Wednesday, April 13, 2011

The Obsession



But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you,
And loved the sorrows of your changing face.
                                                W. B. Yeats, “When You Are Old”

Of love, I have left the best unspoken.
Hundreds of pages I might have filled,
thousands the images comparing you
to every icon of classical beauty.
Instead I wait for the calm reflection,
beamed back from the pool of the mind.
Night cannot know the sun will follow,
     nor the road, the conquering weed,
     nor the truth of love, the worm inside it.

I have a sole thought
in the sombre purity of detached years —
a gold and lapus scarab
untarnished in the pyramid of time —
it moves my pen, my haunted eye,
defies my age’s forgetfulness,
a swan’s lament suspended, held.

If it be not said, this
perennial song,
which I would say in full but that
you and the sun take it away from me
and one of you comes not back —
if it be not sung at last,
     my soul, it dies with me,
nor I nor the world larger for it,
nor you, moved neither to hear
     nor answer it.

You sat at the perfect center
     of grace and beauty:
around you the songs of divas
cast a protective veil. We hovered,
we, your nightly guests and admirers,
in breathless empathy, like courtiers
around your darkened room, cowed
before a pair of expensive speakers,
a turntable no hands but yours
were allowed to touch,
as Streisand twisted
from comedy to bluesy darkness —
as Piaf chansoned herself to death for love
of the boxer, the convict, the forlorn
and nameless man qui me suive
dans la rue, for the cruel one,
Milord Death who sat at her café table —
Inca Yma soaring four-octaves high
in wind song of Andean lament.
And then suddenly, a dash of Horowitz,
or the shriek-scrape of Edgard Varese,
all this so different from my world
of Beethoven, Mahler, and opera.
Your magic was in making it seem
that every love song had you
as its only object, and that we,
each moth and mite of us,
were doomed to circle you
as that last arc on a long playing record
when the needle leaves the fade out
to final orbit, imprisons us
in heart-thump going-nowhere.

Then came the palpable silence
of no more music, our talk exhausted;
our clumsy withdrawal, as one by one
we are not chosen, each home
to a single bed and a shared despair.
If this had been the Renaissance,
dirks might have been drawn
in the darkened alley outside your door,
or poisons purchased from crones
to eliminate all rivals; love poems hurled
into and through your window casements.

Your tribute comes in dark-shadowed eyes,
mumbled confessions or silent hatred,
the red ribbon of a slit wrist.

I did not play the game, I thought.
I watched the moth-dance as from
an amused distance, and told you so.
“I know you know,” you told me,
“and that is why I respect and fear you.”
I never told you that every sight
of you threw me vertiginous
as though we clung to the near apex
of Mount Everest, as though
to leave you were a slide downward
to the bottom-most dark valley.

It was madness. I knew it was madness.
It has never left me:
I have loved you again and again
     in different faces,
weathered your variable storms,
     the deceitful clouds
     that hid you from me
     and from self-judgment.

I asked too much,
you said — my journey was too long and arduous.
So I stood alone in my passion’s temple,
hymning to gods who could not love themselves.
We could storm the citadels of art together,
I said (visions of a Duncan dance in the Parthenon).
All you said, vaguely, was
I don’t want to be thought of
     as part of a couple.

You thought you had no place in these poems,
the making of word-art a mystery to you,
as the making of your sculptures was to me:
the poem a thing inside too many words
reduced to a few; the sculpted figure
a thing inside a block of stone awaiting
the removal of all that was inessential.
I shuddered each time I touched
    a thing you had made;
perhaps my poems were like fire to you,
a thing too fierce to be endured,
a light you did not wish
to have shined upon you.

I learned from you that I do not write alone:
there is always one reader, and one written of.
That my soul, ensnared in the web of yours
takes without cost and enlarges thereby.
In the moment I confessed to myself
I loved you, I saw in full light
what Beatrice was to Dante, Lara to Zhivago,
the loved boy to Hafiz the madman.

