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Collected Poems

Page 6

by Jack Gilbert


  Wisdom? The history of Poland?

  All the ways of growing old?

  No, I decided (walking back

  to the hotel this morning), it must be love.

  The real love that follows

  early delight and ignorance.

  A wonderful sad dance that comes after.

  LOYALTY

  About once a month the beautiful girl

  who was my wife or one of our friends

  comes to say how they defended me

  when the others said I was growing old.

  SONG

  Rotting herds everywhere on the outskirts.

  And the old man shuffling among the carrion

  with his dim flashlight. Not trusting his memory.

  Practicing over and over so that when the time comes

  he will automatically say no. Salvaging at least that.

  GETTING READY

  What if the heart does not pale as the body wanes,

  but is like the sun that blazes hotter each day

  on these immense, perishing fields? What then?

  (Desire is not the problem. This far south,

  we are careful not to mistake seizures for love.)

  He sits there bewildered in a clamp of light.

  In the stillness, the sun grinds him clean.

  SUL PONTICELLO

  Year by year he works himself,

  replacing youth with stone.

  But the marble rings with love

  even more than the fine flesh.

  THE CUCUMBERS OF PRAXILLA OF SICYON

  What is the best we leave behind?

  Certainly love and form and ourselves.

  Surely those. But it is the mornings

  that are hard to relinquish, and music

  and cucumbers. Rain on trees, empty

  piazzas in small towns flooded with sun.

  What we are busy with doesn’t make us

  groan ah! ah! as we will for the nights

  and the cucumbers.

  A DESCRIPTION OF HAPPINESS IN KØBENHAVN

  All this windless day snow fell

  into the King’s Garden

  where I walked, perfecting and growing old,

  abandoning one by one everybody:

  randomly in love with the paradise

  furnace of my mind. Now I sit in the dark,

  dreaming of a marble sun

  and its strictness. This

  is to tell you I am not coming back.

  To tell you instead of my private life

  among people who must wrestle their hearts

  in order to feel anything, as though it were

  unnatural. What I master by day

  still lapses in the night. But I go on

  with the cargo cult, blindly feeling the snow

  come down, learning to flower by tightening.

  NEW HAMPSHIRE MARBLE

  I called Sue the week I moved back from Rome.

  She was getting married on Sunday she said,

  but would drive over after lunch to say goodbye.

  Later, in the tall grass between some homes,

  we were searching around in the torn dirt,

  frantic and laughing. Trying to find

  the huge diamond engagement ring.

  Our bodies flaring in the winter moonlight.

  MY MARRIAGE WITH MRS. JOHNSON

  When the storm hit, I was fording the river

  and thinking of Doctor Johnson. Garrick, as a boy,

  spied on that bulbous man doting on his blowsy wife.

  For years did the famous imitation for London society

  of those walruses pretending to be lovers. I was

  thinking of Johnson’s permanent sadness after she died.

  I looked up at the palms floundering in the warm rain

  and out at the waves piling up in the cove.

  I thought of the foolish earth and how we dally

  in my bed. The absurd exaggeration of her.

  She lies with me after singing, singing, singing,

  singing—Oh, it is such a marriage, however it looks

  through any keyhole. I went on, carrying the fish,

  feeling for the bottom, and dreaming of us entering

  the great hall at Versailles: everyone gaping

  and elaborate Louis Quatorze wondering at his envy.

  HEART SKIDDING

  The pigeon with a broken wing.

  The pigeon with no left foot.

  That pigeon with his beak grown wrong

  starving among the others eating.

  Or the homeless old women carrying

  all they own in worn shopping bags

  around Chicago at three in the morning.

  What is the point of my suffering?

  They are nothing to me. Filthy

  pigeons. Jew-hating old women.

  Why does it bother with me?

  GAMES

  Imagine if suffering were real.

  Imagine if those old people were afraid of death.

  What if the midget or the girl with one arm

  really felt pain? Imagine how impossible it would be

  to live if some people were

  alone and afraid all their lives.

  MY GRAVEYARD IN TOKYO

  It was hard to see the moonlight

  on the gravestones

  because of the neon

  in the parking lot.

  I said I did in my letters.

  But thinking back on it now,

  I don’t feel sure.

  ALONE ON CHRISTMAS EVE IN JAPAN

  Not wanting to lose it all for poetry.

  Wanting to live the living. All this year

  looking on the graveyard below my apartment.

  Holding myself tenderly in this marred body.

