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    Book of Longing

    Page 5
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      Than any Sacred Text

      Sometimes just a list

      Of my events

      Is holier than the Bill of Rights

      And more intense

      THE COLD

      The cold seizes me

      and I shiver

      The wine

      overthrows my tears

      The night puts me to bed

      and the sorrows

      strengthen my resolve

      Your name is burning

      under a statue

      Even when I was with you

      I wanted to be here

      The rain unhooks my belt

      The wind gives a shape

      to your absence

      I move in and out

      of the One Heart

      no longer struggling

      to be free

      A MAGIC CURE

      I get up too late

      The day is lost

      I don’t bless the rooster

      I don’t raise my hands to the water

      Then it’s dark

      and I look into all the spots

      on rue St-Denis

      I even talk religion

      to the other wastrels

      who, like me, are after new women

      In bed I fall asleep

      in the middle of a Psalm

      which I am reading

      for a magic cure

      – Montreal, 1975

      LAYTON’S QUESTION

      Always after I tell him

      what I intend to do next,

      Layton solemnly inquires:

      Leonard, are you sure

      you’re doing the wrong thing?

      – after a photo by Laszlo

      IF YOU KNEW

      if you knew how much we loved you

      you’d cover up

      you wouldn’t fuck around

      with the passion

      that killed three hundred thousand people

      at hiroshima

      or scooped up rocks from the moon

      and crushed them into dust

      looking for you

      looking for your lost encouragement

      I WROTE FOR LOVE

      I wrote for love.

      Then I wrote for money.

      With someone like me

      it’s the same thing.

      – 1975

      LORCA LIVES

      Lorca lives in New York City

      He never went back to Spain

      He went to Cuba for a while

      But he’s back in town again

      He’s tired of the gypsies

      And he’s tired of the sea

      He hates to play his old guitar

      It only has one key

      He heard that he was shot and killed

      He never was, you know

      He lives in New York City

      He doesn’t like it though

      MERCY RETURNS ME

      A woman I want –

      An honour I covet –

      A place where I want my mind to dwell –

      Then Mercy returns me

      To the triad

      And the crisis of the song.

      THE TRADITION

      Jazz on the radio

      32 in the desk drawer

      Brush in hand

      Heart in sad confusion

      He draws a woman

      The sax says it better

      The cold March night says it better

      Everything but his heart and his hand

      Says it better

      Now there is a woman on the paper

      Now there are colours

      Now there is a shadow on her waist

      He knows his own company

      The surprises

      Of patience and disorderly solitude

      Knows the tune

      According to his station

      How to let the changes

      He can’t play

      Connect him to the ones who can

      And the woman on the paper

      Who will never pierce the air with her beauty

      She belongs here too

      She too has her place

      In the basement of the vast museum

      Not that he could boast about it

      Even to himself

      Not that he would dare to call it

      Some kind of Path

      He will never untangle

      Or upgrade

      The circumstances

      That fasten him to this loneliness

      Or bent down with love

      Comprehend the sudden mercy

      Which floods the room

      And dissolves it now

      In the traditional golden light

      My Metal Cup

      GOOD GERMANS

      You took me to your family

      You warned me well before

      that your father is a fascist

      and your mother is a whore

      I was kind of disappointed

      I was bored to tell the truth:

