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    Collected Poems, 1953-1993


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      THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK

      PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.

      Copyright © 1993 by John Updike

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed by Random House, Inc., New York.

      Most of the poems in this work are from the following Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., collections: The Carpentered Hen, copyright © 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1982 by John Updike, copyright renewed 1982 by John Updike; Telephone Poles, copyright © 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963 by John Updike; Midpoint, copyright © 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969 by John Updike; Tossing and Turning, copyright © 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977 by John Updike; Facing Nature, copyright © 1985 by John Updike.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Updike, John.

      [Poems. Selections]

      Collected poems, 1953–1993 / John Updike. — 1st ed.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references.

      eISBN: 978-0-307-96197-6

      I. Title.

      PS3 571.P4A6 1993

      811’.54—dc20 92–28957

      v3.1

      Acknowledgments

      The following publications first printed certain of these poems: Agni, The American Poetry Review, The American Scholar, American Way, Antaeus, The Atlantic Monthly, The Bennington Review, Boston Magazine, The Boston Review of the Arts, Boston University Journal, Boulevard, The Christian Century, Commonweal, The Connecticut Poetry Review, Horse, The Formalist, Grand Street, Harper’s, Harvard Advocate, The Harvard Bulletin, The Harvard Lampoon, Ladies’ Home Journal, Life, Look, Mānoa, Michigan Quarterly Review, Modern Poetry: East and West, The Nation, Negative Capability, New England Monthly, The New Republic, The New Yorker, New York Quarterly, The New York Times, The Ontario Review, The Oxford American, Parabola, The Paris Review, Plum, Poetry, Poetry Review, Poets and Writers Celebration Program, Polemic, Polymus, Première, Punch, Quest Magazine, River City, The Saturday Review, Scientific American, Shenandoah, South Beach, The Southern California Anthology, South Shore, Sycamore Review, Syracuse 10, The Transatlantic Review, What’s New.

      And the following presses and publishers issued broadsides and limited editions of various poems: The Adams and Lowell House Printers, Albondocani Press, Bits Press, Country Squires Books, Eurographica, Frank Hallman, Halty Ferguson, Lord John Press, Mummy Mountain Press, Palaemon Press, Press-22, Rook Broadsides, Santa Susana Press, Waves Press, and Wind River Press.

      for all of my families

      from John Franklin Hoyer, born in 1863,

      to Wesley Doudi Githiora Updike born in 1989

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Acknowledgments

      Dedication

      Preface

      Why the Telephone Wires Dip and the Poles Are Cracked and Crooked

      Cloud Shadows

      Ex-Basketball Player

      A Modest Mound of Bones

      Sunflower

      March: A Birthday Poem

      Burning Trash

      English Train Compartment

      Tao in the Yankee Stadium Bleachers

      How to Be Uncle Sam

      3 A.M.

      Mobile of Birds

      Shillington

      Suburban Madrigal

      Telephone Poles

      Mosquito

      Trees Eat Sunshine

      Winter Ocean

      Modigliani’s Death Mask

      Seagulls

      Seven Stanzas at Easter

      B.W.I.

