Saturday, October 9, 2010

An Observation

It is hard to look at things,

harder to say what you see.

Rattle each grain of sand

in its grave of desert?

Why begin unless you intend

to see things to the end?


And do not rely on the words

you overheard in a dream,

not knowing what they mean,

how they sound, those half-shadowed

chess pieces maneuvering

in and out of thought, unthought.


Language goes hard as time

at the first understanding.

Everything goes inside it,

which is an unopened box . . .

vague outline of a blue box

against a black background.


Then your voice’s children

as they escape to the street,

as they wade into the crowd . . .

the wind sucks them through a bone.

A plume of exhalation

withers on the zero air.


We know only one thing,

as a novel knows one story,

like a closed book reading

its own discrete emotions

pressed to paper word by

word, comma by comma.


It is not only duration

allows our mouths approaching

by halves to sometimes kiss.

A word is startled by the eye,

and something is discrete,

if still unknown, no longer.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Sunday Drive

Cloudless afternoon –

the Mennonite girls

drive carriages down


gravel byways,

laughing under

black bonnets.


All but one

lean and wave

as we blow past.


On an iron pole

in a man-made pond,

a belted kingfisher


cocks his big-

headed profile

against the sun.


The lime headstones

in Cosper’s graveyard

illegible, our fingers


pick up granules

like salt from

their smooth faces.


Back on the course,

before a third put,

pausing for a jet’s


deafening passage

to fade, I hear

the wind vectors’


whipcrack, see

the ball breaking

toward the hole.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Quanta

Perpetuum mobile, we

could know nothing of movement

except that it was movement.

Could we know nothing of men?

The rose was more fully a rose

as we were so unroselike,

stripped of leaf and petal.

Hiroshima, the Battle of Tokyo,

the nightmare and the night,

lesser infinities burgeoning

under one two many suns;

the splay and meld of violence

dealt by stiff-fingered science.

The bomb boomed ego, ordering

order poorly understood and

the universe trembled in a drop

of black water imprisoning god.

Perhaps I shall know god

if I am not a god myself.

Perhaps all gods are god

moving toward or away;

I won’t know him to be god

if I move only as he moves,

so we see him everywhere.

Our eyes in the mirror never

see themselves move, close, blink,

see nothing but a stare, or wink.


That was then.

Now we can know

nothing that we have not changed

by attempting to know it and

put ourselves again at center

of the goddamned universe.

The eye touches the world silver.

Where we can’t see we exult

to find we can’t know place and

velocity simultaneously; we

watch light act now like hate

and now like love, and calmly

declare our kingdom is a horse.

We pluck up the rose but think

the thought the only rose real,

confusing indeterminacy of god

with thinking thinking thinking.

What we know is index

for what we can only imagine:

number is dimension;

numbers variably interact;

dimensions variably interact

depending on the whore’s orgasm,

the equatorially marooned Nootkan

reading my mind like thinking.

So without all this, the mind’s

construction of this poem, this

poem has nothing to say and nor,

we extrapolate, would rose or mirror;

so number, because it accounts

for nothing but itself and

therefore can’t be questioned,

is nature second to second nature.

In the subatomic realm pontiffs

witness paradox and say

it cannot be unless I think it

and so I think it so.

I think the chair; thank god

for me, thinks the chair.

I think god; he has better

things to do. He thinks me:

the ear of a lion of gold,

the light at heart of an icicle,

seed of what I’m not and might be,

a rose in the mirror.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Lady With Birdcages*

Who would keep an eagle in a birdcage,
Or a heron or an owl,
Or the head of a woman of dubious age,
Or varieties of waterfowl?

The man in white with slitted eyes
Watches from the weeds
As the wraithlike woman saunters by
Oblivious of his needs.

The look in his eyes is coarse derision,
But the birds know why
The bird-brained lady has made her decision.

We each have cages in which we imprison
Things that would fly
If we didn't thus impose our lack of vision.

*Note: This is a verbal illustration of a painting by my
daughter, Julia Rose Guerin.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

STARLINGS

Why do the starlings amass
In the air
As well as on the grass?

