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    As We Know

    Page 7
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      Where it is until the next time.

      Like a summer job in a department store

      It stays on and on,

      Breaking up the moments, hiding

      The kissing,

      Taking whatever is there away from us.

      Its temperature is darkness,

      Its taste, the silent, bitter welcome

      On the edge of the forest

      When you were starting to reach home.

      Also, too much is written

      About it, as though each time

      Were starting from zero toward an imaginary

      Number. No one sees it’s

      Just the evening news, mostly,

      A translation into the light of day,

      Or two fiddles scraping along

      Out of kindness, you think, but

      To whom? In short, any kind of tame

      Manifestation against the straw

      Of darkness and the darkening trees

      Until the aftertaste claimed it.

      Nothing here is like the

      Wet, hot vigil

      That loneliness erected:

      There is nothing here that can be seen

      The way that city could be seen,

      Most precisely at night, perhaps

      When thousands of tongues inspect it

      And the outline of its state of mind

      Tapers off hard and clear

      Until the next time.

      The noises in the bedroom dissolve slowly

      And at last the thread holds

      So that the lining adheres strictly

      Or as a plumb line erected straight into the air

      To stand for all vertical constructions

      That chide and quietly amaze

      The pale blue of the sky.

      The shops here don’t sell anything

      One would want to buy.

      It’s even hard to tell exactly what

      They’re selling—in one, you might

      Find a pile of ventilators next

      To a lot of cuckoo-clock parts,

      Plus used government documents and stacks

      Of cans of brine shrimp, and an

      Extremely elegant saleslady, in

      Printed chiffon, seeming to be from a different

      World entirely. But that’s—que voulez-vous?—

      Par for the course, I guess. You

      Pick up certain things here, where

      You need them, and

      Do without the others for the moment,

      Essential though they may be.

      Every collection is as notable for its gaps

      As for what’s there. The wisest among us

      Collect gaps, knowing it’s the only way

      To realize a more complete collection

      Than one’s neighbor’s. It’s also cheaper

      And easier to show off to advantage.

      At night rain whips the collection,

      The plunge, the surge of the tide

      Drowns the memory of it. Only a dark field remains

      But with the return of morning, the same

      Familiar sticks and pieces poke

      Their extremities out of the dewy mound of straw.

      The collection, at least for some people,

      Is still there. And it matters

      To them, and to tax collectors

      And taxation buffs, because

      Now none of it will get lost

      Any more than it already has. A

      Garage can contain it.

      All

      Evening I have waited for your call.

      The early period was never like this.

      Even birds are happier than this.

      You have

      No right to take something out of life

      And then put it back, knowingly, beside

      Its double, from whom

      The original tensions unwittingly came.

      The collection matures.

      Amateurs flock to it, to get a look at it.

      And some day the idea

      Will have been removed, extracted,

      From the flurry of particulars

      From numbered exhibits,

      And the collected will have no end.

      A few always stay behind mechanically

      On a glimpsed piece of scaffolding.

      There are many of us to choose from:

      Blowhards, barnacles, old fogeys

      Rushing up from under the earth

      Into the sun!

      It doesn’t matter that the fruit is greenish,

      Or that the ill-defined sidewalks seem to lead nowhere

      As long as the clock is stowed in somebody’s luggage.

      The round smile of celebration

      Is always there,

      Is part of the permanent scenery

      Of this age’s accumulation

      And seeps, or drifts, only a little.

      My dear yesterday,

      You were ugly and full of promise

      And today the delta is forming:

      The water, or is it sandbars, stretching away

      Almost too far for them to mean to each other

      What they still mean to us.

      Another thing they can do to you

      Is also celebration, but of another kind:

      The dance that is a brown study

      Under the skylight,

      The music of eternal moping

      As far as it goes, since eternity

      Is an eye, and some things elude the eye:

      Polite gestures, timid farewells

      Alongside a flooded creek in April,

      The false sparkle, the finish, the edge.

      These permutate, combine

      In a gentle ellipse of spoken vagaries

      That pester nobody, and yet

      How few invitations are received!

      They say they’re having trouble with the mails

      And so many people have moved as

      We become an increasingly mobile populace

      In the deep shade of a quiet trailer park

      Where nobody minds waiting

      For one to finish examining the elaborate

      Mechanical toys of the last century

      Or playing warped, scratched 78 records

      Of the great coloraturas of the past.

      One is always free to sink into history

      Up to the waist, and the mountains are

      Now so breathtakingly close to the city

      That it’s like taking a vacation

      Just to stay home and look at them.

