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Collected Poems

Page 12

by Jack Gilbert

Allen wearing a red skullcap, and a loose bathrobe

  over his nakedness. Shoulder-length hair

  and a chest-length, oily beard.

  No one was within fifteen years of him. Destroyed

  like the rest of that clan. His remarkable

  talent destroyed. The fine mind grown more

  and more simple. Buddhist chants, impoverishing

  poems. There are no middle tones in the paintings

  of children. Chekhov said he didn’t want

  the audience to cry, but to see. Allen showing

  me his old man’s bald scalp. A kind of love.

  Aachen is a good copy of a mediocre building.

  Architects tried for two thousand years to find

  a way to put a dome on a square base.

  ELEGY FOR BOB (JEAN MCLEAN)

  Only you and I still stand in the snow on Highland Avenue

  in Pittsburgh waiting for the blundering iron streetcars

  that never came. Only you know how the immense storms

  over the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers were the scale

  I wanted. Nobody but you remembers Peabody High School.

  You shared my youth in Paris and the hills above Como.

  And later, in Seattle. It was you playing the aria from

  Don Giovanni over and over, filling the forest of Puget

  Sound with the music. You in the front room and me

  upstairs with your discarded wife in my bed. The sound

  of your loneliness pouring over our happy bodies.

  You were with your third wife when I was in Perugia

  six months later, but in love with somebody else.

  We searched for her in Munich, the snow falling again.

  You trying to decide when to kill yourself. All of it

  finally bringing us to San Francisco. To the vast

  decaying white house. No sound of Mozart coming up

  from there. No alleluias in you anymore. No longer

  will you waltz under the chandeliers in Paris salons

  drunk with champagne and the Greek girl as the others

  stand along the mirrored walls. The men watching

  with fury, the eyes of the women inscrutable. No one

  else speaks the language of those years. No one

  remembers you as the Baron. The streetcars have

  finished the last run, and I am walking home. Thinking

  love is not refuted because it comes to an end.

  RÉSUMÉ

  Easter on the mountain. The hanging goat roasted

  with lemon, pepper and thyme. The American hacks off

  the last of the meat, gets out the remaining

  handfuls from the spine. Grease up to the elbows,

  his face smeared and his heart blooming. The satisfied

  farmers watch his fervor with surprise.

  When the day begins to cool, he makes his way down

  the trails. Down from that holiday energy

  to the silence of his real life, where he will

  wash in cold water by kerosene light, happy

  and alone. A future inch by inch, rock by rock,

  by the green wheat and the ripe wheat later.

  By basil and dove tower and white doves turning

  in the brilliant sky. The ghosts of his other world

  crowding around, surrounding him with himself.

  Tomato by tomato, canned fish in the daily stew.

  He sits outside on the wall of his vineyard

  as night rises from the parched earth and the sea

  darkens in the distance. Insistent stars and him

  singing in the quiet. Flesh of the spirit and soul

  of the body. The clarity that does so much damage.

  MORE THAN SIXTY

  Out of money, so I’m sitting in the shade

  of my farmhouse cleaning the lentils

  I found in the back of the cupboard.

  Listening to the cicada in the fig tree

  mix with the cooing doves on the roof.

  I look up when I hear a goat hurt far down

  the valley and discover the sea

  exactly the same blue I used to paint it

  with my watercolors as a child.

  So what, I think happily. So what!

  BY SMALL AND SMALL:

  MIDNIGHT TO FOUR A.M.

  For eleven years I have regretted it,

  regretted that I did not do what

  I wanted to do as I sat there those

  four hours watching her die. I wanted

  to crawl in among the machinery

  and hold her in my arms, knowing

  the elementary, leftover bit of her

  mind would dimly recognize it was me

  carrying her to where she was going.

  ONCE UPON A TIME

  We were young incidentally, stumbling

  into joy, he said. The sweetness of

  our bodies was natural in the way

  the sun came out of the Mediterranean

  fresh every morning. We were accidentally

  alive. A shape without a form.

  We were a music composed of melody,

  without chords, played only on

  the white keys. We thought excitement

  was love, that intensity was a marriage.

  We meant no harm, but could see the women

  only a little through the ardor and hurry.

  We were innocent, he said, baffled when

  they let us kiss their tender mouths.

  Sometimes they kissed back, even volunteered.

  A CLOSE CALL

  Dusk and the sea is thus and so. The cat

  from two fields away crossing through the grapes.

  It is so quiet I can hear the air

  in the canebrake. The blond wheat darkens.

  The glaze is gone from the bay and the heat lets go.

  They have not lit the lamp at the other farm yet

  and all at once I feel lonely. What a surprise.

  But the air stills, the heat comes back

  and I think I am all right again.