Full many nights we courted, flirted,
     word-circled one another.
One night our talk outlasted
     the guttering candle.
That night, you came to my bed —
    O summer night of which I cannot speak —
almost to curse me by a single giving
you never intended to give again,
as though one touch would cure me
     of my madness.

Years I dreamt of you,
     knowing only the where and how of you,
     not writing, not calling.
I refined, from shattered bits of you,
     the man you might have become
     the words you might have spoken
     the art that might have poured from your hands
         in answer to my words’ urgings.
You had no inkling what children we birthed!
Here in my wordy palace your regency’s intact—
     back on drear earth,
discarded lovers conspired against you,
moths in your aurora,
graying the New England autumn
or bleaching to graveyard white
the coral reef beyond your final place of hiding.

Did you fear me to the end? My harmless love-lie
trapped you only in the realm of angels
where immaterial ghosts of me
came to call, masked, and offered dangerous prizes.
Or perhaps you didn’t think of me at all,
the dark fete poem of my yearning filed away
with diplomas and yearbooks and bric-a-brac.

I waited for seven years, then seven more.
We met, collided, repelled like angry magnets.
Once in a great while I received
     a polite letter;
once in a great while I sent
imprudent poems, my pride and solace.
I said, You are in here somewhere, in some
of these poems
. I did not say, You are in them all.

I have, somewhere in a drawer of sad things
two presents you gave me: a beaded Indian
sunwheel, like a captive star,
and a necklace you fashioned
     from a pyrite shard, fool’s gold
I refuse to submit to metaphor,
just as I refuse to wear it.

Now they have told me of your death,
which culminates the silence between us.
On my autumnal journey homeward,
I come to the place of our meeting,
back to the silent, pebbled lakeshore.
I wait beneath a gibbous moon,
chilled as the damp fog enfolds me.
I have no promise of ghosts, or of Heaven,
no cause to hope that some thread, tenuous
as thought in the ether, might draw
you here, touch to my touch, companioning.
So much unfinished business between us,
too few the decades of life in which to do it.
All the wrong people keep dying, I tell myself.

I touch the limestone with its fossil memories.
I taste the water, breathe in
the hovering mist, the bat and maple aura
of the pioneer graveyard. Some blossom,
complex and curled upon itself
like a tropical orchid,
drifts silently toward me in the black water.

Know this as the place of my waiting,
a waiting that will outlive me,
repeated as some other stands here
and reads aloud these words, the vow
I made some thirty years ago:

Know I will wait,
          that I am bound,
               that no other has ever been awaited
                    or will be.

The One Commandment

Madman at the peak
of the desolate mountain,
led there by a will o’ the wisp,
a still small voice amid
the flashing rhomboids
of a splitting migraine.
He howls at the God
whose every commandment
he has come to fetch.

After a throat-clear of steam
and a spurt of magma,
the great voice bellows
as he flattens himself
in a yellow pool
of his own terror.
Words glorious
     and in the tongue of his fathers,
that which is everything speaks:

I AM THE JUST
COMPASSIONATE GOD,
LORD OF MERCY
AND SOLE SALVATION.
COME CLOSE, POUR OUT
THE HEART BLOOD ON MY ALTAR.

Not today, Lord.
he whimpers,
I have come alone
and bladeless.
Only this shepherd’s staff —


The mountain quakes:
BLOOD! POUR THE BLOOD!
AND NOT JUST ONCE
BUT ALWAYS.
MAKE SURE THE BLADE
IS EVER SHARPENED FOR ANOTHER.

LEAN CLOSE AND HEAR
FROM DEEP WITHIN CREATION’S
SOUL AND DEMIURGE,
MY ONE AND TRUE COMMANDMENT:

KILL. KILL EVERYONE.
GO YE FORTH IN CHARIOTS,
TAKE SWORD AND FIRE AND JAVELIN,
COVER THE GLOBE WITH WARRIORS.
KILL ONE ANOTHER, SLAUGHTER
THE BABIES AND INNOCENTS.
CEASE NOT UNTIL
BUT ONE OF YOU REMAINS.

Then God went silent.
Struck dumb with horror,
Moses went down
to the calf-mad Israelites,
told no one the real command,
invented a tale,
inscribed some laws.

