coffee pot and sewing basket of a still-life—

      It’s more human, if you want, I mean something

      A human is more likely to be interested in

      Than pictures of human beings, no matter how well drawn

      And sympathetic-looking. However, as the author

      Of this, I want to buy a certain picture,

      A still-life in fact, from a man who has one

      And need the permission of the man

      In order to do so. Unless I can acquire it

      I can never feel the point of any of this. Oh,

      I can see it intellectually, all right, but to really

      Feel it, experience it, I have to have the picture.

      That’s all. I’d hate to give it up.

      To be consigned to this world

      Of life, a sea-world

      Which forms, shapes,

      Faces probably decorate—

      It is all as you had suspected

      All along, my dear.

      They proliferate slowly, build,

      Then clog, and in weathering

      Become a foundation of sorts

      For what is afterwards to be erected

      On this plot of unfinal ecstasies—

      Benign, in sum. They don’t just go away, either.

      But like a hollow tower

      Let in some sun, and keep the wind

      Far hence; whatever can destroy

      Us loses, but it’s pretty hard to say

      How far we have come, how much accomplished

      And whether there’s a lot more to be said:

      But for stretches at a time of life the outlined

      Masks and scabbards which are our vague

      Impression of what is probably going on

      All around us, keep us distracted,

      From playing and working too hard.

      And yet life is not really for the squeamish either.

      The hyacinths are dying

      At the end of a broad blue day

      Whose words somehow have not touched you.

      Mad to sacrifice next to them

      In late life, you were “just looking”

      Instead when the uneasy feeling that a jewel

      Might someday be around crossed you

      But I can’t figure out

      What ever happened. You treasured it,

      I contain you, and there are a few clouds

      Down near the baseboard of the room that prevent


      Us from ever continuing our conversation

      About the terrible lake that exists behind us.

      Piss and destruction

      Are the order of the day, the office blues,

      The Monday morning smiling through tears

      That never come.

      Partly because you always expect the impossible,

      But also because here, on the level of personal

      Life, it becomes easier to say, nay, think

      The transversals that haven’t stopped

      Defining our locus, have indeed only begun

      To, you are invited, and cannot refuse,

      To share this wall

      Of painted wooden tulips, the wooden clouds

      In the sky behind it, to feel the intensity

      As it is there. Good news travels fast

      But what about the news you forgot

      To tell until now, so we can’t tell

      All that much about it? Well, it joins us.

      The ground is soaked with tears.

      The tears of centuries are being wiped away.

      The tower is beaded with sweat that

      Has smiled down on our effort

      For so long.

      The lovers saunter away.

      It is a mild day in May.

      With music and birdsong alway

      And the hope of love in the way

      The sleeve detaches itself from the body

      As the two bodies do from the throng of gay

      Lovers on the prowl that do move and sway

      In the game of sunrise they play

      For stakes no higher than the gray

      Ridge of loam that protects the way

      Around the graveyard that sexton worm may

      Take to the mound Death likes to stay

      Near so as to be able to slay

      The lovers who humbly come to pray

      Him to pardon them yet his stay

      Of execution includes none and they lay

      Hope aside and soon disappear.

      Yet none is in disrepair

      And soon, no longer in fear

      Of the flowers their arrears

      Vanish and each talks gaily of his fear

      That is in the past whose ear

      Has been pierced by the flowers and the air

      Is now contagious to him

      He walks by the sea wall

      With a mate or lover and all

      The waves stand on tiptoe around the ball

      Of land where they all are.

      Thus, by giving up much,

      The lovers have lost less than

      The average man.

      No bird of paradise flies up

      With an explosive cry at his touch,

      The lover’s, yet all

      Are made whole in the circle that rounds

      Him, filled the whole time with sweet sounds.

      It is not the disrepair of these lives

      Where we may find the key to all that gives

      Eloquence and truth to our passing thoughts,

      And shapes them as a shipwright shapes

     


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