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    Hotel Lautréamont

    Page 4
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    With us, sweeps us up into something, some way to be

      With pleasure and not be too long about it so the mood stays

      But isn’t fixed? If only I’d known what I was getting into

      That day in Arizona, I’d have taken another detour, but you see

      When you see gravel, you think roadbed, automatically, forgetting how little

      It takes to set anybody off, buzzing into dreams. Old papers and

      Memoirs. Feet under the desk. A tiny girl who smiles and is prepared.

      What year was that? Who was in power then? By what

      Sin have we been burned? And did the president point

      His pointer at the blackboard to the word “articulate,” and did

      Those feet reiterate the premise, damp down through the ages, fresh, yes,

      But so ancient, like an ague. Teeth chattering, all proceeded to the dump.

      After all, it would be time soon.

      After all, nobody knows how to make this any more. You can’t

      Find us in their lounges. Soon, soon, however, the overpass takes us home.

      The leaves are spent, lying in a ditch. Girls gone. The music, the horses took off.

      THE LITTLE BLACK DRESS

      All that we are trying most defiantly to unravel

      is waiting, close to the path. Yes,

      but the pace is both relaxed and insistent,

      a swimming up from under. Your plan sounds fine.

      I knew a brunette once in Omaha,

      he said, and that struck us as news. He hadn’t

      been out of the truck long. On the dank ground the new

      willow leaves lay, a reproof to him and us.

      Why can’t the clay bind us more firmly still,

      until he can read,

      get something out of these notations that arrive

      every day, like letters, O not in the empty house.

      PART OF THE SUPERSTITION

      Help, when it came, came from an unexpected place.

      It was so nice he couldn’t sleep. Our rooms darken

      with every new place of experience. All roses

      admit this, and life stays on, fidgeting, their dream

      disappointed, on the run, and it’s your fault,

      who never had the courage to know nothing and simultaneously

      be attentive. That’s where the secret comes in,

      and, as you might expect, it’s quite unhandy,

      especially if you’re in a coma. Now I don’t want

      to have to speak to you again; we’re on the way down,

      that much is assured, and leggy growth has to stop somewhere,

      at least it did in my day. About what colors to buy:

      this is something each dean and priest decides

      for himself, and then they melt and turn into the jackpot,

      which is a little disturbing. Don’t squirm,

      however, there are other houses on this road to peace

      we can actually live in, as a snail its shell,

      or bird pants. Then a calend grabs your hand

      and tugs you into the future, and that’s about all the space

      there is left. Wipe your nose. Don’t fudge

      the horizon or it will come clattering down

      on us like the earthquake at Lisbon, but always,

      be brave. Yet these are old wives’ tales,

      in truth; nothing insists you believe in them

      except as dreams, which permeate the background

      of our day like colored raindrops, and so go away

      before too long. Many have turned back

      at this point; the trials, the trails, are thistles,

      inherently unrewarding. Yet those who wish to play

      say many are pleased to be in that day:

      pleased, and not a little scared, but from where

      will peace come if not from those beetling crags?

      So many varied stimuli, and I

      was nigh to frantic, as it may believe you,

      and has for other hosts. Yet these passions, arrayed

      like infantry, continue to absorb and confuse

      by turns. No use shouting about waste, it was

      a necessary corner in your apartment that couldn’t be filled

      by anything but its own besottedness. And we think, when we

      do play, that a special aggravation

      has sunk its beak in us like Prometheus’ eagle,

      yet all proceeds from an inability and desire to win

      leading to narrow channels and bogus expectations.

      Cut short the customary peroration:

      its wings soar o’er us still, or will be, and we, we’ll

      have a hand in sorting them out, strand

      by tinted strand, and be sure a life will arise swollen from this:

      a vacant place in the story. My glory

      when it comes will resemble yours in its feinting

      and the way it orders waiters with soiled aprons around.

      We can be back for much of it. Haste, arise;

      a big thing is happening to everyone. We were so prudent

      in our clothes back there it got forgotten, blurred

      with the wet lawn. And when the president

      looked out his window he saw it, and ran to tell the vice-president,

      and so a compact was kept. I sure wish

      it were possible to pole oneself more than a few feet off this shore,

      but it seems to want us. And I can’t explain how a muskrat

      would ever know about such a thing, yet it did.