Despite his prudence
he talked in his sleep.
His sons took up the cudgel,
passed on the secret
maniacal urge of the tyrant god.

Always behind the king
an advisor, or patriarch
steeped in the long-range
marching orders.
Five thousand years the wars
raged on, the world swept thrice
into total commotion,
each peace a mere gathering
of new and more lethal
armaments, until

one man,
brown-caked with blood,
covered with scar and bruises,
climbs to the peak of Sinai.

Lord, he reports,
     all you have said
is done. I am the last
warrior. I come
for my reward
for the task accomplished.
  
     The mountain quakes,
winds roar,
            a boulder tips
out from its neighbors
on the cliff above,
falls and crushes
the supine worshiper.

The Being laughs
     in his magma bed,
passes on the joke
to his silicon cousins.
The crystals rejoice,
poles shift in mirth
as nickel-iron celebrates.
Aluminum could bust a gut.
Limestone and shale
are splitting with laughter.
Coal stamps its feet
and grinds out diamonds.

“Just think,” repeats
the howling Titan,
“how stupid they were,
those meddling humans,
those ugly bone-bags
of knotted carbon!
So dumb they’d do
whatever a doddering
volcano commanded!
If only we’d thought of it sooner!”


1988/ rev. 2011

THE PINES


Grandmother Butler
grew up with the pines
that dotted her acres.
Her grandpa Diebold
first planted them,
edging the house,
the gravel drive,
the property line.
She watched her daughter
who once could leap
the saplings
grow tall and straight.

Her parents are gone now,
her husband vanished,
her daughters grown and married.
She sits on the porch
and communes with the trees.
Some skirt the house —
she walks soft needle loam
to her raspberry patch.
Squirrels are there in the branches,
black snakes steal eggs
from the hapless robins.
Jays and crows,
cardinals and tanagers
live tier by tier
in their sheltered nests.

Each season a song —
bird twitter spring,
storm hum summer,
cone-drop in autumn,
the groan of trunk
in snapping winter.

They are an orchestra
eternally in tune,
black pyramids at night
against the burning stars,
a comforting wall
against the whippoorwills,
the mountain lions,
the howling winds.


One winter day
she’s digging down
to the dregs of her coal pile,
filling a pail for the stove,
when a great truck
lumbers in,
piled high with coal.
Two men follow
in a black Studebaker,
tell her they’ll dump
as much as she needs —

enough to last her
through widow’s winter,
all the way to April.
She hesitates.
They mention her neighbors,
Wingroves and Sweeneys,
Ulleries and Dempseys:
some winters back
they helped them too.

She doesn’t answer them;
her head shakes ever
so slightly no; the man
exhales an ice cloud,
chilled hands shrugged in
at his elbows. The other
starts up the car to back it
away and out to the road.

“It’s just a good neighbor thing”
he tells her. “The Almanac, it says
it’s going to a terrible winter.”
“All right,” she says. “Thank you.”
She lets them dump coal.
All they want is a signed receipt,
oh, and they’d like
to trim a few trees
for the nearby sawmill.
She hesitates again —
they mumble some words
about another delivery
next winter.

She signs.
Hard winter sets in.
The ziggurat of coal
diminishes to sludge,
black dust in melting puddles.

She goes off in May
to visit her daughters,
hold their new babies.
When she comes back
the pines are gone,
     all of them
reduced to stumps,
her acres exposed
to passing cars.

All night the animals
scream in the forest.
Homeless squirrels,
nestless sparrows
hysterical robins,
even the prowling wind,
with nothing to rub against,
makes angry vectors
among the boulders.