      That’s all one can do.

      Inhaling the while the extremely cold

      Fresh cement smell which you must pass

      On your way to school.

      For all those with erysipelas

      And the wrinkles on the forehead

      And the cheeks that come from within, like reverse scars

      For all those wearing old clothes

      With the dormant look of expectation about them

      For the women ironing

      And who cut into lengths of white cloth

      The glass stopper has been removed

      We can breathe! The ocean has been pulled away.

      I was over to the dog show the other day and

      Noticed a nice-looking girl gazing around

      As if puzzled. I went over to her and said:

      “Pardon me, but can’t you find the kennel

      You wish?

      If not, I shall be glad to assist you.”

      “Oh, thank you!” she replied. “Would you

      Mind showing me where they are exhibiting the ocean greyhounds?”

      I came out here originally I

      Came to this flat place

      On the side away from the sun,

      I think my stain must be cauterized.

      I have touched no drink

      For an elevenmonth, yet my head

      Seems stuck in my collar. I have

      No friends because I move too rapidly

      From place to place, only an assistant.


      The time is always false dawn

      In Indian Summer. Faded markings on

      The floor where I walk could have

      Been produced by me, or at best

      Some outside agency. I have no reason

      To rejoice in my mummy condition, yet

      Am fairly happy from day to day

      Like a steeple rejoicing in the sun

      It is the last to shake hands with.

      I wear my weather

      With a good-natured air of secrecy,

      And have no trouble finding my way home

      Once the fun is done. I can sleep.

      I can stand up. The buzzing in the vault

      Of the temple disturbs me only insofar

      As I consult my pocket watch and replace it

      Affably in my breast-pocket. But

      There is a time and a light

      Which do not approach, which leave me

      In the years.

      Don’t flog it. Remember how

      Insane your other undertakings seemed to you,

      How hopeless your desires, how tortured

      The ambience, or riddled

      With the stuff of hazard.

      The orgy

      Bubbles away, the vapors weep their burthen to the ground.

      But in that hotel

      The night is ongoing, the rain

      Continues. Too much of a philosophy

      Is about all it can stand, and we wait

      For the men and ducks to go away, and still

      Most everything stays with us,

      Rooted in thoughtful soil.

      The elephant’s-foot umbrella stand

      That used to be over there, why,

      Somebody must have changed it, or the last

      Catastrophe fished it up out of the depths

      Beyond heaven, or it is here,

      For us to see, yet absent for a while.

      Or perhaps someone merely heard of it

      Or it got written down the wrong way

      In a page of an account book that got mailed

      In a letter by mistake. Perhaps the dust,

      That emptiness on the outside of air, ate it.

      Or in the bin of odd-size and discontinued

      Artifacts it holds its own while seen

      Only partially because the surrounding

      Knobs and hues rob it of a full presence.

      Or a photograph was taken, after which

      It could be destroyed, and now

      The photograph and the negative are lost

      Up ahead in one of the strands

      Where one shall encounter this and all the

      Other deviating forms of momentary life

      In a contradiction which shall make its point.

      I like to imagine though

      That nothing so awkward as the stand ever

      Existed. It must have been

      The trunk of an old apple tree

      And bees hollowed it out to make honey,

      Itself now gone, a remnant

      Of a memory, a gesture time made

      To no one in particular, to itself

      Or not even to itself, a tic,

      A twinge long invisible now

      On the low-pressure area

      On the weather map. A tremor

      Far removed from the individual man

      And his daily wants, a number

      To be looked up in a book, or the catalogue number

      Of that book, or both,

      The number in the book and the catalogue number

      In white guano on the brilliant cranberry binding,

      Concerns galore

      Under both headings, the identical twin numbers.

      Ours, actually, is an “age on ages telling,”

      Once it has become finality. Afterwards,

      It drifts like a stalagmite, advancing

      Pea-brained arguments an inch forward.

      Of course all this has to go on

      Parallel to the hoping, so as to display

      The ancestral linkage, and, more importantly, to drown out

      Any rumors of competing loyalties.

      It is merely a question of avoiding the shadow

      And the starched patch of light,

      At the same time deferring to no sun,

      No shore. No half-naked limit,

      And, in the orange light that the sun succeeds nevertheless

      In shedding all over this terrestrial ball, to avert

      One’s gaze no longer and no less time than is intended

      By the illuminating party to be your account

      Of yourself, here on earth and for all time.

