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    Selected Poems, 1956-1968

    Page 3
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      and clear his throat outside our door.

      T H E F L Y

      I n his black armour

      the house.fty marched the field

      of Freia's sleeping thighs,

      undisturbed by the soft hand

      which vaguely moved

      to end his exercise.

      And it ruined my day-

      this fly which never planned

      to charm her or to please

      should walk boldly on that ground

      I tried so hard

      to lay my trembling knees.

      W A R N I N G

      If your neighbour disappears

      0 if your neighbour disappears

      The quiet man who raked his lawn

      The girl who always took the sun

      Never mention it to your wife

      Never say at dinner time

      Whatever happened to that man

      Who used to rake his lawn

      Never say to your daughter

      As you're walking home from church

      Funny thing about that girl

      I haven't seen her for a month

      And if your son says to you

      Nobody lives next door

      They've all gone away

      Send him to bed with no supper

      Because it can spread, it can spread

      And one fine evening coming home

      Your wife and daughter and son

      They'll have caught the idea and will be gone.

      S T O R Y

      She tells me a child built her house

      one Spring afternoon,

      but that the child was killed

      crossing the street.

      She says she read it in the newspaper,

      that at the corner of this and this avenue

      a child was run down by an automobile.

      Of course I do not believe her.

      She has built the house herself,

      hung the oranges and coloured beads in the doorways,

      crayoned flowers on the walls.

      She has made the paper things for the wind,

      collected crooked stones for their shadows in the sun,

      fastened yellow and dark balloons to the ceiling.

      Each time I visit her

      she repeats the story of the child to me,

      I never question her. It is important

      to understand one's part in a legend.

      I take my place

      among the paper fish and make-believe docks,

      naming the flowers she has drawn,

      smiling while she paints my head on large clay coins,

      and making a sort of courtly love to her

      when she contemplates her own traffic death.

      3 2 I

      B E S I D E T H E S H E P H E R D

      Beside the shepherd dreams the beast

      Of laying down with lions.

      The youth puts away his singing reed

      And strokes the consecrated flesh.

      Glory, Glory, shouts the grass,

      Shouts the brick, as from the cliff

      The gorgeous fallen sun

      Rolls slowly on the promised city.

      Naked running through the mansion

      The boy with news of the Messiah

      Forgets the message for his father,

      Enjoying the marble against his feet.

      Well finally it has happened,

      Imagines someone in another house,

      Staring one more minute out his window

      Before waking up his wife.

      I 33

      II / The Spice-Box of Earth

      A K I T E I S A V I C T I M

      A kite is a victim you are sure of.

      You Jove it became it pulls

      gentle enough to call you master,

      strong enough to call you fool;

      because it lives

      like a desperate trained falcon

      in the high sweet air,

      and you can always haul it down

      to tame it in your drawer.

      A kite is a fish you have already caught

      in a pool where no fish come,

      so you play him carefully and long,

      and hope he won't give up,

      or the wind die down.

      A kite is the last poem you've written,

      so you give it to the wind,

      but you don't let it go

      until someone finds you

      something else to do.

      A kite is a contract of glory

      that must be made with the sun,

      so you make friends with the field

      the river and the wind,

      then you pray the whole cold night before,

      under the travelling cordless moon,

      to make you worthy and lyric and pure.

      I 37

      T H E F L O W E R S T H A T I L E F T

      I N T H E G R O U N D

      The flowers that I left in the ground,

      that I did not gather for you,

      today I bring them all back,

      to let them grow forever,

      not in poems or marble,

      but where they fell and rotted.

      And the ships in their great stalls,

      huge and transitory as heroes,

      ships I could not captain,

      today I bring them back

      to let them sail forever,

      not in model or ballad,

      but where they were wrecked and scuttled.

      And the child on whose shoulders I stand,

      whose longing I purged

      with public, kingly discipline,

      today I bring him back

      to languish forever,

      not in confession or biography,

      but where he flourished,

      growing sly and hairy.

      It is not malice that draws me away,

      draws me to renunciation, betrayal:

      it is weariness, I go for weariness of thee.

      Gold, ivory, flesh, love, God, blood, moon-

      1 have become the expert of the catalogue.

      My body once so familiar with glory,

      my body has become a museum:

      this part remembered because of o;omeone's mouth,

      this because of a hand,

      this of wetness, this of heat.

      Who owns anything he has not made?

      With your beauty I am as uninvolved

      as with horses' manes and waterfalls.