      your folks they’re just Good Germans

      but you, you’re Hitler Youth

      So I’m going to live in China

      where you get a better deal

      where your killer is a poet

      and your comrade is a girl

      – 1973

      IF I COULD HELP YOU

      If I could help you, buddy, I would

      I really would

      I’d pray for you

      I’d make muscles appear on your back

      I’d take you to a bridge

      that people think is beautiful

      if there were the slightest chance

      that you’d like it

      I’d get you that motorcycle

      I’d put your songs on the jukebox

      if you were a singer

      I’d help you step across

      that crack in your life

      I’d die for you on the cross again

      I would do all these things for you

      because I’m the Lord of your life

      but you’ve gone so far from me

      that I’ve decided to embrace you here

      with my most elusive qualities

      You always wanted to be brave and true

      So breathe deeply now

      and begin your great adventure

      with crushing solitude

      THE REMOTE

      I often think about you

      when I’m lying alone in

      my room with my mouth

      open and the remote

      lost somewhere in the bed

      THE MIST OF PORNOGRAPHY

      when you rose out of the mist

      of pornography

      with your talk of marriage

      and orgies

      I was a mere boy

      of fifty-seven

      trying to make a fast buck

      in the slow lane

      it was ten years too late

      but I finally got

      the most beautiful girl

      on the religious left

      to go with her lips

      to the sunless place

      the art of song

      was in my bones

      the coffee died for me

      I never answered

      any phone calls

      and I said a prayer

      for whoever called

      and didn’t leave a message

      this was my life

      in Los Angeles

      when you slowly

      removed your yellow sweater

      and I slobbered over

      your boyish haunches

      and I tried to be

      a husband

      to your dark and motherly

      intentions

      I thank you

      for the ponderous songs

      I brought to completion

      instead of ----ing you

      more often

      and the hours you allowed me

      on a black meditation mat

      intriguing with my failed

      aristocratic pedigree

      to overthrow vulgarity

      and set America straight


      with the barbed wire

      and the regular beatings

      of rhyme

      and now that we are gone

      I have a thousand years

      to tell you how I rise

      on everything that rises

      how I became that lover

      whom you wanted

      who has no other life

      but your beauty

      who is naked and bent

      under the quotas of your desire

      I have a thousand years

      to be your twin

      the loving mirrored one

      who was born with you

      I’m free at last

      to trick you into posing

      for my Polaroid

      while you inflame

      my hearing aid

      with your vigorous obscenities

      your panic cannot hurry me here

      and my panic and my falling

      shoulders

      our shameless lives

      are the grains

      scattered for an offering

      before the staggering heights

      of our love

      and the other side of your anxiety

      is a hammock of sweat

      and moaning

      and generations of the butterfly

      mate and fall

      as we undo the differences

      and time comes down

      like the smallest pet of G-d

      to lick our fingers

      as we sleep

      in the tangle

      of straps and bracelets

      and Oh the sweetness of first nights

      and twenty-third nights

      and nights

      after death and bitterness

      sweetness of this very morning

      the bees slamming into

      the broken hollyhocks

      and the impeccable order

      of the objects on the table

      the weightless irrelevance

      of all our old intentions

      as we undo

      as we undo

      every difference

      DELAY

      “I can hold in a great deal; I don’t speak

      until the waters overflow their banks

      and break through the dam.”

      Thus I was able to delay this book well beyond

      the end of the 20th century.

      MONTREAL AFTERNOON

      Henry and I

      cover our heads

      and write a few poems

      The prayer book is open

      The radio is playing

      Henry says: They’re not

      playing that right,

      it should be faster.

      The kitchen door is open

      It’s raining

      Henry says: I’m sorry I killed your/father

      It was a hunting accident

      Rabbi Zerkin is speeding

      toward us

      through the wet city

      with the woollen prayer-shawls

      that he promised us

      on the telephone

      Henry says: In the year

      sixteen hundred thousand

      two hundred and twenty-nine

      you will begin a commentary

      on the Chumash

      and in the year fourteen thousand

      four hundred and forty-three

      I will begin a commentary

      on the Chumash

      I’ll call mine Tzim Tzimay Ha Yerak

      which means

      The Contracted Greens of the Greenery;

