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    Selected Poems, 1956-1968

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      You restless bullets

      lost in swarms

      from undecided wars:

      fasten on

      these nude throats

      that need some

      decoration

      I've done my own work:

      I had 3 jewels

      no more

      and I have placed them

      on my choices

      jewels

      although they performed

      like bullets:

      an instant of ruby

      before the hands

      came up

      to stem the mess

      I 1 73

      And you over there

      my little acrobat:

      swing fast

      After me

      there is no care

      and the air

      is heavily armed

      and has

      the wildest aim

      T H E B I G W O R L D

      The big world will find out

      about this farm

      the big world will learn

      the details of what

      I worked out in the can

      And your curious life with me

      will be told so often

      that no one will believe

      you grew old

      • 74 I

      F R O N T L A W N

      The snow was falling

      over my penknife

      There was a movie

      in the fireplace

      The apples were wrapped

      in 8-year-old blond hair

      Starving and dirty

      the janitor's daughter never

      turned up in November

      to pee from her sweet crack

      on the gravel

      I'll go back one day

      when my cast is off

      Elm leaves are falling

      over my bow and arrow

      Candy is going bad

      and Boy Scout calendars

      are on fire

      My old mother

      sits in her Cadillac

      laughing her Danube laugh

      as I tell her that we own

      all the worms

      under our front lawn

      Rust rust rust

      in the engines of love and time

      I 175

      K E R E N S K Y

      My friend walks through our city this winter night,

      fur-hatted, whistling, anti-mediterranean,

      stricken with seeing Eternity in all that is seasonal.

      He is the Kerensky of our Circle

      always about to chair the last official meeting

      before the pros take over, they of the pure smiling eyes

      trained only for Form.

      He knows there are no measures to guarantee

      the Revolution, or to preserve the row of muscular icicles

      which will chart Winter's decline like a graph.

      There is nothing for him to do but preside

      over the last official meeting.

      It will all come round again: the heartsick teachers

      who make too much of poetry, their students

      who refuse to suffer, the cache of rilles in the lawyer's attic:

      and then the magic, the So-year comet touching

      the sturdiest houses. The Elite Corps commits suicide

      in the tennis-ball basement. Poets ride buses free.

      The General insists on a popularity poll. Troops study satire.

      A strange public generosity prevails.

      Only too well he knows the tiny moment when

      everything is possible, when pride is loved, beauty held

      in common, like having an exquisite sister,

      and a man gives away his death like a piece of advice.

      Our Kerensky has waited for these moments

      over a table in a rented room

      when poems grew like butterflies on the garbage of his life.

      How many times? The sad answer is: they can be counted.

      Possible and brief: this is his vision of Revolution.

      Who will parade the shell today?

      Who will kill in the name

      of the husk? Who will write a Law to raise the corpse

      176 I

      which cries now only for weeds and excrement?

      See him walk the streets, the last guard, the only idler

      on the square. He must keep the wreck of the Revolution

      the debris of public beauty

      from the pure smiling eyes of the trained visionaries

      who need our daily lives perfect.

      The soft snow begins to honour him with epaulets, and

      to provoke the animal past of his fur hat. He wears a death,

      but he allows the snow, like an ultimate answer, to forgive

      him, just for this jewelled moment of his coronation. The

      carved gargoyles of the City Hall receive the snow as bibs

      beneath their drooling lips. How they resemble the men of

      profane vision, the same greed, the same intensity as they

      who whip their minds to recall an ancient lucky orgasm,

      yes, yes, he knows that deadly concentration, they are the

      founders, they are the bankers-of History! He rests in his

      walk as they consume of the generous night everything that

      he does not need.