The attraction of grain or seed,
I understand,
Abundance and the need.

But there is no apparent reason
Why they flock
Above these fields the entire season.

Like a school of tiny fish they boil
And pitch, dive
And tack, black ink in oil.

They have no leader and no
Follower,
But seem to know when and where to go.

Perhaps it is a matter of duty,
Each to the others.
I prefer to think the point is beauty.

Then one day they are gone.
You hardly notice
When they return, one by one by one.




Sunday, August 29, 2010

Nine Dragons

From the mist--
yellow eye lolling
beneath
a scaly lid,
blunt horn
jutting from a skull,
armored, undulant
tail so tapered
it might never end,
the body
only a guess
in veiling
formlessness--
belch steam and ashes,
multiplying night on the cragless
mountain, confounding the hunt.
There are no dragons, no mists.
Like shattered wind,
its deafening shriek
embarrasses
the null hope mystics
mumble on their featureless mountaintops.
Bag of water,
bag of blood,
hung upon
a single hook.
The jeweled brow frowns.
The spectator of the game of being
the spectator
lusts for insight, trembling
in the white pall
like one tongue
of flame. All,
immense, eternal--
the first is one of nine dragons:
Leering groggily
out of their late afternoon nap,
muscles tightening
along the spine,
they breathe in whispers,
trembling slits widening—
widening into eyes:
into into
into into
into me.
Where’s your face?
Where’s my heart?
The bed sheets mount up like thunderheads.
I find our love
between our legs
when she pushes.
Curtains billow on the summer’s breezes.
I’m sorry you
must go
away from me.
This time maybe
I won’t feel
so guilty.
Glass bowls glow on the bedside table
among flowers
and a pear
and a knife.
Their faces turn to green rock,
hair to rusty wire,
fingernails to nails.
Then they sleep until it’s time
to wind the clock . . . .
Where there’s love there’s some new thing--
a child with one eye practicing
piano without
a metronome,
painlessly adding
note to note
for his mother’s love.
When his fingers ripple down
the ridged back of the keyboard,
women reach
with bent back arms,
and chatter prayers
only old gods
appreciate.
The notes fall
like thin trees
hit with an ax.
The boy’s face distends to a thin mask.
His mother listens
from the ropes
and curtains
in the wings.
Each note dies
before the next,
while breasts engorge with milk;
nipples toughened and ready,
their bodies’ purpose transformed,
each woman clutches the near man, who,
uncomprehending,
is nonetheless glad for such embraces.
The boy stands,
reaches in to pluck the strings—
his mother lurches out on his blind side,
unaware of what’s been written—
his plain music,
simple to hear,
like love so much harder to feel . . . .
Shadow dog,
burning giraffe,
Daedulus
and Icarus
watch each other
fall into the blue;
corn-on-the-cob
for the last supper;
the ptarmigan perched
on the torpedo;
interchangeable
corks and angels;
the little people
born in mushroom shade;
the butterfly/
hourglass rhyme;
the ocean and the desert of the mind.
At the base of the upturned pyramid,
at the point of gathered weight,
a little man with a face of scars
yammers, “I am
not the one! I
am not the one!”
We cannot tell
if he is the ruler of Hell.
At the end of roads, a hooded ghost
says, “You knew
I did not know.
It’s up to you.”
Nor square the geometries of the senses
with the smell
of a dead man.
Scales glistering and jingling
like gold coins,
fishes plunge
into mirror-black
floor tiles
to the hum hum of wind-strummed guitars
and the exhaust of cars.
Imagination
consists of this
or leads into
a blank abyss.
On more than faith the rose is taken red,
the painted flat an image;
something hesitate to name
or call it fear . . . .
August night—
one hundred and five degrees on the line—
spot-welds begat in spark spray—
station wagons and sedans
grow likes sons and daughters
visited
once a week.
A man, naked to the waist, sweat beading
off grimy skin,
arms arching back,
eyes white bulges
tilted toward
the I-beam-occluded ceiling,
bellows, bellows.
The line turns chorus of tin whistles