Then she finds the paper
in the kitchen cupboard,
reads with her glasses
the fine print over her signature.
Far off, the ripsaws mock her
as she reads and repeats
what she gave to the stranger —-
not just once but forever­
like a contract
with a rapist,
     her rights, her
          timber rights.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Love Spells


Disproof of ritual magic:
incense and candles, amulets and spells.
Try hard as you will, you cannot make
an oblivious boy love you. 
I know. More than once, I have tried. Despite the aid
of an army of phantom assistants —
translucent, arrow-laden Cupids —
satyrs ascending fire-escapes —
garden Priapi all compass-pointing
from his bedroom to mine —
in spite of love-arbors made
by djins, piled high with roses
from the grave of Omar Khayyam —
in spite of the mandolin serenatas,
the gypsy fiddles, the er-hu, the lute,
the mournful barrage of hautbois
and the Arcadian shepherd’s pipe,
no, he heard not a single melody
that brought my name to his lips.

Not even the darker spells availed me:
despite the unfounded panic that seized
and diverted all his would-be lovers
as bodiless wish forms stalked them
on empty streets, scaling up to the height
of a penthouse with dacoit ease;
despite the solitude my magic cast
around him, still in all that emptiness,
I was not the one he called to fill it.
His lovers fled, and he fled their fleeing.
(Spells only serve repulsively, it seems!)

Vain were the midnight oaths and promises
I made to dubious monarchs of love,
half-seen in the smog of sulfurous hearth,
as I bartered off to black-eyed Erys
(love’s phantom in Pluto’s domain),
a whole year of my life, for a night of his.

“Later,” the hard bargainer said,
placing the coin back in my hand,
“Wait, and he will then be with you always.”
Now, with ashes and Styx between us
I know the scope of the contract refused:
The coin in my hand is for the boatman.

-2011, revised 2021.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

What She Was Like

In October, he was home to stay.
Last night, as chill November ripped
the last red remnants from the maples,
and Orion stalked the horizon
he told her, “Mother,
I have to leave. I am returning
to Florida. I can’t explain.”

It was all he could do to get the words out.
In a month he had not said a thing
of what he had to tell her.
He had called no one, content
to be driven to malls and dinners,
polite teas with her old friends
who had never been permitted
to forget his existence, though he
saw them all as a blur of old shoes
primped hair in unnatural hues,
coats too many times out and back
to cold storage. Tanned and plump
he felt like an exotic parrot
in a town full of mummies.

They made a striking pair.
She was a beauty once, her line
     of noble cheek and chin
as proud as his own; nature
kept all her hair and artifice
kept it black as ever, while his
had long receded, speckled with white.
Still, she carried herself well,
as if afloat above her shoes,
as if afflicted still
     with fatal allure
(once his own curse, and power).
She is Lady Madeline Usher
to his Dorian Gray.

“The cab is on its way,” he tells her
as they make morning motions
upstairs, downstairs.
She does not protest. One sigh,
head droop and hand-drop
says everything: out of her sight
is out of existence. His butterfly
would fade to moth memory.
Once more he'd be reduced
to an object of converstion:
Art School — No, never married,
poor boy — lives far away.
I've never met his friends.

Perhaps, from there, from the safe
distance of a letter, he could tell her.

As he packs the last suitcase,
reverse motion from a month ago,
things won’t fit easily.
“You have scarcely time for breakfast,”
she admonished from the doorway.
“I’d rather shower,” he said.
“You have so many things now,”
     she said, alluding
     to all her recent gifts,
“impossible to pack them all.
This is so sudden.”

Most of the clothes are in the closet.
They are dead weight, ballast
to keep his ship from sailing.
Only one new suit, an exquisite black,
was folded beneath the old jeans,
the khaki trousers and well-worn shirts.
It would have its use.

She mumbles something, it sounds
like “Oh, very well.” She’s gone.
He takes a towel and razor and soap
for his hurried shower – and then –
as though in dream’s slow motion
he passes her bedroom where

two disembodied arms stretch out,
     two alabaster cylinders
     arms odalisque, surreal,
against a paisley bedspread —
no, it is a mirror laid flat on the bed,
     reflecting two arms to the elbow bared,
the door ajar, as she intended it;

he peers round to see her thrashing there,
     half-crouched, a butcher knife
before her transfixed eyes, first
     in one hand, then tightly in two,
the one-hand gesture a throat-cut sweep,
     two-handed, it turns upon herself,
     blade pointed at base of bosom,
     a disemboweling thrust if only
she would — but she doesn’t.
     She looks up, sees him seeing her.
The door goes shut.