  Wondering if the quiet I feel is that happiness

  wise people speak of, or the modulation

  that is the acquiescence to death beginning.

  TEXTURES

  We had walked three miles through the night

  when I had to piss. She stopped just beyond.

  I aimed at the stone wall of a vineyard,

  but the wind took it and she made a sound.

  I apologized. “It’s all right,” she said out

  of the dark, her voice different. “I liked it.”

  THE REVOLUTION

  Robinson Crusoe breaks a plate on his way out,

  and hesitates over the pieces. The ship begins

  to sink as he sweeps them up. Sets the table

  and stands looking at history for the last time.

  Knowing precision will leak from him

  however well he learns the weather or vegetation,

  and despite the cunning of his hands.

  His mind can survive only among the furniture.

  Amid the primary colors of the island, he will

  become a fine thing, perhaps, but a different one.

  MEXICO

  I went to sleep by the highway

  and woke just before dawn,

  to see people drifting toward me

  across the fields. Silently

  getting into trucks.

  Blurred like first love.

  Another inappropriate beauty

  I leave out of what I am making.

  ANOTHER GRANDFATHER

  Every generation tells

  of how the good world died.

  How he went into the giant corn

  at night, leaving the dogs.

  Always they say it was the end

  once and for all of America.

  Grandfather and curing tobacco.

  We picked the clumsy leaves,

  sweating. And piled them on sleds.

  Girls tied them in bunches

  and the bunches on poles. The poles

  were hung in a log barn.

  He built fires underneath for days

  and stayed up with the thermometer.

  I was proud to be out
there, but afraid

  of his dogs and the size of the dark.

  A city child, down for the summer.

  When suddenly he walked into

  the twelve-foot wall of corn.

  Leaving the dogs. Firelight

  on the barn. The smell of Carolina.

  The stars making me lurch.

  Thirty years ago. And now

  loud cantons night

  after night: America, America.

  He came back with watermelons,

  but always I see him going

  into the corn. And that order ending.

  SINGING IN MY DIFFICULT MOUNTAINS

  Helot for what time there is

  in the baptist hegemony of death.

  For what time there is summer,

  island, cornice. Weeping

  and singing of what declines

  into the earth. But of having,

  not of not having. What abounds.

  Amazed morning after morning

  by the yielding. What times there are.

  My fine house that love is.

  THRESHING THE FIRE

  I

  Fire begins seriously at the body

  and it sits up. The oldest son beats it down.

  It sits up and he clubs it back again.

  That’s what I want.

  This best time begins and stomach can’t have it.

  Nor pride. Nor snakebrain’s excitements

  and darkness. Let him hammer me down

  into the paradise furnace.

  The boy I was remembers the scale. Flames

  two hundred feet up into the sky every night.

  Three powerful rivers naked everywhere.

  Brick and metal. Dirty brick and old raw iron.

  He does not understand, but he knew the wanting.

  Remembers working in the mill, the titanic shear

  cleaving slabs into sections. Halfway

  to something. Smell of Pittsburgh after rain.

  Smell of winter steel and grease, and the smell

  of welding. Believing there were breasts.

  So he will hammer me deep into that rendering.

  Knowing blindly there is something to get.

  II

  Love like chunks of an animal.

  Clothes ripped off and clothes drawn aside.

  Bodies like cries from the ocean.

  Hearts like unkeeled Jerusalem.

  Italian breasts under brambles in Perugia.

  My youth clandestinely in the palazzo.

  Stumbling into love,

  bewildered by the storms of me. Soft beauty.

  Beyond youth after, and my heart augmenting.

  (Stronger, she said to the choir, not louder.)

  Love a second time, then eight years with Linda.

  Now love probably not again.

  The pictures of paradise seem innocent,

  and the Devil’s temptation things for children.

  I would burrow into stone. Into iron.

  Into the rain to find someone important

  there in the dark. A mystery that magnifies

  the earth but does not lie. What is Pure Land

  to that? Let him force me to try once more.

  Insist, insist until I at least fail.

  III

  Cicadas on the olive trees rage in brevity.

  When I go out at night, the stars and quiet

  smell of jasmine and I long for a life

  like fatty boiled beef. Pound me into that.

  I was looking down on my Tokyo graveyard

  late at night and heard in the complete

  silence a violin string snap.

  Drive me down there.

  Lord Nobunaga (surrounded, the castle

  on fire), knowing he would die that day,

  put on his kimono and slowly danced the No¯

  in the flames. When great Hideyoshi was sho¯gun

  and lying on his deathbed, he wept constantly.