blowing off steam.
Beneath a grate in the concrete floor,
an earmuffed man
scoops metal
scraps and cinders
in a plastic pail with a plastic shovel.
Another
sleeps in the stairwell,
wags no forefinger
on either hand—
each night mops the cafeterias.
He’s found a pint of Southern Comfort
in his bucket
every night,
and a dead man hidden where only he
might find him,
every other year for twenty;
doesn’t know how
that could happen,
but he talks about it all the time.
The shirtless man was a P.h.d.,
but discovered
at twenty-six
that life is dust.
Into his mutter
has slowly stolen
a constant stutter.
They all leave be
a wiry man
whose nose and lips
were fused by
electricity.
His eyes hide behind his eternal smile;
no one has ever equaled his piecework;
he goes to church every Saturday night;
no one has heard a word from him in years.
Lunch at two
am on the roof—
the men ogle
the moon, kick pebbles, crack
the new tar bubbles
with their thumbs . . . .
A skeleton drawn in a horseless cart
plucks a fiddle and looses arrows;
enthroned beneath
sides of carrion,
he spreadeagles
the devils
picking through
mounds of human hair.
What is fetid in the fetid air?
First, the balloon mother brings home
brother pops
quite on purpose,
then all still life paintings seem the same.
There’s sense in the burying of fingernails.
Trees make wind blow and time sorrow.
Thus, the wings
wrap the ready
in stiff black leather and squeeze,
squeeze them dizzy.
What whispers
Nothing to fear?
The only angel
believed in
anymore. Out
of where there are not even mists,
the queen breeds soldiers and mites
from her bloated bag;
the white salesman at the doorstep
has no history,
sells thingumbobs
once and to only
one customer—
a proton winking
in and out
of existence
like nothing
thinking.
At midnight, the darkness stretches,
the moon blinks . . . .
Some ideas share the ages
with the mists.
Some die out.
Others, born
pregnant, delivered
of a reason
not to be,
will never die.
Hear it think:
E=mc shivers.
True courage refrains from creation.
A blue ceramic bowl patterned with fishes
lies in sand out of the tide’s reach, is
unbroken,
never breaks.
Sand may come and go,
burying
and unburying,
grain by grain blasting
the glazes away,
working the walls thin as paper;
the bowl is gone,
but not before the sand.
What is its final taking off?
Some say this thought.
Or is it the one
who first thought of Hell,
then told his son?
When the last thing
we are inclined
to be is nothing,
shouldn’t some words remain unspoken?
Each man and woman
stands still in the street,
looking at her or his own feet.
No muscles. No names.
Beyond horizons,
the sequestered
miracle
flashes into being,
splashing matrices,
and for a moment there’s no need to die . . . .
“So what? We are all gods, all angels!”
he bellows,
“A dove nesting on my nose sustains
my attention.
Consider the instruction of the times:
‘Ignore everything.
Keep the counsel
of the argument
of the council,
and press all eyes closed to the agony
of individuals.
You are the pariah lion in the dusty bush
devouring
hyenas.
Eat your bread.
Say yes and no.
Love nothing.
Love the nothing.
Add, but don’t
multiply. Eat,
but don’t grow.
You can be what you already are, with
modification.’
Consciousness doth make us children.
Poor Grizzly
and Hellken, Deaddog
and Curlybeard—
incarcerated
by an idea
most overrated—
loathing the taste of human souls.
Only the rain
blocks the wind
from the window pane.
Pietas remind us of the criminals
buried by thieves.
‘Inevitability of understanding,’ says
the doctor of
interrogation,
the priest tapping the cheek
in Confirmation—
the poetry
of the last sound
of the last line,
the soporific of repetition,
the lonely kneeling walk down the long aisle,
the unicorn
mortal sin—
the teeth of the beast who
stops hearts with the judgment of his eyes.
The other eight are as apes and plague us,
hoist us screaming into the leafy trees,
where they bless us fondly, fondle, or let go.
Consider:
if I say
everything,
I say dragon.
Say dragon,
I’ve nothing
to go on.
Here’s how one might see it: I wake.
My brow contracts
