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    The Heart Is Strange: New Selected Poems

    Page 6
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      Louts in a bar aloud, The People, sucking beer.

      A barefoot kiss. Who trembles?

      Peach-bloom, sorb-apple sucked in what fine year!

      I am a wine, he wonders; when?

      Am I what I can do? My large white hands.

      Boater & ascot, in grandstands

      Coups. Concentrations of frightful cold, and then

      Warm limbs below a pier.

      The Master is sipping his identity.

      Ardours & stars! Trash humped on trash.

      The incorporated yacht, the campaign cheque

      Signed one fall on the foredeck

      Hard on a quarrel, to amaze the fool. Who brash

      Hectored out some false plea?

      Brownpaper-blind, his morning passions trailed

      Home in the clumsy dusk,—how now

      Care which from which, trapped on a racing star

      Where we know not who we are! . .

      The whipcord frenzy curls, he slouches where his brow

      Works like the rivals’ failed.

      Of six young men he flew to breakfast as,

      Only the magpie, rapist, stayed

      For dinner, and the rapist died, so that

      Not the magpie but the cat

      Vigil upon the magpie stalks, sulky parade,

      Great tail switching like jazz.

      Frightened, dying to fly, pied and obscene,

      He blinks his own fantastic watch

      For the indolent Spring of what he was before;

      A stipple of sunlight, clouded o’er,

      Remorse a scribble on the magic tablet which

      A schoolboy thumb jerks clean.

      Heat lightning straddles the horizon dusk

      Above the yews: the fresh wind blows:

      He flicks a station on by the throne-side . .

      Out in the wide world, Kitty—wide

      Night—far across the sea . . Some guardian accent grows

      Below the soft voice, brusque:

      ‘You are: not what you wished but what you were,

      The decades’ vise your gavel brands,

      You glare the god who gobbled his own fruit,

      He who stood mute, lucid and mute,

      Under peine forte et dure to will his bloody lands,

      Then whirled down without heir.’

      The end of which he will not know. Undried,

      A prune-skin helpless on his roof.

      His skin gleams in the lamplight dull as gold

      And old gold clusters like mould

      Stifling about his blood, time’s helm to build him proof.

      Thump the oak, and preside!

      An ingrown terrible smile unflowers, a sigh

      Blurs, the axle turns, unmanned.

      Habited now forever with his weight

      Well-housed, he rolls in the twilight

      Unrecognizable against the world’s rim, and

      A bird whistles nearby.

      Whisked off, a voice, fainter, faint, a guise,

      A gleam, pin of a, a. Nothing.

      —One look round last, like rats, before we leave.

      A famous house. Now the men arrive:

      Horror, they swing their cold bright mallets, they’re breaking

      Him up before my eyes!

      Wicked vistas! The wolves mourn for our crime

      Out past the grey wall. On to our home,

      Whereby the barley may seed and resume.

      Mutter of thrust stones palls this room,

      The crash of mallets. He is going where I come.

      Barefoot soul fringed with rime.

      A Winter-Piece to a Friend Away

      Your letter came.—Glutted the earth & cold

      With rains long heavy, follows intense frost;

      Snow howls and hides the world

      We workt awhile to build; all the roads are lost;

      Icy spiculae float, filling strange air;

      No voice goes far; one is alone whirling since where,

      And when was it one crossed?

      You have been there.

      I too the breaking blizzard’s eddies bore

      One year, another year: tempted to drop

      At my own feet forlorn

      Under the warm fall, frantic more to chop

      Wide with the gale until my thought ran numb

      Clenching the blue skin tight against what white spikes come

      And the sick brain estop.

      Your pendulum

      Mine, not stilled wholly, has been sorry for,

      Weeps from, and would instruct . . Unless I lied

      What word steadies that cord?

      Glade grove & ghyll of antique childhood glide

      Off; from our grown grief, weathers that appal,

      The massive sorrow of the mental hospital,

      Friends & our good friends hide.

      They came to call.

      Hardly theirs, movement when the tempest gains,

      Loose heart convulses. Their hearts bend off dry,

      Their fruit dangles and fades.

      —Solicitudes of the orchard heart, comply

      A little with my longing, a little sing

      Our sorrow among steel & glass, our stiffening,

      That hers may modify:

      O trembling Spring.—

      Immortal risks our sort run, to a house

      Reported in a wood . . mould upon bread

      And brain, breath giving out,

      From farms we go by, barking, and shaken head,

      The shrunk pears hang, Hölderlin’s weathercock

      Rattles to tireless wind, the fireless landscape rock,

      Artists insane and dead

      Strike like a clock:

      If the fruit is dead, fast. Wait. Chafe your left wrist.

      All these too lie, whither a true form strays.

      Sweet when the lost arrive.

      Foul sleet ices the twigs, the vision frays,

      Festoons all signs; still as I come to name

      My joy to you my joy springs up again the same,—

      The thaw alone delays,—

      Your letter came!

      New Year’s Eve

      The grey girl who had not been singing stopped,

      And a brave new no-sound blew through acrid air.