      So there were times in between like the seasons

      and the times between them when peaches fall,

      and dancers sift across the stage like leaves,

      and these are dark times. Only remember that the figure

      worked deep into the fabric implodes there;

      has a next, a resting place. It is from the multiplication

      of similar wacko configurations that theses do arise

      to attest the efficacy of this castor oil,

      this medicine. And if why we want to go away

      is as plain as the nose on your face, the buried village,

      cut out of rose-petal limestone, is still standing. Haply

      some faith trickles out of it, and is not lost

      in the glittering grass, but persists to become a torrent,

      then a turret, somewhere else. For there is a key,

      and it leads to your door. Yet it is only repetition, something

      the seasons like a lot. And as you get up to go you mutter,

      and that’s it!—the fortunate crisis that was always

      going to stave us off, and explain so much

      about car wrecks, and postage stamps and the like.

      Farewell in the rain; it is surely lucky to know

      as much as we do, and not to know as much

      as we do. Or were taught was proper. Papers

      will explain it, music it. That’s a promise.

      THE ART OF SPEEDING

      And when some sidle awkwardly,

      why, the grove is green again. There is more than enough catfood

      for two, she said. And I think I belong in this prism.

      Day means more than luck itself to me,

      but I shall be forgotten

      on a shore made monotonous by the inverted hulls of rowboats.

      There is more than enough time for me,

      sympathy too. I’m the cap and bells that don’t belong.

      A free-lance artist. The last and first of the romantics.

      Sometimes a suppler season weaves pliant straws

      into a crown for no one in particular.

      This hiatus is my legacy:

      a patterned map whose symmetries invite exploration

      yet in the end repel the cold traveler, wrapped

      in gray at the end of the mole.

      He sees farther into the rising banister of the city’s rage

      and shuts out all ivory memories like pestile
    nce.

      Indeed he is the naked forager.

      But when tomatoes are ripe and girls

      don’t mind, and the sun is civil again, then

      look in your shoeboxes for sheaves of snapshots

      that came over us and were here, wild as the wilderness.

      We forgot who was talking to us on the quay.

      It just might have been a distinguished stranger.

      Now his visor keeps us from noticing

      his general appearance, but genially we all say

      how much we have loved this place, how gay

      are the receipts. All we have to do is stay.

      Yet more pictures are involved than the accountant

      realizes, moaning over his headache: sometimes it agrees

      with us to say we do. And then the game is darker;

      no one pauses in the rain.

      AMERICAN BAR

      We bake a dozen kinds of muffins every day

      yet we are cold and disquieting at heart.

      I fear for his sciatica, though

      we were never lovers.

      Let me memorialize this mattress, M.

      le Comte, he will be decent

      in this fog that emanates from everything

      though the air is fresh and sunny. Thought

      about wandering down to the river to have a

      look at the water. It always has so much to say,

      more than the upended rain barrel in its day

      had. See the monkey in its cage.

      Bright eyes are feasting again and again.

      In the casual track of a zipper my penis

      once got stuck, and it’s been like that ever since:

      feet stop where no snare lives, the best

      is to die down and desist. Perhaps life is better

      near the Arctic Circle, where the buildings are plain

      and no trees sing. One can feel totally indoors.

      The wireless plays a lanky tune;

      there are spots on the wall from the moisture

      you either keep out or keep in. I forget which,

      and what a bird looks like. The winter night drones on

      for centuries, and what keeps us at peace is actually

      the sight of an empty cage

      and a few children’s drawings of it.

      My, we have raced to be equivocally here

      and have invented what sign? Off of what do we climb

      to the lower level, what compact fleet of stairs

      is nestled here? Or did we bowdlerize each other’s delirium

      in fear of having the last word, and it frightened us off the page?

      In any case have a ripping good time. The boars

      will be here around then, as you know.

      FROM PALOOKAVILLE

      “Death cancels all engagements.”