      This is my last catalogue.

      I breathe the breathless

      I love you, I love you-

      and let you move forever.

      G I F T

      You tell me that silence

      is nearer to peace than poems

      but if for my gift

      I brought you silence

      (for I know silence)

      you would say

      This is not silence

      this is another poem

      and you would hand it back to me.

      I 39

      T H E R E A R E S O M E M E N

      There are some men

      who should have mountains

      to bear their names to time.

      Grave-markers are not high enough

      or green,

      and sons go far away

      to lose the fist

      their father's hand will always seem.

      I had a friend:

      he lived and died in mighty silence

      and with dignity,

      left no book, son, or lover to mourn.

      Nor is this a mourning-song

      but only a naming of this mountain

      on which I walk,

      fragrant, dark, and softly white

      under the pale of mist.

      I name this mountain after him.

      Y O U A L L I N W H I T E

      Whatever cities are brought down,

      I will always bring you poems,

      and the fruit of orchards

      I pass by.

      Strangers in your bed,

      excluded by our grief,


      listening to sleep-whispering,

      will hear their passion beautifully explained,

      and weep because they cannot kiss

      your distant face.

      Lovers of my beloved,

      watch how my words put on her lips like clothes,

      how they wear her body like a rare shawl.

      Fruit is pyramided on the window-sill,

      songs flutter against the disappearing wall.

      The sky of the city

      is washed in the fire

      of Lebanese cedar and gold.

      In smoky filigree cages

      the apes and peacocks fret.

      Now the cages do not hold,

      in the burning street man and animal

      perish in each other's arms,

      peacocks drown around the melting throne.

      Is it the king

      who lies beside you listening?

      Is it Solomon or David

      or stuttering Charlemagne?

      I 41

      Is that his crown

      in the suitcase beside your bed?

      When we meet again,

      you all in white,

      I smelling of orchards,

      when we meet-

      But now you awaken,

      and you are tired of this dream.

      Turn toward the sad-eyed man.

      He stayed by you all the night.

      You will have something

      to say to him.

      I W O N D E R H O W M A N Y P E O P L E

      I N T H I S C I T Y

      I wonder how many people in this city

      live in furnished rooms.

      Late at night when I look out at the buildings

      I swear I see a face in every window

      looking back at me,

      and when I turn away

      I wonder how many go back to their desks

      and write this down.

      42 1

      G O B Y B R O O K S

      Go by brooks, love,

      Where fish stare,

      Go by brooks,

      I will pass there.

      Go by rivers,

      Where eels throng,

      Rivers, love,

      I won't be long.

      Go by oceans,

      Where whales sail,

      Oceans, love,

      I will not fail.

      I 43

      T O A T E A C H E R

      Hurt once and for all into silence.

      A long pain ending without a song to prove it.

      Who could stand beside you so close to Eden,

      when you glinted in every eye the held-high razor,

      shivering every ram and son?

      And now the silent loony-bin,

      where the shadows live in the rafters

      like day-weary bats,

      until the turning mind, a radar signal,

      lures them to exaggerate mountain-size

      on the white stone wall

      your tiny limp.

      How can I leave you in such a house?

      Are there no more saints and wizards

      to praise their ways with pupils,

      no more evil to stun with the slap

      of a wet red tongue?

      Did you confuse the Messiah in a mirror

      and rest because he had finally come?

      Let me cry Help beside you, Teacher.

      I have entered under this dark roof

      as fearlessly as an honoured son

      enters his father's house.

      44 I

      I H A V E N O T L I N G E R E D I N

      E U R O P E A N M O N A S T E R I E S

      I have not lingered in European monasteries

      and discovered among the tall grasses tombs of knights

      who fell as beautifully as their ballads tell;

      I have not parted the grasses

      or purposefully left them thatched.

      I have not released my mind to wander and wait

      in those great distances

      between the snowy mountains and the fishermen,

      like a moon,

      or a shell beneath the moving water.

      I have not held my breath

      so that I might hear the breathing of God,

      or tamed my heartbeat with an exercise,

      or starved for visions.

      Although I have watched him often

      I have not become the heron,

      leaving my body on the shore,

      and I have not become the luminous trout,

      leaving my body in the air.

      I have not worshipped wounds and relics,

      or combs of iron,

      or bodies wrapped and burnt in scrolls.

      I have not been unhappy for ten thousand years.

      During the day I laugh and during the night I sleep.

      My favourite cooks prepare my meals,

      my body cleans and repairs itself,

      and all my work goes well.

