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    Collected Poems, 1953-1993

    Page 26
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    convulsively departing from the exhausting regimen—

      the rising at 6 a.m. to sharpen twelve pencils

      with which to cut, as he stands at his bookcase,

      269 or 312 or 451 more words into the paper

      that will compose one of those many rumored books

      that somehow never appear—did he abruptly exclaim,

      “I must have a fishing tourney!”

      and have posters painted and posted

      in cabañTas, cigar stores, and bordellos,

      ERNEST HEMINGWAY FISHING COMPETITION,

      just like that?

      And did he receive, on one of those soft Havana mornings,

      while the smoky-green Caribbean laps the wharf legs,

      and the señToritas yawn behind grillwork,

      and the black mailmen walk in khaki shorts,

      an application blank stating CASTRO, Fidel?

      Occupation: Dictator. Address:

      Top Floor, Habana-Hilton Hotel (commandeered).

      Hobbies: Ranting, U.S.-Baiting, Fishing (novice).

      And was it honest? I mean, did Castro

      wade down off the beach in hip boots

      in a long cursing line of other contestants, Cubans,

      cabdrivers, pimps, restaurant waiters, small landowners,

      and make his cast, the bobbin singing,

      and the great fish leap, with a splash

      leap from the smoky-green waves,

      and he, tugging, writhing, bring it in

      and stand there, mopping the brow

      of his somehow fragile, Apollonian profile

      while the great man panted back and forth

      plying his tape measure?

      And at the award ceremony,

      did their two so-different sorts of fame—

      yet tangent on the point of beards and love of exploit—

      create in the air one of those eccentric electronic disturbances

      to which our younger physicists devote so much thought?

      In the photograph, there is some sign of it:

      they seem beatified, and resemble

      two apostles by Dürer, possibly Peter and Paul.

      My mind sinks down through the layers of strangeness:

      I am as happy as if I had opened

      a copy of “Alice in Wonderland”

      in which the heroine does win the croquet contest

      administered by the Queen of Hearts.

      Cosmic Gall

      Every second, hundreds of billions of these neutrinos pass through each square inch of our bodies, coming from above during the day and from below at night, when the sun is shining on the other side of the earth!

      —from “An Explanatory Statement on Elementary Particle Physics,” by M. A. Ruderman and A. H. Rosenfeld, in American Scientist

      Neutrinos, they are very small.

          They have no charge and have no mass

      And do not interact at all.

      The earth is just a silly ball

          To them, through which they simply pass,

      Like dustmaids down a drafty hall

          Or photons through a sheet of glass.

          They snub the most exquisite gas,

      Ignore the most substantial wall,

          Cold-shoulder steel and sounding brass,

      Insult the stallion in his stall,

          And, scorning barriers of class,

      Infiltrate you and me! Like tall

      And painless guillotines, they fall

          Down through our heads into the grass.

      At night, they enter at Nepal

          And pierce the lover and his lass

      From underneath the bed—you call

          It wonderful; I call it crass.

      A Vision

      (After Being Heavily Drugged with Inhalations of Literary Criticism, circa 1960)

      Said Harvey Swados to Herbert Gold,

      “American Fiction has to be bold.”

      Said Leslie Fiedler to Seymour Krim,

      “American Fiction ought to have vim.”

      Said Alfred Kazin to Lionel Trilling,

      “American Fiction must become willing

      To take the reader upon its knee

      And criticize Society.”

      So saying, all took pen in hand

      And scratched away to beat the band

      And wrote these splendid works themselves

      And then arranged them on the shelves,

      Proud row on row, immutable ranks.

      American Fiction wept, and gave thanks.

      Les Saints Nouveaux

      Proust, doing penance

      in a cork-lined room,

      numbered the petals

      in the orchards of doom

      and sighed through the vortex

      of his own strained breath

      the wonderfully abundant

      perfume called Death.

      Brancusi, an anchorite

      among rough shapes,

      blessed each with his eyes

      until like grapes

      they popped, releasing

      kernels of motion

      as patiently worked

      as if by the ocean.

      Cézanne, grave man,

      pondered the scene

      and saw it with passion

      as orange and green,

      and weighted his strokes

      with days of decision,

      and founded on apples

      theologies of vision.

      The Descent of Mr. Aldez

      Mr. Aldez, a cloud physicist, came down last year to study airborne ice crystals.

      —dispatch from Antarctica in the Times

      That cloud—ambiguous, not

      a horse, or a whale, but what?—

      comes down through the crystalline mist.

      It is a physicist!

