Thursday, January 2, 2025

FOSSILS, A POEM IN VOICES

When the cherry was a flower,
Then hadde it no stone.  Anon.

I
Trilobite Euripides, sarcophagus Shakespeare,
Gogol the archaeological digs of Leningrad—
dust of species dead to the last blood cell—
civilizations evolve to misspelled one word poems.

No sane man sings of anger, hears the dream voice
ringing the clapper of his consciousness
anymore; some things you just don’t do.  God daunts,
whatever shape he takes.  Less if he’s something you say.

II
“As for what they’ve done, they have done it.
Let it be their heads.  No one is immune.
I move my hand, like this, and block the sight
of fools who think they see their own eyeballs.”

“The buzzards came upon us—hands clapping
a thunderous beat; they squawked and coughed
shreds of meat and moldy grain, spraying us with filth.
We covered our candles but left the tables as they were.”

“Thus, I escape the painful, the mystery,
into a womb the forecaster says
will bear a child with signs of a new man.
Shave my head.  Dress me in orange.  Leave me homeless.”

“Not even the dead are free of being.
We feed like birds on the seed of all flesh and blood.
We stuff incense like snuff up our noses.  We dance
on the grave mounds beneath the pines in ecstasy.”

III
I know only one good thing, said the Angel.  Understanding
is movement, and movement cannot end in variety.
My will is not obstinate in evil, said the Devil.  I know
everything and one thing, what you call the one good thing.

The bridegroom’s thinning pate wags,
loins stirred by eraser-nippled Aphrodite.
His free will dictated falsehoods by misinformed reason,
he shrivels at the thought of fucking Eve.

IV
“Tonight you may go to your wives.
God sees you’ve betrayed yourselves.  He pardons you.
Sleep with them, find out what awaits you.
White threads fray from black cloth at dawn.”

“Her left hand with tent peg, her right with mallet
struck and crushed the head.
She struck again and the peg entered the ground.
‘Come,’ she said, ‘I’ll show you the man you want.’”

“Oh, exquisite company, you’ve all taken a bride!
Nowhere a bachelor, everyone true and tried.
Look!  The earth gapes to drink the handsome revel!
Quick!  The priest escapes!  After the devil!”

“Wir, Vergeuder der Schmerzen a milk bottle
painted white we are too wise to sip from,
here in this vegetable garden of delight,
we tooth-picked avocado pits rooting in green glasses.

V
Two rocks fight for a third rock, make progress—
a corner will fit a corner, that kind of strategy.
A man walking by takes advantage of the row
to put the rock in his mouth and cite the law.

Another humpback breaches the tumultuous birthplace,
lolls on his back in cataracts of blood and fire;
a flick of his tailfin upends the proud metropolis;
the bodies stack like cordwood on the ocean floor.

VI
“The surgeon’s knife probed her entrails and withdrew,
leaving a jagged gash on her belly.
I see dark, suffering eyes, beautiful as eyes
of an antelope.  Oh, cruel wound, libidinous God!”

“Two boys in the front seat bob against the flashing
windshield, laughing obvious insults in rewinding
rhythms of thought forgotten and thought again,
laughing back at me, it is all laughing back at me.”

“I didn’t wince when Mother stitched the shirt
to my back.  I laughed when Father yanked it off.
I ate bread I baked with flour from a bag of rats.
I bit my shield and my blade and my enemy’s face.”

“I cut them in two, as you’d cut apples for preserves.
Each face on half of each neck turned to the incision;
in contemplation, each man and woman was made more orderly.
I closed their skins around them like zipping coats.”

“Let us pass on to the lesson of the lesson.  Let us
follow the thread of the demonstration through
the apparently unquestionable facts.  The point of the incident
supports an enormous theoretical edifice.”

“I shoot the boy in the neck some place try shoot
him twice with a .22.  I shoot the old man
two times, he had on blue P.J. light blue, he lade
on the wall as you go out the door with a .44.”

VII
Exempla accelerating decay, rusting lugnuts, Bloom
and Sweeney sip absinthe-mournful toasts to thee,
epitome of art, the verities locked in their garages
(So priketh hem nature in hir corages.)

And poetry proliferates like cancer cells,
rock-hard burl on trunks of ageless redwoods.
The imperturbable trees speed every root westward
because the wind always blows from the sundown.

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Return 1 (Brice Marden), Sonnet #627

 











The structured residue of brilliance,

A layering of the lesser or least

Into a visual and mental feast,

Or, gestures, moveless, the dimliest dance —

Paint rules the kingdom it created,

The painter’s invisible intent, fingers

Drawing on experience that lingers,

Slowly diminished, subtly ablated,

Of null paintings seen or contemplated.

(Or call them conscious unconscious singers,

For all music without words is abstract,

The furthest thing from an idea or fact.)

The painter has brushes to think or say.

He motions — his eye makes or takes away.



Thanks to Jeffrey Strayer for posting the Marden painting

and for suggesting two lines of the sonnet.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Mountain Brook (John Singer Sargent)

 

















The brook ran through high mountain pasture

From failing glacier to pool to pond to lake,

Between banks limned with moss and aster

Rooted in cascades of shattered igneous flake.

I straddled the water running slow over stones,

My boots precariously gripping boulders

The water’s rilling shaped into hipbones.

Further up hunched matching shoulders.

I found a head and rolled it in, midstream.

The shallow, muttering water, unperturbed,

Flowed around and on like a vanquished dream.

Provoked, I left not a rock undisturbed

And rolled them in -- the addled stream burst

Banks and drowned the mountain pasture’s thirst.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

A Fable

I set a pebble on a table by a spoon

And tried to tell the difference between

My mind and the surface of the table.

 

Evening stole the light and soon

The rest of the rest of the room seemed

As far as the spoon was from the pebble.

 

It was not the pebble or the spoon

That took the center of the scene

But the impulse to discover this fable.

 

There is no finer thought than this:

All that might be is not what is.

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Of a Blackbird Looking at Thin Trees Sway (with apologies to Wallace Stevens)

 1. 

The trees move and I am
Not moving.

2.
My eye is not the only eye.
There is one other.

3.
I fly between the branches
But do not find a perch--too many leaves falling.

4.
I am alone as a blind eye. I was once
Not alone. I have forgotten why.

5. 
The wind whistles in the branches
And I whistle--the sounds exactly the same.

6.
Ice on the grass this morning. Soon the snow
Will catch my shadow as I pass from tree to tree.
I know exactly why I am here.

7.
I watch for the one with talons.
I cannot chase him like the little ones.
I think of him, at night, huddled on the opposite
Side of the black bole. 

8.
I know all the inflections of birds and of branches.
They know
That I can sing louder than the moon.

9.
From above, the trees look like black suns
Against the dying grass. There is no
Perch at the center of a sun.

10.
My fellows cry out as they pass.
They see these trees with my eye
And do not want them for their own.

11.
I do not fear anything
And nothing fears me
Except the trees.

12. 
I must be going soon--
Once the river and the trees
Stop moving.

13.
The dark grows long as day
And there are no more leaves.
The snow stings my eye.
I have already left 
Before I fly.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Waking

Is it only dullness,
   the courage the eye
requires to watch itself,
   white circling hue
circling black?  Perhaps
   a life of seeing
greens infinitely shaded
   teaches us to take
the shock of the red
   without equanimity
or as a joke.  Morning
   headache, the renewed
blur of sense, release
   of energy, all that
awakening can make
   of itself, explains,
“You’ve come this far.”
   To take responsibility
for the rainbow beneath
   the water glass, or
the dogs we’ve run with
   all night long, we
must make a choice:
   watch the light blister,
or close our eyes tight.