  Saying over and over, I don’t want to die.

  I want to live a thousand years.

  Keep me at them both.

  The boy walked the mean winter streets of Pittsburgh

  knowing of their leafy summer. Let him make sure

  the dreams are loose before the fire gets it all.

  And I am hammered into the sun.

  THE GREAT FIRES:

  POEMS 1982–1992

  [1994]

  GOING WRONG

  The fish are dreadful. They are brought up

  the mountain in the dawn most days, beautiful

  and alien and cold from night under the sea,

  the grand rooms fading from their flat eyes.

  Soft machinery of the dark, the man thinks,

  washing them. “What can you know of my machinery!”

  demands the Lord. Sure, the man says quietly

  and cuts into them, laying back the dozen struts,

  getting to the muck of something terrible.

  The Lord insists: “You are the one who chooses

  to live this way. I build cities where things

  are human. I make Tuscany and you go to live

  with rock and silence.” The man washes away

  the blood and arranges the fish on a big plate.

  Starts the onions in the hot olive oil and puts

  in peppers. “You have lived all year without women.”

  He takes out everything and puts in the fish.

  “No one knows where you are. People forget you.

  You are vain and stubborn.” The man slices

  tomatoes and lemons. Takes out the fish

  and scrambles eggs. I am not stubborn, he thinks,

  laying all of it on the table in the courtyard

  full of early sun, shadows of swallows flying

  on the food. Not stubborn, just greedy.

  GUILTY

  The man certainly looked guilty.

  Ugly, ragged, and not clean. Not to mention

  their finding him there in the woods

  with her body. Neighbors told how he was

  always playing with dead squirrels,

  mangled dogs, even snakes. He said

  those were the only things that would

  allow him to get close. “Look at me,”

  the old man said with uncomplaining

  simplicity, “I’m already one of the dead

  among the dead. It’s hard to watch things

  humiliated the way death does it.

  Possums smeared on the road, birds with ants

  eating out their eyes. Even dying rats

  want privacy for their disgrace.

  It’s true I washed the dirt from her face

  and the blood off the body. Combed her hair.

  I slept beside her, at her feet for two days,

  the way my dog used to. I got the dress

  on the best I could. She looked so neglected.

  Like garbage thrown in the weeds.

  Like nobody cared because he had done that

  to her. I kept thinking about how long

  she is going to be alone now. I knew

  the police would take pictures and put them

  in the papers naked and open so people

  eating breakfast could look at her. I wanted

  to give her spirit enough time to get ready.”

  THE FORGOTTEN DIALECT OF THE HEART

  How astonishing it is that language can almost mean,

  and frightening that it does not quite. Love, we say,

  God, we say, Rome and Michiko, we write, and the words

  get it wrong. We say bread and it means according

  to which nation. French has no word for home,

  and we have no word for strict pleasure. A people

  in northern India is dying out because their ancient

  tongue has no words for endearment. I dream of lost

  vocabularies that might express some of what

  we no l
onger can. Maybe the Etruscan texts would

  finally explain why the couples on their tombs

  are smiling. And maybe not. When the thousands

  of mysterious Sumerian tablets were translated,

  they seemed to be business records. But what if they

  are poems or psalms? My joy is the same as twelve

  Ethiopian goats standing silent in the morning light.

  O Lord, thou art slabs of salt and ingots of copper,

  as grand as ripe barley lithe under the wind’s labor.

  Her breasts are six white oxen loaded with bolts

  of long-fibered Egyptian cotton. My love is a hundred

  pitchers of honey. Shiploads of thuya are what

  my body wants to say to your body. Giraffes are this

  desire in the dark. Perhaps the spiral Minoan script

  is not a language but a map. What we feel most has

  no name but amber, archers, cinnamon, horses and birds.

  LOVERS

  When I hear men boast about how passionate

  they are, I think of the two cleaning ladies

  at a second-story window watching a man

  coming back from a party where there was

  lots of free beer. He runs in and out

  of buildings looking for a toilet. “My Lord,”

  the tall woman says, “that fellow down there

  surely does love architecture.”

  MEASURING THE TYGER

  Barrels of chains. Sides of beef stacked in vans.

  Water buffalo dragging logs of teak in the river mud

  outside Mandalay. Pantocrator in the Byzantium dome.

  The mammoth overhead crane bringing slabs of steel

  through the dingy light and roar to the giant shear

  that cuts the adamantine three-quarter-inch plates

  and they flop down. The weight of the mind fractures

 

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