      A grand army of fatality succeeding

      One after the other like a phylloxera

      Never succeeded in erasing intimate

      Knowledge of how long that was supposed to be

      Despite ferocious efforts from age to age the same

      From the minds of those men in which it had been planted

      Originally, and who continued to keep up

      With the changing time and modes while retaining

      With no effort at all,

      As though all were elegy and toccata

      (Which happens to be the case),

      The guidelines. Once given

      They can be forgotten in the sad joy of life,

      Reverence for which is almost incumbent

      On each contestant, and no one, including them,

      Will ever be wider for it. Yet

      Thereby hangs a tale, of starving musicians,

      Strolling players, grasshopper and the ant

      Whose contemptible fireside contrasts so untellingly

      With the barren outdoors. Just to play an instrument,

      It seems, is to have to come round one

      Day to the impossibility of making a living on it,

      To being forced to prostitute oneself, innocently,

      For the greater pleasure which is as the damage

      Succeeding on the small first pleasure.

      And there’s no way out, unless

      The sound of harps is sufficient distraction

      Against the thunder of the fray “for which

      Gog and Magog are said to be continually preparing,

      Or loss of memory (which cannot, by definition,

      Take place) render one oblivious to the traffic

      And all it implies. That loss of memory

      Which is itself a music,

      A kind of music.

      And meanwhile, growing older like leaves that lean back

      Against the trees, is an accomplishment

      Without comfort.

      Back home from the beauty contest

      And its attendant squalors, she doesn’t feel

      Like much. The world

      Is vaguer and less pejorative, a time

      Of stressful headache but also

      Of architectonic inklings and inspiration:

      Agony for a day, and then the refreshing dream

      Bubbles up like an artesian well in all its

      Wealth of accurately observed detail,

      Its truth of being, on the surface

      But striking long, pointed roots into the dull earth

      Behind the mask. Yet like a pain

      That went away, its immanence

      Is very much an ongoing thing, its present

      Departed in the greater interest of the whole.

      A coronet of dark red jewels

      Like winter berries was slowly lowered

      Onto the snow-white curls, and the dream became

      A person, a beautiful princess unable to stand

      Or sit. And the older guests remembered

      How none of it had been predicted, though the mystery word,

      “Magic,” had been imagined

      Many years before. How

      Do we live from the beginning of the tale

      To its inevitable, momentary end, where all

      Its pocket’s treasures are summarily emptied,

      On the mirroring tabletop? And w
    ait

      For someone to whisper the word that restores them

      To their velvet hummock, sets all right again?

      Only the cartoon animals know

      How hard it was to get inside the frame, and then

      To make a noise, or eventually to place

      An inky paw-print on the wide, blinding white

      Damask desert as the company was leaving

      In twos and threes. Someone

      Projects a shriek of recognition far up, into the civilized

      But dim world of the farthest chandelier.

      A commercial airliner streaked by. Once again

      The prize will not be awarded.

      The distant plains match up with

      The pictures of them on these transparent walls,

      And that is all. No children

      To relieve the tensions of the adult business,

      No new funny animals, only the vocal abstractions

      Of the solemn, imaginary world of transportation

      And commerce. No one

      Laughs at the brilliant errors any more.

      Yet we who came to know them,

      Castaways of middle life, somehow

      Grew aware through the layers of numbing comfort,

      The eiderdown of materialism and space, how much meaning

      Was there languishing at the roots, and how

      To take some of it home before it melts (as all

      Will, dreams and mica-sparkling sidewalks, clouds

      And office buildings, the conversation

      And the trance, until

      A day when they can do no more, and the mass

      Of the scenery wanders partially

      Over the defunct terrain of broken fences

      And windows stuffed with rags) while the ballad

      Still rings in the seller’s ear.

      In the beginning of speech the question

      Of frontiers is taken up again.

      And the trees and buildings are porous

      And the dome of heaven.

      The talk leads nowhere but is

      Inside its space.

      It is contracting, it is observed ...

      Breath we wanted, to build and lie down

      In slumber at night, under the tattered shade

      Of the trees, open to the rain, rustling of night.

      And the wet, doggy smell,

      The pealing of church bells interspersed with thunder

      And lightning, the distress

      And tiny triumphs of the field.

      Everything is a shaft

      Sunk far too deep into the body, opening landscapes,

      New people, mingling in new conversations,

      Yet distant, as the back of one’s head is distant.

      It all seems like 2½ years ago

      To the impatient sun trapped in the attic

      When all it wants is to be able to write about mathematics and the word,

      For although a few wind-chime notes filter down

      From heaven in the small hours, one cannot help

      But note the frequent fanfare of hoofbeats

      In the wet, empty street.

     


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