upon a wadded thought;
vigorously fanning wings on the dawn wind,
and with one thrust of immense haunches,
I’m airborne.
The clouds below
erase me
as I go. No!
No, no, no!
Fancy being the early rumor of belief,
let me be St. George
tilting his lance
into the dust,
and not see myself the pitiable beast
beneath his horse’s scissoring hooves,
resurrected
in the arrogance
of martyrdom.
Not even I can say the earth is
as old as it is
because I’m here
to say it is so.
Wings folded in prayer, I genuflect,
receive the dragon
on my tongue,
draw it between my teeth,
float it beneath my roof,
feel it—dry,
savorless—
until (my one good
eye closed tight as a healing wound)
it dissolves
and I swallow . . . .”
I am the visitation of mists—
the thousand cracked bowls holding
the measureless moisture of the earth,
the cat rubbing its back upon its back,
a weary conspirator to the extinction
of the universe (not without its qualms),
neither shunning the sun nor sure
it destroys me—
I am the cathedral sanctuary of dragons.
The bodhisattva
flaps up on his crane
and pierces me.
I hide Christ’s agony on Gethsemane.
Be empty yourself
and hide everything!
On Sunday I am proud to dissipate.
I am the conical cloud meandering
the brightest sky in June,
mimicking
a parasol,
the lethal yellow gas descending
from the cauldron of a crater lake,
the perpetually losing player of tag,
the permanent undone by street breezes.
All clouds create
themselves, winds
assisting.
I am the very meat of the mushroom,
a binary
war machine,
the thought balloons of all murderers.
I shroud the first instant of history
like the mind of Cain.
I am the very meat of the mushroom.
I am the position and the velocity.
I am mist, all mists, and all equally.
I am the dragon hidden in the mist.
I am the envelope of the letter
never sent,
the ink in the pen that never writes
what is read.
I am so
much ego.
I, the smoke that pushes the train down tracks,
the hen who lays the eggs of sun and moon,
the sugar film on the delighted tongue,
the spume on the naked thighs of ex-virgins,
the laughter of children on a winter’s day,
the prayer in the execution chamber . . . .
Vision is
a pint of mist
frozen and rolled
into a snowball:
in Sesshu’s Winter,
each stroke is the stem of an exclamation
point, each dot
the period at the end of a question mark.
Nine strokes of the pen make the man
spryly mount steep steps to his home.
Name everything:
tree, rock, cloud,
mountain, step, water, boat, man, house
and that’s all.
But the painting!
you complain.
But Sesshu!
A thick, vertical line cuts the top half
of the landscape.
To the left,
an outline of unfoliate,
craggy pinnacles;
to the right,
the mountainside teams
with unnamable forms of vegetation.
Old mountain.
New mountain.
Humble Sesshu.
Catch any one
of a thousand snowballs. Hold it up—
watch it split,
feel the inner,
wriggling newborn emerging . . . .
For the new locus is never completely hidden
inside the old one;
otherwise, relation
could not exist between them
(not that Reason could rout it out).
It is neither
undiscovered,
nor guarded by dragons in distant
mountains, where Imagination
could brave wind and lightning
to bring it home.
The place of birth is too obvious
and near to notice—
a dim kennel a stone’s throw
from our hut
outside the castle walls—reserved
for those who peek
from the parapets,
for the eyes of faith to find;
the unattended
hatchery
may have already grown too cold . . . .


Note: Several lines near the end of “Nine Dragons” are borrowed from Auden’s “Age of Anxiety.” View the entire "Nine Dragons" scroll at: http://www.craigcoss.com/DragonScroll.html

Saturday, August 14, 2010

What After (for Ruth)

In a motionless thicket, a single leaf
twists, as if two fingers roll its stem,
then stops. It twists again and drops.

In a tree, broken branches held aloft
by stubborn bark sway on a pendulum
wider than the solid branches swing.

Most things blaze before they die.
Stars nova and sunlight is an
incandescent exhalation.

What after? What, after my last
shiver through, do I want there to be?
Leaf, branch, star, sun, and you.