      I 177

      A N O T H E R N I G H T W I T H

      T E L E S C O P E

      Come back to me

      brutal empty room

      Thin Byzantine face

      preside over this new fast

      I am broken with easy grace

      Let me be neither

      father nor child

      but one who spins

      on an eternal unimportant loom

      patterns of wars and grass

      which do not last the night

      I know the stars

      are wild as dust

      and wait for no man's discipline

      but as they wheel

      from sky to sky they rake

      our lives with pins of light

      IV / Parasites of Heaven

      T H E N I G H T M A R E S D O N O T S U D D E N L Y

      The nightmares do not suddenly

      develop happy endings

      I merely step out of them

      as a live-year-old scientist

      leaves the room

      where he has dissected an alarm clock

      Love wears out

      like overused mirrors unsilvering

      and parts of your faces

      make room for the wall behind

      If terror needs my round green eyes

      for a masterpiece

      let it lure them with nude keyholes

      mounted on an egg

      And should Love decide

      I am not the one

      to stand scratching his head

      wondering what wall to lean on

      send King Farouk to argue

      or come to me dressed as a fast

      A C R O S S D I D N ' T F A L L O N M E

      A cross didn't fall on me

      when I went for hot-dogs

      and the all-night Greek

      slave in the Silver Gameland

      didn't think I was his brother

      Love me because nothing happens

      I believe the rain will not

      make me feel like a feather

      when it comes tonight after

      the streetcars have stopped

      because my size is definite

      Love me because nothing happens

      Do you have any idea how

      many movies I had to watch

      before I knew surely

      that I would love you

      when the lights woke up

      Love me because nothing happens

      Here is a headline July 14

      in the city of Montreal

      Intervention decisive de Pearson

      a Ia conference du Commonwealth

      That was yesterday

      Love me because nothing h
    appens

      Stars and stars and stars

      keep it to themselves

      Have you ever noticed how private

      a wet tree is

      a curtain of razor blades

      Love me because nothing happens

      Why should I be alone

      if what I say is true

      I confess I mean to find

      a passage or forge a passport

      or talk a new language

      Love me because nothing happens

      I confess I meant to grow

      wings and lose my mind

      I confess that I've

      forgotten what for

      Why wings and a lost mind

      Love me because nothing happens

      S O Y O U ' R E T H E K I N D O F V E G E T A R I A N

      So you're the kind of vegetarian

      that only eats roses

      Is that what you mean

      with your Beautiful Losers

      N O T H I N G H A S B E E N B R O K E N

      Nothing has been broken

      though one of the links of the chain

      is a blue butterfly

      Here he was attacked

      They smiled as they came and retired

      baffled with blue dust

      The banks so familiar with metal

      they made for the wings

      The thick vaults fluttered

      The pretty girls advanced

      their fingers cupped

      They bled from the mouth as though struck

      The jury asked for pity

      and touched and were electrocuted

      by the blue antennae

      A thrust at any link

      might have brought him down

      but each of you aimed at the blue butterfly

      H E R E W E A R E A T T H E W I N D O W

      Here we are at the window. Great unbound sheaves of

      rain wandering across the mountain, parades of wind and

      driven silver grass. So long I've tried to give a name to

      freedom, today my freedom lost its name, like a student's

      room travelling into the morning with its lights still on.

      Every act has its own style of freedom, whatever that means.

      Now I'm commanded to think of weeds, to worship the

      strong weeds that grew through the night, green and wet,

      the white thread roots taking lottery orders from the coils

      of brain mud, the permeable surface of the world. Did you

      know that the brain developed out of a fold in the epidermis? Did you? Falling ribbons of silk, the length of rivers, cross the face of the mountain, systems of grass and cable.

      Freedom lost its name to the style with which things happen.

      The straight trees, the spools of weed, the travelling skeins

      of rain floating through the folds of the mountain-here

      we are at the window. Are you ready now? Have I dismissed

      myself? May I fire from the hip? Brothers, each at your

      window, we are the style of so much passion, we are the

      order of style, we are pure style called to delight a fold of

      the sky.

      C L E A N A S T H E G R A S S F R O M W H I C H

      Clean as the grass from which

      the sun has burned the little dew

      I come to this page

      in the not so early morning

      with a picture of him

      whom I could not be for long

      not wanting to return or begin

      again the idolatry of terror

      He was burned away from me

      by needles by ashes

      by various shames I

      engineered against his innocence

      by documenting the love of one

      who gathered my first songs,

      and gave her body to my wandering

      With a picture of him

      grooming her thighs for a journey

      with a picture of him

      buying her a staring peacock feather

      with a picture of him

      knighted by her smile her soft fatigue

      I begin the hopeless formula

      she already had the gold from

      Live for him huge black eyes

      He never understood their purity

      or how they watched him prepare

      to ditch the early songs and say goodbye

      Sleep beside him uncaptured darling

      while I fold into a kite

      1 86 1

      the long evenings he scratched with

      experiments the empty dazzling mornings

      that forbid me to recall your name

      With a picture of him

      standing by the window while she slept

      with a picture of him

      wondering what adventure is

      wondering what cruelty is

      with a picture of him

      waking her with an angry kiss

      leading her body into use and time

      I bargain with the fire

      which must ignore the both of them

      W H E N I P A I D T H E S U N T O R U N

      When I paid the sun to run

      It ran and I sat down and cried

      The sun I spent my money on

      Went round and round inside

      The world all at once

      Charged with insignificance

      I S E E Y O U O N A G R E E K M A T T R E S S

      I see you on a Greek mattress

      reading the Book of Changes,

      Lebanese candy in the air.