      February 22

      Summer: West Side

      Wash

      Maples in a Spruce Forest

      Vermont

      The Solitary Pond

      Flirt

      Fever

      Earthworm

      Old-Fashioned Lightning Rod

      Sunshine on Sandstone

      The Stunt Flier

      Calendar

      The Short Days

      Boil

      Widener Library, Reading Room

      Movie House

      Vibration

      The Blessing

      My Children at the Dump

      The Great Scarf of Birds

      Azores

      Erotic Epigrams

      Hoeing

      Report of Health

      Fireworks

      Lamplight

      Nuda Natens

      Postcards from Soviet Cities

      Moscow

      Leningrad

      Kiev

      Tbilisi

      Yerevan

      Camera

      Roman Portrait Busts

      Fellatio

      Décor

      Poem for a Far Land

      Late January

      Dog’s Death

      Home Movies

      Antigua

      Amoeba

      Elm

      Daughter

      Eurydice

      Seal in Nature

      Air Show

      Omega

      The Angels

      Bath After Sailing

      Topsfield Fair

      Pompeii

      Sand Dollar

      Washington

      Dream Objects

      Midpoint

      I. Introduction

      II. The Photographs

      III. The Dance of the Solids

      IV. The Play of Memory

      V. Conclusion

      Chloë’s Poem

      Minority Report

      Living with a Wife

      At the Piano

      In the Tub

      Under the Sunlamp

      During Menstruation

      All the While

      À l’École Berlitz

      South of the Alps

      A Bicycle Chain

      Tossing and Turning

      On an Island

      Sunday Rain

      Marching Through a Novel

      Night Flight, over Ocean

      Phenomena

      Wind

      Sunday

      Touch of Spring

      The House Growing

      Cunts

      Apologies to Harvard

      Commencement, Pingree School

      Conversation

      Melting

      Query

      Heading for Nandi

      Sleepless in Scarsdale

      Note to the Previous Tenants

      Pale Bliss

      Mime

      Golfers

      Poisoned in Nassau

      You Who Swim

      Sunday in Boston

      Raining in Magens Bay

      Leaving Church Early

      Another Dog’s Death

      Dream and Reality

      Dutch Cleanser

      Rats

      The Melancholy of Storm Windows

      Calder’s Hands

      The Grief of Cafeterias

      Spanish Sonnets

      To Ed Sissman

      Ohio

      Iowa

      Waiting Rooms

      Boston Lying-In

      Mass. Mental Health

      On the Way to Delphi

      An Oddly Lovely Day Alone

      Taste

      Penumbrae

      Revelation

      The Shuttle

      Crab Crack

      Nature

      The Moons of Jupiter

      Upon the Last Day of His Forty-Ninth Year

      Planting Trees

      The Fleckings

      East Hampton-Boston by Air

      Small-City People

      L.A.

