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      without cease, all of him, every last exploding piece

      of him. Until he reaches a place only he knows about.

      An Arctic place, cold and frozen. Where he thinks,

      This is far enough. This is the place.

      And lies down, for he is tired.

      Sleeping

      He slept on his hands.

      On a rock.

      On his feet.

      On someone else’s feet.

      He slept on buses, trains, in airplanes.

      Slept on duty.

      Slept beside the road.

      Slept on a sack of apples.

      He slept in a pay toilet.

      In a hayloft.

      In the Super Dome.

      Slept in a Jaguar, and in the back of a pickup.

      Slept in theaters.

      In jail.

      On boats.

      He slept in line shacks and, once, in a castle.

      Slept in the rain.

      In blistering sun he slept.

      On horseback.

      He slept in chairs, churches, in fancy hotels.

      He slept under strange roofs all his life.

      Now he sleeps under the earth.

      Sleeps on and on.

      Like an old king.

      The River

      I waded, deepening, into the dark water.

      Evening, and the push

      and swirl of the river as it closed

      around my legs and held on.

      Young grilse broke water.

      Parr darted one way, smolt another.

      Gravel turned under my boots as I edged out.

      Watched by the furious eyes of king salmon.

      Their immense heads turned slowly,

      eyes burning with fury, as they hung

      in the deep current.

      They were there. I felt them there,

      and my skin prickled. But

      there was something else.

      I braced with the wind on my neck.

      Felt the hair rise

      as something touched my boot.

      Grew afraid at what I couldn’t see.

      Then of everything that filled my eyes —

      that other shore heavy with branches,

      the dark lip of the mountain range behind.

      And this river that had suddenly

      grown black and swift.

      I drew breath and cast anyway.

      Prayed nothing would strike.

      The Best Time of the Day

      Cool summer nights.

      Windows open.

      Lamps burning.

      Fruit in the bowl.

      And your head on my shoulder.

      These the happiest moments in the day.

      Next to the early morning hours,

      of course. And the time

      just before lunch.

      And the afternoon, and

      early evening hours.

      But I do love

      these summer nights.

      Even more, I think,

      than those other times.

      The work finished for the day.

      And no one who can reach us now.

      Or ever.

      Scale

      FOR RICHARD MARIUS

      It’s afternoon when he takes off

      his clothes and lies down.

      Lights his cigarette. Ashtray

      balanced over his heart.

      The chest rising, then

      sinking

      as he draws, holds it,

      and lets the smoke out in spurts.

      The shades are drawn. His eyelids

      closing. It’s like after sex,

      a little. But only a little.

      Waves thrash below the house.

      He finishes the cigarette.

      All the while thinking

      of Thomas More who,

      according to Erasmus, “liked eggs”

      and never lay with his second wife.

      The head stares down at its trunk

      until it thinks it has it

      memorized and could recognize

      it anywhere, even in death.

      But now the desire to sleep

      has left him, utterly.

      He is still remembering More

      and his hair shirt. After thirty years of wear

      he handed it over, along with his cloak,

      before embracing his executioner.

      He gets up to raise the shades.

      Light slices the room in two.

      A boat slowly rounds the hook

      with its sails lowered.

      There’s a milky haze

      over the water. A silence there.

      It’s much too quiet.

      Even the birds are still.

      Somewhere, off in another room,

      something has been decided.

      A decision reached, papers signed

      and pushed aside.

      He keeps on staring at the boat.

      The empty rigging, the deserted deck.

      The boat rises. Moves closer.

      He peers through the glasses.

      The human figure, the music

      it makes, that’s what’s missing

      from the tiny deck.

      A deck no broader than a leaf.

      So how could it support a life?

      Suddenly, the boat shudders.

      Stops dead in the water.

      He sweeps the glasses over the deck.

      But after a while his arms grow

      unbearably heavy. So he drops them,

      just as he would anything unbearable.

      He lays the glasses on the shelf.

      Begins dressing. But the image

      of the boat stays. Drifting.

      Stays awhile longer. Then bobs away.

      Forgotten about as he takes up

      his coat. Opens the door. Goes out.

      Company

      This morning I woke up to rain

      on the glass. And understood

      that for a long time now

      I’ve chosen the corrupt when

      I had a choice. Or else,

      simply, the merely easy.

      Over the virtuous. Or the difficult.

      This way of thinking happens

      when I’ve been alone for days.

      Like now. Hours spent

      in my own dumb company.