      I set my drink down, hard. Somebody slapped

      Somebody’s second wife somewhere,

      Wheeling away to long to be alone.

      I see the dragon of years is almost done,

      Its claws loosen, its eyes

      Crust now with tears & lust and a scale of lies.

      A whisky-listless and excessive saint

      Was expounding his position, whom I hung

      Boy-glad in glowing heaven: he grows faint:

      Hearing what song the sirens sung,

      Sidelong he web-slid and some rich prose spun.

      The tissue golden of the gifts undone

      Surpassed the gifts. Miss Weirs

      Whispers to me her international fears.

      Intelligentsia milling. In a semi-German

      (Our loss of Latin fractured how far our fate,—

      Disinterested once, linkage once like a sermon)

      I struggle to articulate

      Why it is our promise breaks in pieces early.

      The Muses’ visitants come soon, go surly

      With liquor & mirrors away

      In this land wealthy & casual as a holiday.

      Whom the Bitch winks at. Most of us are linsey-

      woolsey workmen, grandiose, and slack.

      On m’analyse, the key to secrets. Kinsey

      Shortly will tell us sharply back

      Habits we stuttered. How revive to join

      (Great evils grieve beneath: eye Caesar’s coin)

      And lure a while more home

      The vivid wanderers, uneasy with our shame?

      Priests of the infinite! ah, not for long.

      The dove whispers, and diminishes

      Up the blue leagues. And no doubt we heard wrong—

      Wax of our lives coll
    ects & dulls; but was

      What we heard hurried as we memorized,

      Or brightened, or adjusted? Undisguised

      We pray our tongues & fingers

      Record the strange word that blows suddenly and lingers.

      Imagine a patience in the works of love

      Luck sometimes visits. Ages we have sighed,

      And cleave more sternly to a music of

      Even this sore word ‘genocide’.

      Each to his own! Clockless & thankless dream

      And labour Makers, being what we seem.

      Soon soon enough we turn

      Our tools in; brownshirt Time chiefly our works will burn.

      I remember: white fine flour everywhere whirled

      Ceaselessly, wheels rolled, a slow thunder boomed,

      And there were snowy men in the mill-world

      With sparkling eyes, light hair uncombed,

      And one of them was humming an old song,

      Sack upon sack grew portly, until strong

      Arms moved them on, by pairs,

      And then the bell clanged and they ran like hares.

      Scotch in his oxter, my Retarded One

      Blows in before the midnight; freezing slush

      Stamps off, off. Worst of years! . . no matter, begone;

      Your slash and spells (in the sudden hush)

      We see now we had to suffer some day, so

      I cross the dragon with a blessing, low,

      While the black blood slows. Clock-wise,

      We clasp upon the stroke, kissing with happy cries.

      Of 1947

      The Dispossessed

      ‘and something that … that is theirs—no longer ours’

      stammered to me the Italian page. A wood

      seeded & towered suddenly. I understood.—

      The Leading Man’s especially, and the Juvenile Lead’s,

      and the Leading Lady’s thigh that switches & warms,

      and their grimaces, and their flying arms:

      our arms, our story. Every seat was sold.

      A crone met in a clearing sprouts a beard

      and has a tirade. Not a word we heard.

      Movement of stone within a woman’s heart,

      abrupt & dominant. They gesture how

      fings really are. Rarely a child sings now.

      My harpsichord weird as a koto drums

      adagio for twilight, for the storm-worn dove

      no more de-iced, and the spidery business of love.

      The Juvenile Lead’s the Leader’s arm, one arm

      running the whole bole, branches, roots, (O watch)

      and the faceless fellow waving from her crotch,

      Stalin-unanimous! who procured a vote

      and care not use it, who have kept an eye

      and care not use it, percussive vote, clear eye.

      That which a captain and a weaponeer

      one day and one more day did, we did, ach

      we did not, They did . . cam slid, the great lock

      lodged, and no soul of us all was near was near,—

      an evil sky (where the umbrella bloomed)

      twirled its mustaches, hissed, the ingenue fumed,

      poor virgin, and no hero rides. The race

      is done. Drifts through, between the cold black trunks,

      the peachblow glory of the perishing sun

      in empty houses where old things take place.

      The Cage

      (1950)

      The Cage

      And the Americans put Pound in a cage

      In the Italian summer coverless

      On a hillside up from Pisa in his age

      Roofless the old man with a blanket yes

      On the ground. Shih in his pocket luck jammed there

      When the partigiani with a tommy-gun

      Broke in the villa door. Great authors fare

      Well; for they fed him, the Americans

      And after four weeks were afraid he’d die

      So the Americans took him out of the cage

      And tented him like others. He lay wry

      To make the Pisan cantos with his courage

      Sorrow and memory in a slowing drive

      (And after five months they told Dorothy

      Where Ezra was, and what,—i.e., alive)

      Until from fingers such something twitcht free

      … O years go bare, a madman lingered through

      The hall-end where we talked and felt my book

      Till he was waved away; Pound tapped his shoe

      And pointed and digressed with an impatient look

      ‘Bankers’ and ‘Yids’ and ‘a conspiracy’

      And of himself no word, the second worst,

      And ‘Who is seeryus now?’ and then ‘J. C.