      Like fog, on cat’s feet, tiptoeing

      to where the bits of ice are blowing,

      it drifts, and eddies, and spies

      its prey through vaporous eyes

      and pounces! With billowing paws

      the vague thing smokily claws

      the fluttering air, notes its traits,

      smiles knowingly, and dissipates.

      Upon Learning That a Town Exists in Virginia Called Upperville

      In Upperville, the upper crust

      Say “Bottoms up!” from dawn to dusk

      And “Ups-a-daisy, dear!” at will—

      I want to live in Upperville.

      One-upmanship is there the rule,

      And children learn about, at school,

      The Rise of Silas Lapham and

      Why gravitation has been banned.

      High hamlet, ho!—my mind’s eye sees

      Thy ruddy uplands, lofty trees,

      Upsurging streams, and towering dogs;

      There are no valleys, dumps, or bogs.

      Depression never dares intrude

      Upon thy sweet upswinging mood;

      Downcast, long-fallen, let me go

      To where the cattle never low.

      I’ve always known there was a town

      Just right for me; I’ll settle down

      And be uplifted all day long—

      Fair Upperville, accept my song.

      Recital

      ROGER BOBO GIVES

      RECITAL ON TUBA

      —headline in The New York Times

      Eskimos in Manitoba,

          Barracuda off Aruba,

      Cock an ear when Roger Bobo

          Starts to solo on the tuba.

      Men of every station—Pooh-Bah,

          Nabob, bozo, toff, and hobo—

      Cry in unison, “Indubi-

          Tably, there is simply nobo-

      Dy who oompahs on the tubo,

      Solo, quite like Roger Bubo!”

      I Missed His Book, but I Read His Name

      “The Silver Pilgrimage,” by M. Anantanarayanan … 160 pages. Criterion. $3
    .95.

      —The New York Times

      Though authors are a dreadful clan

      To be avoided if you can,

      I’d like to meet the Indian,

      M. Anantanarayanan.

      I picture him as short and tan.

      We’d meet, perhaps, in Hindustan.

      I’d say, with admirable élan,

      “Ah, Anantanarayanan—

      I’ve heard of you. The Times once ran

      A notice on your novel, an

      Unusual tale of God and Man.”

      And Anantanarayanan

      Would seat me on a lush divan

      And read his name—that sumptuous span

      Of “a”s and “n”s more lovely than

      “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan”—

      Aloud to me all day. I plan

      Henceforth to be an ardent fan

      Of Anantanarayanan—

      M. Anantanarayanan.

      On the Inclusion of Miniature Dinosaurs in Breakfast Cereal Boxes

      A post-historic herbivore,

      I come to breakfast looking for

      A bite. Behind the box of Brex

      I find Tyrannosaurus rex.

      And lo! beyond the Sugar Pops,

      An acetate Triceratops.

      And here! across the Shredded Wheat,

      The spoor of Brontosaurus feet.

      Too unawake to dwell upon

      A model of Iguanodon,

      I hide within the Raisin Bran;

      And thus begins the dawn of Man.

      The High-Hearts

      Assumption of erect posture in man lifts the heart higher above the ground than in any other animal now living except the giraffe and the elephant.

      —from an article titled “Anatomy” in the Encyclopaedia Britannica

      Proud elephant, by accident of bulk,

      Upreared the mammoth cardiacal hulk

      That plunged his storm of blood through canvas veins.

      Enthroned beneath his tusks, unseen, it reigns

      In dark state, stoutly ribbed, suffused with doubt,

      Where lions have to leap to seek it out.

      Herbivorous giraffe, in dappled love

      With green and sunstruck edibles above,

      Yearned with his bones; in an aeon or so,

      His glad heart left his ankles far below,

      And there, where forelegs turn to throat, it trem-

      Bles like a blossom halfway up a stem.

      Poor man, an ape anxious to use his paws,

      Became erect and held the pose because

      His brain, developing beyond his ken,

      Kept whispering, “The universe wants men.”

      So still he strains to keep his heart aloft,

      Too high and low at once, too hard and soft.

      Marriage Counsel

      WHY MARRY OGRE

      JUST TO GET HUBBY?

      —headline in the Boston Herald

      Why marry ogre

          Just to get hubby?

      Has he a brogue, or

          Are his legs stubby?

      Smokes he a stogie?

          Is he not sober?

      Is he too logy

          And dull as a crowbar?

      Tom, Dick, and Harry:

          Garrulous, greedy,

      And grouchy. They vary

          From savage to seedy,

      And, once wed, will parry

          To be set asunder.