      Hours and hours

      much like a little room.

      With just a strip of carpet to walk on.

      Yesterday

      Yesterday I dressed in a dead man’s

      woolen underwear. Then drove to the end

      of an icy road where I passed

      some time with Indian fishermen.

      I stepped into water over my boots.

      Saw four pintails spring from the creek.

      Never mind that my thoughts were elsewhere

      and I missed the perfect shot.

      Or that my socks froze. I lost track

      of everything and didn’t make it back

      for lunch. You could say

      it wasn’t my day. But it was!

      And to prove it I have this little bite

      she gave me last night. A bruise

      coloring my lip today, to remind me.

      The Schooldesk

      The fishing in Lough Arrow is piss-poor.

      Too much rain, too much high water.

      They say the mayfly hatch has come

      and gone. All day I stay put

      by the window of the borrowed cottage

      in Ballindoon, waiting for a break

      in the weather. A turf fire smokes

      in the grate, though no romance

      in this or anything else

      here. Just outside the window an old iron

      and wood schooldesk keeps me company.

      Something is carved into the desk under

      the inkwell. It doesn’t matter

      what; I’m not curious. It’s enough

      to imagine the instrument

      that gouged those letters.

      My dad is dead,

     
    ; and Mother slips in and out of her mind.

      I can’t begin to say how bad it is

      for my grown-up son and daughter.

      They took one long look at me

      and tried to make all my mistakes.

      More’s the pity. Bad luck for them,

      my sweet children. And haven’t I mentioned

      my first wife yet? What’s wrong with me

      that I haven’t? Well, I can’t anymore.

      Shouldn’t, anyway. She claims

      I say too much as it is.

      Says she’s happy now, and grinds her teeth.

      Says the Lord Jesus loves her,

      and she’ll get by. That love

      of my life over and done with. But what

      does that say about my life?

      My loved ones are thousands of miles away.

      But they’re in this cottage too,

      in Ballindoon. And in every

      hotel room I wake up in these days.

      The rain has let up.

      And the sun has appeared and small

      clouds of unexpected mayflies,

      proving someone wrong. We move

      to the door in a group, my family and I.

      And go outside. Where I bend over the desk

      and run my fingers across its rough surface.

      Someone laughs, someone grinds her teeth.

      And someone, someone is pleading with me.

      Saying, “For Christ’s sake, don’t

      turn your back on me.”

      An ass and cart pass down the lane.

      The driver takes the pipe from his mouth

      and raises his hand.

      There’s the smell of lilacs in the damp air.

      Mayflies hover over the lilacs,

      and over the heads of my loved ones.

      Hundreds of mayflies.

      I sit on the bench. Lean

      over the desk. I can remember

      myself with a pen. In the beginning,

      looking at pictures of words.

      Learning to write them, slowly,

      one letter at a time. Pressing down.

      A word. Then the next.

      The feeling of mastering something.

      The excitement of it.

      Pressing hard. At first

      the damage confined to the surface.

      But then deeper.

      These blossoms. Lilacs.

      How they fill the air with sweetness!

      Mayflies in the air as the cart

      goes by—as the fish rise.

      Cutlery

      Trolling the coho fly twenty feet behind the boat,

      under moonlight, when the huge salmon hit it!

      And lunged clear of the water. Stood, it seemed,

      on its tail. Then fell back and was gone.

      Shaken, I steered on into the harbor as if

      nothing had happened. But it had.

      And it happened in just the way I’ve said.

      I took the memory with me to New York,

      and beyond. Took it wherever I went.

      All the way down here onto the terrace

      of the Jockey Club in Rosario, Argentina.

      Where I look out onto the broad river

      that throws back light from the open windows

      of the dining room. I stand smoking a cigar,

      listening to the murmuring of the officers

      and their wives inside; the little clashing

      sound of cutlery against plates. I’m alive

      and well, neither happy nor unhappy,

      here in the Southern Hemisphere. So I’m all the more

      astonished when I recall that lost fish rising,

      leaving the water, and then returning.

      The feeling of loss that gripped me then

      grips me still. How can I communicate what I feel

      about any of this? Inside, they go on

      conversing in their own language.

      I decide to walk

      alongside the river. It’s the kind of night

      that brings men and rivers close.

      I go for a ways, then stop. Realizing

      that I haven’t been close. Not

      in the longest time. There’s been

      this waiting that’s gone along with me

      wherever I go. But the hope widening now

      that something will rise up and splash.