      Thought he’d got something, yes, but Ari was first’

      His body bettered. And the empty cage

      Sings in the wringing winds where winds blow

      Backward and forward one door in its age

      And the great cage suffers nothing whatever no

      Homage to Mistress Bradstreet

      (1953)

      Homage to Mistress Bradstreet

      [Born 1612 Anne Dudley, married at 16 Simon Bradstreet, a Cambridge man, steward to the Countess of Warwick and protégé of her father Thomas Dudley secretary to the Earl of Lincoln. Crossed in the Arbella, 1630, under Governor Winthrop.]

      1

      The Governor your husband lived so long

      moved you not, restless, waiting for him? Still,

      you were a patient woman.—

      I seem to see you pause here still:

      Sylvester, Quarles, in moments odd you pored

      before a fire at, bright eyes on the Lord,

      all the children still.

      ‘Simon…’ Simon will listen while you read a Song.

      2

      Outside the New World winters in grand dark

      white air lashing high thro’ the virgin stands

      foxes down foxholes sigh,

      surely the English heart quails, stunned.

      I doubt if Simon than this blast, that sea,

      spares from his rigour for your poetry

      more. We are on each other’s hands

      who care. Both of our worlds unhanded us. Lie stark,

      3

      thy eyes look to me mild. Out of maize & air

      your body’s made, and moves. I summon, see,

      from the centuries it.

      I think you won’t stay. How do we

      linger, diminished, in our lovers’ air,

      implausibly visible, to whom, a year,

      years, over interims; or not;

      to a long stranger; or not; shimmer & disappear.

      4

      Jaw-ript, rot with its wisdom, rending then;

      then not. When the mouth dies, who misses you?

      Your master never died,

      Simon ah thirty years past you—

      Pockmarkt & westward staring on a haggard deck

      it seems I find you, young. I come to check,

      I come to stay with you,

      and the Governor, & Father, & Simon, & the huddled men.

      5

      By the week we landed we were, most, used up.

      Strange ships across us, after a fortnight’s winds

      unfavouring, frightened us;

      bone-sad cold, sleet, scurvy; so were ill

      many as one day we could have no sermons;

      broils, quelled; a fatherless child-unkennelled; vermin

      crowding & waiting: waiting.

      And the day itself he leapt ashore young Henry Winthrop

      6

      (delivered from the waves; because he found

      off their wigwams, sharp-eyed, a lone canoe

      across a tidal river,

      that water glittered fair & blue

      & narrow, none of the other men could swim

      and the plantation’s prime theft up to him,

      shouldered on a glad day

      hard on the glorious feasting of thanksgivi
    ng) drowned.

      7

      How long with nothing in the ruinous heat,

      clams & acorns stomaching, distinction perishing,

      at which my heart rose,

      with brackish water, we would sing.

      When whispers knew the Governor’s last bread

      was browning in his oven, we were discourag’d.

      The Lady Arbella dying—

      dyings—at which my heart rose, but I did submit.

      8

      That beyond the Atlantic wound our woes enlarge

      is hard, hard that starvation burnishes our fear,

      but I do gloss for You.

      Strangers & pilgrims fare we here,

      declaring we seek a City. Shall we be deceived?

      I know whom I have trusted, & whom I have believed,

      and that he is able to

      keep that I have committed to his charge.

      9

      Winter than summer worse, that first, like a file

      on a quick, or the poison suck of a thrilled tooth;

      and still we may unpack.

      Wolves & storms among, uncouth

      board-pieces, boxes, barrels vanish, grow

      houses, rise. Motes that hop in sunlight slow

      indoors, and I am Ruth

      away: open my mouth, my eyes wet: I wóuld smile:

      10

      vellum I palm, and dream. Their forest dies

      to greensward, privets, elms & towers, whence

      a nightingale is throbbing.

      Women sleep sound. I was happy once . .

      (Something keeps on not happening; I shrink?)

      These minutes all their passions & powers sink

      and I am not one chance

      for an unknown cry or a flicker of unknown eyes.

      11

      Chapped souls ours, by the day Spring’s strong winds swelled,

      Jack’s pulpits arched, more glad. The shawl I pinned

      flaps like a shooting soul

      might in such weather Heaven send.

      Succumbing half, in spirit, to a salmon sash

      I prod the nerveless novel succotash—

      I must be disciplined,

      in arms, against that one, and our dissidents, and myself.

      12

      Versing, I shroud among the dynasties;

      quarternion on quarternion, tireless I phrase

      anything past, dead, far,

      sacred, for a barbarous place.

      —To please your wintry father? all this bald

      abstract didactic rime I read appalled

      harassed for your fame

      mistress neither of fiery nor velvet verse, on your knees

      13

      hopeful & shamefast, chaste, laborious, odd,

      whom the sea tore. —The damned roar with loss,

     


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