      O harpy, why marry

          Ogre? I wonder.

      The Handkerchiefs of Khaibar Khan

      Arriving for a Paris vacation with a wardrobe which included … 818 handkerchiefs … Iran’s Khaibar Khan explained with disarming candor: “I was fortunate to be born in the middle of an area where oil comes from.”

      —Life

      In Nishapur did Khaibar Khan

      With stately ease exclaim “Kerchoo!”

      And Standard Oil dispatched its man

      With bales of linen to Iran

      To minister unto his flu.

      The prince allowed, “O lucky me,

      To have been born above a sea

      Where microörganisms died

      By barrelfuls and so supplied

      The engines of the fabled West

      With fuel for which I take the fee

      In handkerchiefs my valet crams

      In chests and filing cabinets

      In order of their monograms,

      Which range from ‘K’ to ‘K,’ ” said he,

      With candor, quite disarmingly.

      Dea ex Machina

      In brief, shapeliness and smoothness of the flesh are desirable because they are signs of biological efficiency.

      —David Angus, The New York Times Book Review

      My love is like Mies van der Rohe’s

                     “Machine for living”; she,

      Divested of her underclothes,

                     Suggests efficiency.

      Her supple shoulders call to mind

                     A set of bevelled gears;

      Her lower jaw has been aligned

                     To hinge behind her ears.

      Her hips, sweet ball-and-socket joints,

                     Are padded to perfection;

      Each knee, with its patella, points

                     In just the right direction.

      Her fingertips remind me of

                     A digital computer;

      She couldn’t be, my shapely love,

                     A millimeter cuter.

      Die Neuen Heiligen

      Kierkegaard, a

      cripple and a Dane,

      disdained to marry;

      the consequent strain

      unsprang the whirling

      gay knives of his wits,

      which slashed the Ideal

      and himself to bits.

      Kafka, a lawyer

      and citizen of Prague,

      became consumptive

      in the metaphysic fog

      and, coughing with laughter,

      lampooned the sad state

      that judged its defendants

      all guilty of Fate.

      Karl Barth, more healthy,

      and married, and Swiss,

      lived longer, yet took

      small comfort from this;

      Nein! he cried, rooting

      in utter despair

      the Credo that Culture

      left up in the air.

      Miss Moore at Assembly

      (Based Finically upon an Item in The New York Times Describing Marianne Moore’s Lecture Appearance before the Students of a Brooklyn High School)

      A “chattering, gum-snapping audience”

          held rapt by poetess, hat

                     tricorn, “gigantic white orchid

          fluttering at her shoulder”—that

                     suffices, in mid-

      century, to tax one’s fittingness’s sense.

      But why?…Birds heard Francis. Who else could come

          to Eastern District High School

                     (“slum,” “bubble-gum-snapping”) and stand—

          tobacco-eschewer but Bol-

                     lingen Prize-winner—and

      say, “I’ve always wanted to play a snare drum”?

      White Dwarf

      Discovery of the smallest known star in the universe was announced today.… The star is about one half the diameter of the moon.

      —The New York Times

      Welcome, welcome, little star!

      I’m delighted that you are

      Up in Heaven’s vast extent,


      No bigger than a continent.

      Relatively minuscule,

      Spinning like a penny spool,

      Glinting like a polished spoon,

      A kind of kindled demi-moon,

      You offer cheer to tiny Man

      ’Mid galaxies Gargantuan—

      A little pill in endless night,

      An antidote to cosmic fright.

      Exposure

      Please do not tell me there is no voodoo,

      For, if so, how then do you

      Explain that a photograph of a head

      Always tells if the person is living or dead?

      Always. I have never known it to fail.

      There is something misted in the eyes, something pale,

      If not in the lips, then in the hair—

      It is hard to put your finger on, but there.

      A kind of third dimension settles in:

      A blur, a kiss of otherness, a milky film.

      If, while you hold a snapshot of Aunt Flo,

      Her real heart stops, you will know.

      Exposé

      LE CHAMP MAGNÉTIQUE DE VÉNUS EST EXTRÊMEMENT FAIBLE

      —headline in Le Monde

      Le Monde regrets it must report—

          In simple duty to the nation,

                     And favoring no clique or faction—

                     That Venus’ powers of attraction,

      When measured coolly, fall far short

          Of their much-vaunted reputation.

      “Extrěmement”—harsh word, but, then,

          Le monde, it is a brutal planet,

                     Unsentimental, unromantic.

     


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