      I 45

      I T S W I N G S , JOCKO

      It swings, Jocko,

      but we do not want too much flesh in it.

      Make it like fifteenth-century prayers,

      love with no climax,

      constant love,

      and passion without flesh.

      (Draw those out, Jocko,

      like the long snake from Moses' arm;

      how he must have screamed

      to see a snake come out of him;

      no wonder he never felt holy:

      We want that scream tonight.)

      Lightly, lightly,

      I want to be hungry,

      hungry for food,

      for love, for flesh;

      I want my dreams to be of deprivation,

      gold thorns being drawn from my temples.

      If I am hungry

      then I am great,

      and I love like the passionate scientist

      who knows the sky

      is made only of wave-lengths.

      Now if you want to stand up,

      stand up lightly,

      we'll lightly march around the city.

      I'm behind you, man,

      and the streets are spread with chicks and palms,

      white branches and summer arms.

      We're going through on tiptoe,

      like monks before the Virgin's statue.

      We built the city,

      we drew the water through,

      we hang around the rinks,

      the bars, the festive halls,

      like Brueghel's men.

      Hungry, hungry.

      Come back, Jocko,

      bring it all back for the people here,

      it's your turn now.

      I 47

      C R E D O

      A cloud of grasshoppers

      rose from where we loved

      and passed before the sun.

      I wondered what farms

      they would devour,

      what slave people would go free

      because of them.

      I thought of pyramids overturned,

      of Pharaoh hanging by the feet,

      his body smeared-

      Then my love drew me down

      to conclude what I had begun.

      Later, clusters of fern apart,

      we lay.

      A cloud of grasshoppers

      passed between us and the moon,

      going the other way,

      each one fat and flying slow,

      not hungry for the leaves and ferns

      we rested on below.

      The smell that burning cities give

      was in the air.

      Battalions of the wretched,

      wild with holy promises,

      soon passed our sleeping place;

      they ran among

      the ferns and grass.

      I had two thoughts:

      to leave my love

      and join their wandering,

      join their holiness;

      or take my love

      to the city they had fled:

      That impoverished world

    &nb
    sp; of boil-afflicted flesh

      and rotting fields

      could not tempt us from each other.

      Our ordinary morning lust

      claimed my body first

      and made me sane.

      I must not betray

      the small oasis where we lie,

      though only for a time.

      It is good to live between

      a ruined house of bondage

      and a holy promised land.

      A cloud of grasshoppers

      will turn another Pharaoh upside-down;

      slaves will build cathedrals

      for other slaves to burn.

      It is good to hear

      the larvae rumbling underground,

      good to learn

      the feet of fierce or humble priests

      trample out the green.

      I 49

      Y O U H A V E T H E L O V E R S

      You have the lovers,

      they are nameless, their histories only for each other,

      and you have the room, the bed and the windows.

      Pretend it is a ritual.

      Unfurl the bed, bury the lovers, blacken the windows,

      let them live in that house for a generation or two.

      No one dares disturb them.

      Visitors in the corridor tip-toe past the long closed door,

      they listen for sounds, for a moan, for a song:

      nothing is heard, not even breathing.

      You know they are not dead,

      you can feel the presence of their intense love.

      Your children grow up, they leave you,

      they have become soldiers and riders.

      Your mate dies after a life of service.

      Who knows you? Who remembers you?

      But in your house a ritual is in progress:

      it is not finished: it needs more people.

      One day the door is opened to the lover's chamber.

      The room has become a dense garden,

      full of colours, smells, sounds you have never known.

      The bed is smooth as a wafer of sunlight,

      in the midst of the garden it stands alone.

      In the bed the lovers, slowly and deliberately and silently,

      perform the act of love.

      Their eyes are closed,

      as tightly as if heavy coins of flesh lay on them.

      Their lips are bruised with new and old bruises.

      Her hair and his beard are hopelessly tangled.

      When he puts his mouth against her shoulder

      she is uncertain whether her shoulder

      has given or received the kiss.

      5° I

      All her flesh is like a mouth.

      He carries his fingers along her waist

      and feels his own waist caressed.

      She holds him closer and his own arms tighten around her.

      She kisses the hand beside her mouth.

      It is his hand or her hand, it hardly matters,

      there are so many more kisses.

      You stand beside the bed, weeping with happiness,

      you carefully peel away the sheets

      from the slow-moving bodies.

      Your eyes are filled with tears, you barely make out the

      lovers.

     


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