      On the whitewashed wall I see

      you raise another hexagram

      for the same old question:

      how can you be free?

      I see you cleaning your pipe

      with the hairpin

      of somebody's innocent night.

      I see the plastic Evil Eye

      pinned to your underwear.

      Once again you throw the pennies,

      once again you read

      how the pieces of the world

      have changed around your question.

      Did you get to the Himalayas?

      Did you visit that monk in New Jersey?

      I never answered any of your letters.

      Oh Steve, do you remember me?

      188 1

      S U Z A N N E W E A R S A L E A T H E R C O A T

      Suzanne wears a leather coat.

      Her legs are insured by many burnt bridges.

      Her calves are full as spinnakers

      in a clean race, hard from following music

      beyond the maps of any audience.

      Suzanne wears a leather coat

      because she is not a civilian.

      She never walks casually down Ste Catherine

      because with every step she must redeem

      the clubfoot crowds and stalk the field

      of huge hail-stones that never melted,

      I mean the cemetery.

      Stand upl standi

      Suzanne is walking by.

      She wears a leather coat. She won't stop

      to bandage the fractures she walks between.

      She must not stop, she must not

      carry money.

      Many are the workers in charity.

      Few serve the lilac,

      few heal with mist.

      Suzanne wears a leather coat.

      Her breasts yearn for marble.

      The traffic halts: people fall out

      of their cars. None of their most drooling

      I I8g

      thoughts are wild enough

      to build the ant-full crystal city

      she would splinter with the tone of her step.

      O N E N I G H T I B U R N E D T H E H O U S E

      I L O V E D

      One night I burned the house I loved,

      It lit a perfect ring

      In which I saw .�orne weeds and stone

      Beyond-not anything.

      Certain creatures of the air

      Frightened by the night,


      They came to see the world again

      And perished in the light.

      Now I saii from sky to sky

      And all the blackness sings

      Against the boat that I have made

      Of mutilated wings.

      Igo I

      T W O W E N T T O S L E E P

      Two went to sleep

      Two went to sleep

      almost every night

      every sleep went together

      one dreamed of mud

      wandering away

      one dreamed of Asia

      from an operating table

      visiting a zeppelin

      one dreamed of grass

      visiting Nijinsky

      one dreamed of spokes

      Two went to sleep

      one bargained nicely

      one dreamed of ribs

      one was a snowman

      one dreamed of senators

      one counted medicine

      Two went to sleep

      one tasted pencils

      two travellers

      one was a child

      The long marriage

      one was a traitor

      in the dark

      visiting heavy industry

      The sleep was old

      visiting the family

      the travellers were old

      Two went to sleep

      one dreamed of oranges

      none could foretell

      one dreamed of Carthage

      one went with baskets

      Two friends asleep

      one took a ledger

      years locked in travel

      one night happy

      Good night my darling

      one night in terror

      as the dreams waved goodbye Love could not bind them

      one travelled lightly

      Fear could not either

      one walked through water

      they went unconnected

      visiting a chess game

      they never knew where

      visiting a booth

      always returning

      always returning

      to wait out the day

      to wait out the day

      parting with kissing

      One carried matches

      parting with yawns

      one climbed a beehive

      visiting Death till

      one sold an earphone

      they wore out their welcome

      one shot a German

      visiting Death till

      the right disguise worked

      I N T H E B I B L E G E N E R A T I O N S P A S S . . .

      In the Bible generations pass in a paragraph, a betrayal

      . is disposed of in a phrase, the creation of the world consumes a page. I could never pick the important dynasty out of a multitude, you must have your forehead shining

      to do that, or to choose out of the snarled network of daily

      evidence the denials and the loyalties. Who can choose what

      olive tree the story will need to shade its lovers, what tree

      out of the huge orchard will give them the particular view

      of branches and sky which will unleash their kisses. Only

     


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