      —Clifton Webb, in the movie Laura

      The midgets stand on giants who stand on midgets

      in Palookaville

      that day of storm notwithstanding and it still takes one

      on out to the “farther reaches” where boys play and maids bay

      at the moon

      in my Palookaville

      where the stench of farts drenches outside irony with the dust of snow

      where all is served up right

      to blond kids in history books on the gothic outskirts

      where everything gets unravelled just right

      where you can see a coincidence coming for miles down the valley

      along the trestle when the snow the femurs the cries

      demur and act unwise

      at a time when centers shatter in strict unison

      when doubt is in the call of the fox

      and the sunsets are like weddings

      I came here of my own accord

      from Djakarta

      I’m as old as you are and dare to say so

      but the falling liaisons spat out like miles of thread

      are the lining of time’s one easy lesson

      the shocks deep and narrow like crevasses dog teams fly over

      over and around

      aiming no way to please

      and it does in the arrested quickness of the visit, task—

      even life is the least bit pejorative

      but not the costumes the calendar

      the trivia the painted trappings

      to come undone

      in your embrace and that’s the word

      You were sent for and that is all

      no word on why some became

      the anvil

      and from here all that runs is dust

      or consommé there was fear smeared again on the walk

      and for two consecutive days

      we go out on it it’s pretty safe

      so far

      on the fifth day a bank fails there are great falls

      and iodine in the little house

      it smells more like an accord this time

      and then there were birds you know too soft

      this time for much

      of an answer

      and they came were there under steel arcades

      the night brings its business along

      stalls as though a feint saved the day one

      other time and now it’s horses all around for anybody that thinks

      they’ve got a contusion or a monopoly

      surely it was warm faces all round

      The accents are distant as bells in that other hometown

      the stories often gory

      tell why please the accents and your own personal vignette came up

      without a number and no one explained the cause

      a dim musicale in some small room

      folded under netting as though the crows stood by

      to watch

      under the felt cushion something impolite zoomed

      it was suggested that we all carry away

      our traces that we dispose of them “thoughtfully”

      so as not to leave any bones of an argument around

      for others mauling traces

      in bushes

      black ones riding with white snow a pure, defined drop

      of atheism and it arches out too wide, too near the circumference

      of the pier too much to say for what an old man did

      on a recent day and what if it comes round

      on a recent day and what if we all did

      and who shoved the pace of the thermometer

      on an outing who shamed the toaster

      who is to say

      ANOTHER EXAMPLE

      Of our example, earth,

      we know the star-shaped universe:

      divisions,

      somewhere,

      of July streets.

      Is it a bucket you sit in

      or on?

      How they led us past the fence.

      The one horse was mortified.

      But it’s unhealthy, you say

      we must have another example,

      just one.

      What’s wanted is faces in windows

      screams that went away a long time ago.

      What says to recall them?

      To be revived like paper ants

      and then endure the long vacuum of pre-eternity

      and still be allowed to buy something

      on the station platform?

      The train is turning away—

      There are no familiar quotations.

      Here, put some on a plate, he said. That’s the way.

      AVANT DE QUITTER CES LIEUX

      They watch the blue snow.

      It is the fifth act in someone else’s life,

      but here, on Midway Island, reefs and shoals interfere

      with that notion. That nothing so compact

      as the idea of a season is to be allowed

      is the note, for today at least. It is Tuesday morning.

      They sing a duet of farewell

      to their little table, and to themselves as they were

      when they sat at it. Noon intersects with fat
    birds

      the rhythm of dishes in the cupboard. My love,

      he seems to say, is this the way it is for you? Then we shall have to leave

      these shabby surroundings for others, but first

      I want to plant a kiss like a star

      on your forehead. The ships are knocking together at the quayside,

      the lanyards struck, there is more moving

      than we were intended for, as we clear out

      nodding to the caryatids we pass. Perhaps they will sing to us.

      And in a summer house somewhere in Russia

      a clematis soaks up the heat. One can think without breathing

      of the blue snow that invades the fields, a curse some obscure ancestor

      once let fall and now it’s the custom, duly serenaded each season

      before the apples rust

      and the idea of winter takes over, to be followed in short order

      by the real thing.

      If all of us could lead lives of razoring things out of the newspaper,

      filing them on pincushions … but no. There is the father

      and morning to be dealt with, and after that the students arrive.

      The rhythm is broken up among them.

      That was a cold year, but not

      the last. It will be remembered.

      Why is it you always ask me this, and this:

      is there no question behind the arras of how we now meet

      seconding each other’s projects, our emotions? Or is that too weak

      as a question, though strong enough as an affirmation, so that we again go out

      from each other. One shades one’s eyes automatically, though the sky

      is dark. “We have no place to go” (the fifteenth

      major situation), and if God decrees we like each other, someday

      we will meet on a stone up there, and all will not be well,

      but that is useful. Great rivers run into each other and graves

      have split open, the tyranny of dust plays well, there is

      so little to notice. Besides we have always known each other.

      Except for that it was automatically the century

      before this one. Thus we are made aware of the continuity

      of times that were, and time itself is revealed

      not as a series of rooms but a single corridor

      stretching into the truth: an alpine pasture, with a few goats

      and, in the distance, a hovel. It is high noon. Dinorah,

      who has lost her goat, sings the mad scene for which her life

      has been a preparation, sings it out of daylight, out of the outcropping

      of rock overhead, out of the edelweiss and cowslips.

     


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