      then we will write a book together

      called Acorns and Other Leaves

      or

      The Green Hills of Sunshine

      We smoke Players Medium

      drink cups of hot water

      waiting for Rabbi Zerkin

      Henry says: I’m sorry I killed your father

      It was a hunting accident

      But he’ll be back

      So will Queen Elizabeth the First

      READING TO THE PRIME MINISTER

      NEED THE SPEED

      need the speed

      need the wine

      need the pleasure

      in my spine

      need your hand

      to pull me out

      need your juices

      on my snout

      need to see

      I never saw

      your need for me

      your longing raw

      need to hear

      I never heard

      against my ear

      your dirty word

      need to have

      you summon me

      like moon above

      the gathered sea

      need to know

      I never knew

      the tidal tow-

      ing come from you

      need to feel

      I never felt

      your magnet pull-

      ing at my self

      now it fades

      now it’s gone

      hormonal rage

      unquiet song

      HOW COULD I HAVE DOUBTED

      I stopped looking for you

      I stopped waiting for you

      I stopped dying for you

      and I started dying for myself

      I aged rapidly

      I became fat in the face

      and soft in the gut

      and I forgot that I’d ever loved you

      I was old

      I had no focus, no mission

      I wandered around eating and buying

      bigger and bigger clothes

      and I forgot why I hated

      every long moment that was mine to fill

      Why did you come back to me tonight

      I can’t even get off this chair

      Tears run down my cheeks

      I am in love again

      I can live like this

      VOICE DICTATING IN A PLANE OVER EUROPE

      Leonardos,

      I am no longer lonely.

      I will accept your friendship now

      if you can say

      something true about me.

      That is correct,

      I had a red cardigan sweater

      which I used to wear

      in the evenings.

      The years have brought us together.

      Straighten your seat back.

      You are landing in Vienna

      where I killed myself

      in nineteen sixty-two.

      THE GREAT EVENT

      It’s going to happen very soon. The great event that will end the horror. That will end the sorrow. Next Tuesday, when the sun goes down, I will play the Moonlight Sonata backwards. This will reverse the effects of the world’s mad plunge into suffering for the last 200 million years. What a lovely night that will be. What a sigh of relief, as the senile robins become bright red again, and the retired nightingales pick up their dusty tails, and assert the majesty of creation!

      THE PARIS SKY

      The Paris sky

      is blue and bright

      I want to fly

      with all my might

      Her legs are long

      her heart is high

      The chains are strong

      but so am I

      THE STORY THUS FAR

      Things blew all over the place on the day that I was born. It was windy. Dried leaves crashed against the walls of the Homeopathic Hospital. I was alive. I was alive in the horror.

      The Givers huddled over me like a football team. They started to give me things and then to take them away. The things that didn’t fit they chucked back into the Funnel of the Void. The gifts were many and many were the warnings that went with them.

      We are giving you a great heart but if you drink wine you will begin to hate the world. The moon is your sister but if you take sleeping pills you will find yourself in the company of unhappy women. Every time you grab at love you will lose a snowflake of your memory.

      My mother was lying not far away and I heard her cry, “He isn’t mine!” My noble parent cried to my ears alone from her bed of blood and wa
    ter. I heard her say it and I thanked her for the truth with a shriek of joy. I was not born into a family. I was fully protected.

      The hammers fell on infants everywhere but I was saved on a river in the beautiful autumn land of Egypt.

      THE SWEETEST LITTLE SONG

      You go your way

      I’ll go your way too

      THING

      I am this thing that needs to sing

      I love to sing

      to my beloved’s other thing

      and to my own dear sweet G-d

      I love to sing to Him and her

      and to my baby’s lower fur

      which is so holy

      that I want to crawl on my knees

      off a high cliff

      and sail around singing

      in the wind

      which is so friendly

      to my feathery spirit

      I am this thing

      that wants to sing

      when I am up against the spit

      and scorn of judges

      O G-D I want to sing

      I Am

      THIS THING THAT NEEDS TO SING

      STANZAS FOR H.M.

      O perfect gentleman, and champion

      of the Royal Throne; O unbroken stone

      of Sinai’s heart; O Hero of Verdun;

      our greatest poet until now unknown,

      whose banner over death has always flown

      in wilds of poverty and solitude;

      I thank you for the years you spent alone

      with nothing to hang on to but a mood

      of glory, searching words that Love could not elude

      (We lost you for a while. The doctors tried

      their hopeful science on a chosen soul,

      but this chosen soul was sitting by the side

      of G-d, and touched by Him, hale and whole,

      though broken in men’s eyes, in His control.)

     


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