      Plow Cemetery

      Spring Song

      Accumulation

      Styles of Bloom


      Natural Question

      Two Hoppers

      Two Sonnets Whose Titles Came to Me Simultaneously

      The Dying Phobiac Takes His Fears with Him

      No More Access to Her Underpants

      Long Shadow

      Aerie

      The Code

      Island Sun

      Pain

      Sleeping with You

      Richmond

      Gradations of Black

      The Furniture

      Seven Odes to Seven Natural Processes

      Ode to Rot

      To Evaporation

      Ode to Growth

      To Fragmentation

      Ode to Entropy

      To Crystallization

      Ode to Healing

      Switzerland

      Munich

      A Pear like a Potato

      Airport

      From Above

      Oxford, Thirty Years After

      Somewhere

      Sonnet to Man-Made Grandeur

      Klimt and Schiele Confront the Cunt

      Returning Native

      Snowdrops 1987

      Goodbye, Göteborg

      Hot Water

      Squirrels Mating

      Sails on All Saints’ Day

      Tulsa

      Washington: Tourist View

      Back Bay

      In Memoriam Felis Felis

      Enemies of a House

      Orthodontia

      Condo Moon

      Pillow

      Seattle Uplift

      The Beautiful Bowel Movement

      Charleston

      Frost

      To a Box Turtle

      Each Summer’s Swallows

      Fargo

      Fall

      The Millipede

      Generic College

      Perfection Wasted

      Working Outdoors in Winter

      Indianapolis

      Zoo Bats

      Landing in the Rain at La Guardia

      Mouse Sex

      Granite

      Relatives

      Thin Air

      November

      Light Switches

      Miami

      Fly

      Flurry

      Bindweed

      July

      To a Dead Flame

      Back from Vacation

      Literary Dublin

      Elderly Sex

      Celery

      São Paulo

      Rio de Janeiro

      Brazil

      Upon Looking into Sylvia Plath’s Letters Home

      At the End of the Rainbow

      Academy

      Light Verse

      Mountain Impasse

      Solitaire

      Duet, with Muffled Brake Drums

      Player Piano

      Snapshots

      An Imaginable Conference

      Dilemma in the Delta

      Shipbored

      Song of the Open Fireplace

      The Clan

      Youth’s Progress

      Humanities Course

      V. B. Nimble, V. B. Quick

      Lament, for Cocoa

      Pop Smash, Out of Echo Chamber

      Sunglasses

      Pooem

      To an Usherette

      Time’s Fool

      Superman

      An Ode

      The Newlyweds

      The Story of My Life

      A Bitter Life

      A Wooden Darning Egg

      Publius Vergilius Maro, the Madison Avenue Hick

      Tsokadze O Altitudo

      The One-Year-Old

      Room 28

      Philological

      Mr. High-Mind

      Tax-Free Encounter

      Scenic

      Capacity

      Little Poems

      Popular Revivals 1956

      Tune, in American Type

      Due Respect

      A Rack of Paperbacks

      Even Egrets Err

      Glasses

      The Sensualist

      In Memoriam

      Planting a Mailbox

      ZULUS LIVE IN LAND WITHOUT A SQUARE

      Caligula’s Dream

      Bendix

      The Menagerie at Versailles in 1775

      Reel

      Kenneths

      Upon Learning That a Bird Exists Called the Turnstone

      In Extremis

      Blked

      Toothache Man

      Party Knee

      The Moderate

      Deities and Beasts

      Within a Quad

      In Praise of (C10H9O5)x

      Milady Reflects

      The Fritillary

      Thoughts While Driving Home

      Sonic Boom

      Tome-Thoughts, from the Times

      A Song of Paternal Care

      Tropical Beetles

      Agatha Christie and Beatrix Potter

      Young Matrons Dancing

      Comp. Religion

      Meditation on a News Item

      Cosmic Gall

      A Vision

      Les Saints Nouveaux

      The Descent of Mr. Aldez

      Upon Learning That a Town Exists in Virginia Called Upperville

      Recital

      I Missed His Book, but I Read His Name

      On the Inclusion of Miniature Dinosaurs in Breakfast Cereal Boxes

      The High-Hearts

      Marriage Counsel

      The Handkerchiefs of Khaibar Khan

      Dea ex Machina

      Die Neuen Heiligen

      Miss Moore at Assembly

      White Dwarf

      Exposure

      Exposé

      Farewell to the Shopping District of Antibes

      Some Frenchmen

      Sea Knell

      Vow

      The Amish

      The Naked Ape

      The Origin of Laughter

      The Average Egyptian Faces Death

      Painted Wives

      Skyey Developments

      Courtesy Call

      Business Acquaintances

      Seven New Ways of Looking at the Moon

      Upon Shaving Off One’s Beard

      The Cars in Caracas

      Insomnia the Gem of the Ocean

      To a Waterbed

      The Jolly Greene Giant

      News from the Underworld

      Authors’ Residences

      Sin City, D.C.

      Shaving Mirror

      Self-Service

      The Visions of Mackenzie King

      Energy: A Villanelle

      On the Recently Minted Hundred-Cent Piece

      Typical Optical

      The Rockettes

      Food

      The Sometime Sportsman Greets the Spring

      ZIP Code Ode

      Déjà, Indeed

      Two Limericks for the Elderly

      Mites

      An Open Letter to Voyager II

      Classical Optical

      Neoteny

      Notes

      Appendix A: Poems in Previous Collections Omitted

      Appendix B: Poems Published in The New Yorker Omitted

      Index of Titles

      A Note About the Author

      Books by John Updike

      Preface

      AS A BOY I wanted to be a cartoonist. Light verse (and the verse that came my way was generally light) seemed a kind of cartooning with words, and through light verse I first found my way into print. The older I have grown, the less of it I have written, but the idea of verse, of poetry, has always, during forty years spent working primarily in prose, stood at my elbow, as a standing invitation to the highest kind of verbal exercise—the most satisfying, the most archaic, the most elusive of critical control. In hotel rooms and airplanes, on beaches and Sundays, at junctures of personal happiness or its opposite, poetry has comforted me with its hope of permanence, its packaging of flux.

      In making this collection, I wanted to distinguish my poems from my light verse. My principle of segregation has been that a poem derives from the real (the given, the substantial) world and light verse from the man-made world of information—books, newspapers, words, signs. If a set of lines brought ba
    ck to me something I actually saw or felt, it was not light verse. If it took its spark from language and stylized signifiers, it was. A number of entries wavered back and forth across the border; the distinction becomes a subjective one of tone. You will find in the light category a game of solitaire, a pair of glasses, and a shaving mirror that were all real to me. Artificial in essence, light verse usually employs the artifices of rhyme and strict form, but not always. Nor are rhyming poems always light; those reporting from specific places (“Azores,” “Antigua”) seemed to me earnest enough, in delivering up a piece of our planet, to be considered poems. The very first poem here, bearing a comically long title, yet conveyed, with a compression unprecedented in my brief writing career, the mythogenetic truth of telephone wires and poles marching across a stretch of Pennsylvania farmland. I still remember the shudder, the triumphant sense of capture, with which I got these lines down, not long after my twenty-first birthday.

      But every set of lines herein gave me the excited sensation of being a maker, a poiētēs. Almost all of the poems in my five previous volumes of verse have been included, along with some seventy more. I have sought out their dates of composition—given in the index of titles—and arranged them, within the two broad categories, in the order in which they were written. They form thus, with their sites and occasions, the thready backside of my life’s fading tapestry. Not included are verse translations, rhyming salutes for the birthdays and weddings of children and stepchildren, the lyrics of a children’s opera called The Fisherman and His Wife, a set of seasonal poems titled A Child’s Calendar, and a “cheerful alphabet” of “pleasant objects” composed with my infant first son in mind. An appendix lists the titles previously collected but dropped from this conclusive gathering. The stanza breaks, I trust, are all clear. Sic stat. My poems are my oeuvre’s beloved waifs, and I feared that if I did not perform the elementary bibliographical decencies for them no one would.

      J.U.

      Why the Telephone Wires Dip and the Poles Are Cracked and Crooked

      The old men say

      young men in gray

      hung this thread across our plains

      acres and acres ago.

      But we, the enlightened, know

      in point of fact it’s what remains

      of the flight of a marvellous crow

      no one saw:

      each pole, a caw.

      Cloud Shadows

      I

      That white coconut, the sun,

          is hidden by his blue leaves,

      piratical great galleons.

      Our sky their spanking sea,

          they thrust us to an ocean floor,

      withal with certain courtesy.

      II

      These courtly cotton-bellies rub

          around the jewel we live within

      and down to the muddled hub

      drop complements.

          Down shafts of violet fall

      counterweights of shadow, hence

     


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