He tiptoes past, decides
     he will forego the shower.
With a great motion
     he did not think within him,
he rose, bags in both hands —
neither embrace nor handshake
a possibility as he backs
down the stairway
to the door; it opens somehow
behind his fumbling fingers
twisted as they are with bag-holds,
and he is out.

The full light of cloudless day,
out there, the oxygen
which seemed so lacking amid
the wallpaper and tapestries —
was the cab even in sight? —
no matter — he would turn the corner,
away and out of her sight at last.

Gone was the death-urge that brought him here
to a rust-belt town that even rust
had abandoned, as if old broth
were a cure for his tumors, as if
the thing that gnawed him
would stop gnawing if she forgave him
the sin of their decades’ severance.

He breathes hard breaths, short,
     then longer. No, it is still there,
odds not good if they cut him open.
He will go back to the sand and the coral,
     the indifferent tide,
the long, slow sunsets.

He pauses once, before the turn
to the safe side street, feels eyes
like spider tendrils on neck-nape.
She is there;
she has ascended to the attic,
watching,
          mouth mouthing incantations
of arachnid web-pull.

He will not turn; he will not look.
Thank God, he thinks, the mad
do not go forth. They stay at home,
tethered to memory and failure,
eyes fixed at last on blankness,
a pale face in a rhomboid window.

This poem was a dream I had after learning of the death of a friend. Later I learned that he had briefly and secretly returned home to Pennsylvania, and had just as abruptly returned to Florida where he died. I have never met his mother, so this poem comes entirely from dream and imagination. As a young college student he had often spoken of his mother as a figure of some dread, so this doubtless influenced the content of my dream. Having to deal with my own "terrible Mother" in life and in poetry, I guess it would be surprising if I had seen a benevolent mother figure.

The Butcher Knife

Not once did I see one used for butchering.
The wooden handle firm in the grasp,
the broad, long edge, serrated ominously,
quite capable of rending limb from torso,
or a small head from a shuddering spine.

No, the fame of these kitchen implements
was their use by neurotic aunties,
stepmothers too jealous and easily provoked,
old wives at the end of married tether.

Medea in slippers and terrycloth,
red-eyed from onion chopping,
she waved it aloft in a shrieking rage, or,
worse by far, swung it in stone-eyed silence.

She could chase and corner a terrified
stepchild (while her own, better daughter
watches from the stairwell landing),
or send the man hurtling to corner tavern.

In the right hands, this most domestic
of kitchen tools clears any house
of inconvenient relatives,
of the need for cooking and mending,

a Pennsylvania Gothic sword
that never needs sharpening.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

The Brown Derby

Racial segregation was a fact of life in rural Pennsylvania where I spent my childhood. There was a road we didn't go down where all the black people lived. As a result of my trip back to Pennsylvania I am writing my recollections of this for the first time. First came "Monday Miss Schreckengost Reads Us Little Black Sambo," a major poem that will be in my next book. I am working on a piece about an elderly woman who froze to death and the attitude of neighbors who brushed it off because the black neighbor was "too proud" to ask for help. The poem below is just a small recollection of the road itself, one of a number of coal shantytowns that followed the creek.


THE BROWN DERBY
 
Road we don’t go down
     weed trees and roadside flowers
shack houses     no toilets
     a collapsed barn
a shingled hall     the Negroes’ nightclub
its paint-peeled sign
     THE BROWN DERBY
crowded Saturday
     cars and shouting
sometimes a gunshot     a body
     would float in the creek behind,
     tangled with discarded shoes,
     coal miners’ helmets,
     belts and suspenders
     old tires     turtles and crayfish
fished out     dragged to the county morgue
     John Doe’d till someone’s son
     was reported missing
Who lives there?     What do they do
on that road we don’t go down?
How far does it go?     How many live down there?
Why don’t we ever see them
in the school, the bank, the post office?
It’s not even on the street map,
     the nameless lane
          of The Brown Derby.