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    John Berryman

    Page 38
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      If not white shorts—then in a princess gown

      Images of Elspeth

      Imagine a crowded war-time street

      Impossible to speak to her, and worse

      In & Out

      In a poem made by Cummings, long since, his

      In Memoriam (1914–1953)

      In my serpentine researches

      Infallible symbolist!—Tanker driven ashore

      Interstitial Office

      Is it possible, poor kids, you must not come out?

      It is supernal what a youth can take

      It kissed us, soft, to cut our throats, this coast

      It seems to be DARK all the time

      It was the sky all day I grew to and saw

      It will seem strange, no more this range on range

      Itself a lightning-flash ripping the ‘dark

      Keep your eyes open when you kiss: do: when

      King David Dances

      Languid the songs I wish I willed . . I try

      Lauds

      Let us rejoice on our cots, for His nocturnal miracles

      Letter to His Brother

      Lines to Mr Frost

      Lockout. The seventh week. Men in the Square

      London

      Long long with wonder I thought you human

      Lover & child, a little sing

      Loversgrove lay

      Loves are the summer’s. Summer like a bee

      Luftmenschen dream, the men who live on air

      Mallarmé siren upside down,—rootedly!

      Man with a tail heads eastward for the Fair

      Marble nor monuments whereof then we spoke

      Master of beauty, craftsman of the snowflake

      Matins

      Meditation

      Meeting

      Ménage à trois, like Tristan’s,—difficult!

      Message

      Minnesota Thanksgiving

      Monkhood

      Most strange, my change, this nervous interim

      Moths white as ghosts among these hundreds cling

      Motions of waking trouble winter air

      Musculatures and skulls. Later some throng

      Mutinous & free I drifted off

      Mutinous in the half-light, & malignant, grind

      My intense friend was tall & strongly made

      My offended contempt for the mental & stylistic workings of Ruskin & Carlyle

      My Special Fate

      Narcissus Moving

      Navajo Setting the Record Straight

      Near the top a bad turn some dare. Well

      New Year’s Eve

      Niceties of symbolism & identification

      Night and the City

      Nineteen Thirty-Eight

      Ninety percent of the mass of the Universe

      No

      Noise of the vans woke us before we would

      Nones

      Not to Live

      Note to Wang Wei

      Nothing there? nothing up the sky alive

      Nowhere

      O! I had my gyp prepare that tea

      O a little lonely in Cambridge that first Fall

      O lithest Shirley! & the other worlds

      O my Lord, I am not eloquent

      O parakeets & avocets, O immortelles

      ‘O tell me of the Russians, Communist, my son!’

      O when I grunted, over lines and her

      Occludes wild dawn. Up thro’ green ragged clouds

      October’s both, back in the Sooner State

      Of all that weeks-long day, though call it back

      Of Suicide

      Oh half as fearful for the yawning day

      Old Man Goes South Again Alone

      ‘Old Smoky’ when you sing with Robin, Chris

      Olympus

      On the London Train

      On the night of the Belgian surrender the moon rose

      On the wheat-sacks sullen with the ceaseless damp

      Once when they found me, some refrain ‘Quoi faire?’

      One luncheon party in Andy’s rooms in Magdalene

      One night in Albany

      One note, a daisy, and a photograph

      ‘One of the wits of the school’ your chum would say

      1 September 1939

      Opus Dei

      Our lives before hopelessly our mistake!

      Our love conducted as in tropic rain

      Our Sunday morning when dawn-priests were applying

      Outlaws claw mostly to a riddled end

      Overseas Prayer

      Parting as Descent

      Presidential flags! and the General is here

      Prime

      Problem. I cannot come among Your saints

      Purgatory

      (. . rabid or dog-dull.) Let me tell you how

      Rackman and victim twist: sounds all these weeks

      Rectitude, and the terrible upstanding member

      Recovery

      Reflexions on suicide, & on my father, possess me

      Relations

      Revelations every two hours on the Lounge

      ‘Ring us up when you want to see us…’—‘Sure’

      River Rouge, 1932

      Rock-Study with Wanderer

      Sanctuary

      Scholars at the Orchid Pavilion

      Scots Poem

      Sensible, coarse, and moral; in decent brown

      Sext

      She says: Seek help! Ha-ha Ha-ha & Christ

      Shirley & Auden

      Sick with the lightning lay my sister-in-law

      Sigh as it ends . . I keep an eye on your

      Sleep! In your boat brought into the living room

      Slumped under the impressive genitals

      Snow on the ground. A day in March

      Sole watchman of the flying stars, guard me

      Somber Prayer

      Some sketch sweat’ out, unwilling swift & crude

      Sometimes the night echoes to prideless wailing

      Song from “Cleopatra”

      Song of the Man Forsaken and Obsessed

      Sozzled, Mo-tsu, after a silence, vouchsafed

      Spendthrift Urethra—Sphincter, frugal one

      Still it pleads and rankles: ‘Why do you love me?’