      I want to hear it, and move on.

      The Pen

      The pen that told the truth

      went into the washing machine

      for its trouble. Came out

      an hour later, and was tossed

      in the dryer with jeans

      and a western shirt. Days passed

      while it lay quietly on the desk

      under the window. Lay there

      thinking it was finished.

      Without a single conviction

      to its name. It didn’t have

      the will to go on, even if it’d wanted.

      But one morning, an hour or so

      before sunrise, it came to life

      and wrote:

      “The damp fields asleep in moonlight.”

      Then it was still again.

      Its usefulness in this life

      clearly at an end.

      He shook it and whacked it

      on the desk. Then gave up

      on it, or nearly.

      Once more though, with the greatest

      effort, it summoned its last

      reserves. This is what it wrote:

      “A light wind, and beyond the window

      trees swimming in the golden morning air.”

      He tried to write some more

      but that was all. The pen

      quit working forever.

      By and by it was put

      into the stove along with

      other junk. And much later

      it was another pen,

      an undistinguished pen

      that hadn’t proved itself

      yet, that facilely wrote:

      “Darkness gathers in the branches.

      Stay inside. Keep still.”

      The Prize

      He was never the same, they said, after that.

      And they were right. He left home, glad for his life.

      Fell under the spell of Italian opera.

      A gout stool was built into the front of his sedan chair.

      His family went on living in a hut without a chimney.

      One season very much like another for them.

      What did they know?

      A river wound through their valley.

      At night the candles flickered, blinking like eyelashes.

      As though tobacco smoke burned their eyes.

      But nobody smoked in that stinking place.

      Nobody sang or wrote cantatas.

      When he died it was they who had to identify the body.

      It was terrible!

      His friends couldn’t remember him.

      Not even what he’d looked like the day before.

      His father spat and rode off to kill squirrels.

      His sister cradled his head in her arms.

      His mother wept and went through his pockets.

      Nothing had changed.

      He was back where he belonged.

      As though he’d never left.

      Easy enough to say he should have declined it.

      But would you?

      An Account

      He began the poem at the kitchen table,

      one leg crossed over the other.

      He wrote for a time, as if

      only half interested in the result. It wasn’t

      as if the world didn’t have enough poems.

      The world had plenty of poems. Besides,

      he’d been away for months.

      He hadn’t even read a poem in months.

      What kind of life was this? A life

      where a man was too busy even to read poems?

      No life at all. Then he looked out the window,

      down the hill to Frank’s house.


      A nice house situated near the water.

      He remembered Frank opening his door

      every morning at nine o’clock.

      Going out for his walks.

      He drew nearer the table, and uncrossed his legs.

      Last night he’d heard an account

      of Frank’s death from Ed, another neighbor.

      A man the same age as Frank,

      and Frank’s good friend. Frank

      and his wife watching TV. Hill Street Blues.

      Frank’s favorite show. When he gasps

      twice, is thrown back in his chair —

      “as if he’d been electrocuted.” That fast,

      he was dead. His color draining away.

      He was grey, turning black. Betty runs

      out of the house in her robe. Runs

      to a neighbor’s house where a girl knows

      something about CPR. She’s watching

      the same show! They run back

      to Frank’s house. Frank totally black now,

      in his chair in front of the TV.

      The cops and other desperate characters

      moving across the screen, raising their voices,

      yelling at each other, while this neighbor girl

      hauls Frank out of his chair onto the floor.

      Tears open his shirt. Goes to work.

      Frank being the first real-life victim

      she’s ever had.

      She places her lips

      on Frank’s icy lips. A dead man’s lips. Black lips.

      And black his face and hands and arms.

      Black too his chest where the shirt’s been torn,

      exposing the sparse hairs that grew there.

      Long after she must’ve known better, she goes on

      with it. Pressing her lips against his

      unresponsive lips. Then stopping to beat on him

      with clenched fists. Pressing her lips to his again,

      and then again. Even after it’s too late and it

      was clear he wasn’t coming back, she went on with it.

      This girl, beating on him with her fists, calling

      him every name she could think of. Weeping

      when they took him away

      from her. And someone thought to turn off

      the images pulsing across the screen.

      The Meadow

      In the meadow this afternoon, I fetch

      any number of crazy memories. That

      undertaker asking my mother did she

      want to buy the entire suit to bury my dad in,

      or just the coat? I don’t

     


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