      Summoned from offices and homes, we came

      Sunderings and luxations, luxe, and grief-

      Surprise me on some ordinary day

      Surviving Love

      Swarthy when young; who took the tonsure; sign

      Tampa Stomp

      Tea

      Terce

      Thanksgiving: Detroit

      The Animal Trainer (1)

      The Animal Trainer (2)

      The Apparition

      The Ball Poem

      The Black Book (i) from

      The Black Book (ii) from

      The Black Book (iii) from

      The Captain’s Song

      The clapper hovers, but why run so hard?

      The clots of age, grovel and palsy, crave

      The clouds before the sun when the sun rose

      The cold rewards trail in, when the man is blind

      The crowd moves forward on the midway, back

      The Curse

      The Dangerous Year

      The days are over, I leave after breakfast

      The dew is drying fast, a last drop glistens

      The Disciple

      The Dispossessed

      The Enemies of the Angels

      The Facts & Issues

      The fireflies and the stars our only light

      The first signs of the death of the boom came in the summer

      The first, scattering rain on the Polish cities

      The Form

      The Governor your husband lived so long

      The grey girl who had not been singing stopped

      The Handshake, The Entrance

      The Hell Poem

      The Heroes

      The history of strangers in their dreams

      The Home Ballad

      The Irish and the Italians own the place

      The lady in her silver-

      The Lightning

      The
    Long Home

      The man who made her let me climb the derrick

      The Moon and the Night and the Men

      The Mysteries

      The Nervous Songs

      The night is on these hills, and some can sleep

      The Old Boys’ blazers like a Mardi-Gras

      The old men wept when the Old Man in blue

      The Other Cambridge

      The oxen gone, the house is fallen where

      The Pacifist’s Song

      The poet hunched, so, whom the worlds admire

      The Poet’s Final Instructions

      The Possessed

      The Prayer of the Middle-Aged Man

      The problem is urgent, yes, for this hot light

      The round and smooth, my body in my bath

      The Search

      The Song of the Bridegroom

      The Song of the Demented Priest

      The Song of the Tortured Girl

      The Song of the Young Hawaiian

      The Spinning Heart

      The Statue

      The statue, tolerant through years of weather

      The summer cloud in summer blue

      The sun rushed up the sky; the taxi flew

      The terrible trains crawl seaward thro’ the South

      The three men coming down the winter hill

      The Traveller

      The tree before my eyes bloomed into flame

      The Trial

      The two plantations Greatgrandmother brought

      The weather in the drawing-room

      They come too thick, hail-hard, and all beside

      They Have

      They may, because I would not cloy your ear

      They pointed me out on the highway, and they said

      This afternoon, discomfortable dead

      Thou hard. I will be blunt: Like widening

      Three, almost, now into the ass’s years

      Thrice, or I moved to sack, I saw you: how

      Thus far, to March, into the dangerous year

      To a Woman

      Today is it? Is it today? I shudder

      Tom Grumbold’s bridge has balusters set diagonally

      Took my leave (last) five times before the end

      Traitoring words,—tearing my thought across

      Transit

      Travelling South

      Troubling are masks . . the faces of friends, my face

      Two Organs

      Two men sat by a stone in what dim place

      Tyranny of your car—so far resembles

      Tyson & Jo, Tyson & Jo

      Under new management, Your Majesty

      Unknowable? perhaps not altogether

      Vanity! hog-vanity, ape-lust

      Venice

      Vespers

      Views of Myself

      Viridian and gamboge and vermilion

      ‘Warrior Who Went With a Crowd, my sand-painter grandfather’

      Washington in Love

      We are to tell one man tonight good-bye

      We must work & play and John Jacob Niles

      What can to you this music wakes my years

      What is the boy now, who has lost his ball

      What was Ashore, then? . . Cargoed with Forget

      When I peered out, he had nine nights to spare

      When I recall I could believe you’d go

      Where the lane from the highway swerves the first drops fell

      Whether the moorings are invisible

      Whether There Is Sorrow in the Demons

      White & blue my breathing lady leans

      White Feather

      Who am I worthless that You spent such pains

      Who for those ages ever without some blood

      Whom undone David upto the dire van sent

      Why can’t, Chris, why shouldn’t they fall in love?

      Winter Landscape

      World’s Fair

      World-Telegram

      You come blonde visiting through the black air

      You in your stone home where the sycamore

      You sailed in sky-high, with your speech askew

      You should be gone in winter, that Nature mourn

      ‘You’ve got to cross that lonesome valley’ and

      You, Chris, contrite I never thought to see

      Young Woman’s Song

      Your Birthday in Wisconsin You Are 140

      Your letter came.—Glutted the earth & cold

      Your shining—where?—rays my wide room with gold

      JOHN BERRYMAN: COLLECTED POEMS, 1937–1971. Copyright © 1989 by Kate Donahue Berryman.

      All rights reserved.

      For information, address Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

      eBooks may be purchased for business or promotional use. For information on bulk purchases, please contact Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department by writing to MacmillanSpecialMarkets@macmillan.com.

      eISBN 9781466879584

      First eBook edition: July 2014

     

     

     



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