  THE ROOSTER

  They have killed the rooster, thank God,

  but it’s strange to have my half

  of the valley unreported. Without the rooster

  it’s like my place by the Chinese Elm is not here

  each day. As though I’m gone. I touch my face

  and get up to make tea, feeling my heart claim

  no territory. Like the colorless weeds which fail,

  but don’t give in. Silent in the world’s clamor.

  They killed the rooster because he could feel

  nothing for the six frumpy hens. Now there is only

  the youngster to announce and cover. They are only

  aunts to him. Mostly he works on his crowing. And for

  a long time the roosters on the other farms would not

  answer. But yesterday they started laying

  full-throated performances on him. He would come

  back, but couldn’t get the hang of it. The scorn

  and the failing went on until finally one day,

  from the other end of the valley, came a deep

  voice saying, “For Christ’s sake, kid, like this.”

  And it began. Not bothering to declare parts

  of the landscape, but announcing the glory,

  the greatness of the sun and moon.

  Told of the heavenly hosts, the mysteries,

  and the joy. Which were the Huns and which not.

  Describing the dominions of wind and song. What was

  noble in all things. It was very quiet after that.

  FAILING AND FLYING

  Everyone forgets that Icarus also flew.

  It’s the same when love comes to an end,

  or the marriage fails and people say

  they knew it was a mistake, that everybody

  said it would never work. That she was
r />   old enough to know better. But anything

  worth doing is worth doing badly.

  Like being there by that summer ocean

  on the other side of the island while

  love was fading out of her, the stars

  burning so extravagantly those nights that

  anyone could tell you they would never last.

  Every morning she was asleep in my bed

  like a visitation, the gentleness in her

  like antelope standing in the dawn mist.

  Each afternoon I watched her coming back

  through the hot stony field after swimming,

  the sea light behind her and the huge sky

  on the other side of that. Listened to her

  while we ate lunch. How can they say

  the marriage failed? Like the people who

  came back from Provence (when it was Provence)

  and said it was pretty but the food was greasy.

  I believe Icarus was not failing as he fell,

  but just coming to the end of his triumph.

  BURNING (ANDANTE NON TROPPO)

  We are all burning in time, but each is consumed

  at his own speed. Each is the product

  of his spirit’s refraction, of the inflection

  of that mind. It is the pace of our living

  that makes the world available. Regardless of

  the body’s lion-wrath or forest waiting, despite

  the mind’s splendid appetite or the sad power

  in our soul’s separation from God and women,

  it is always our gait of being that decides

  how much is seen, what the mystery of us knows,

  and what the heart will smell of the landscape

  as the Mexican train continues at a dog-trot each

  day going north. The grand Italian churches are

  covered with detail which is visible at the pace

  people walk by. The great modern buildings are

  blank because there is no time to see from the car.

  A thousand years ago when they built the gardens

  of Kyoto, the stones were set in the streams askew.

  Whoever went quickly would fall in. When we slow,

  the garden can choose what we notice. Can change

  our heart. On the wall of a toilet in Rock Springs

  years ago there was a dispenser that sold tubes of

  cream to numb a man’s genitals. Called Linger.

  THE OTHER PERFECTION

  Nothing here. Rock and fried earth.

  Everything destroyed by the fierce light.

  Only stones and small fields of

  stubborn barley and lentils. No broken

  things to repair. Nothing thrown away

  or abandoned. If you want a table,

  you pay a man to make it. If you find two

  feet of barbed wire, you take it home.

  You’ll need it. The farmers don’t laugh.

  They go to town to laugh, or to fiestas.

  A kind of paradise. Everything itself.

  The sea is water. Stones are made of rock.

  The sun goes up and goes down. A success

  without any enhancement whatsoever.

  A BALL OF SOMETHING

  Watching the ant walk underwater along

  the bottom of my saucepan is painful.

  Though he seems in no distress.

  He walks at leisure, almost strolling.

  Lifts his head twice in the solid outside

  and goes on. Until he encounters a bit

  of something and acts almost afraid

  in struggling to get free. After, he continues,

  again at ease. He looks up and pitches forward

  into a tight ball. It is not clear whether

  that’s the end. Perhaps he is doing what

  the hedgehog does well. Waiting for someone

  to go by whose ankle he can grab

  and ask for help. Hoping for pity. But maybe

  not. Maybe he lies there curled around a smile,

  liberated at last. Dreaming of coming back

  as Byron, or maybe the favorite dog.

  GETTING AWAY WITH IT

  We have already lived in the real paradise.

  Horses in the empty summer street.

  Me eating the hot wurst I couldn’t afford,

  in frozen Munich, tears dropping. We can

  remember. A child in the outfield waiting

  for the last fly ball of the year. So dark

  already it was black against heaven.

  The voices trailing away to dinner,

  calling faintly in the immense distance.

  Standing with my hands open, watching it

  curve over and start down, turning white

  at the last second. Hands down. Flourishing.

  TRUTH

  The glare of the Greek sun

  on our stone house

  is not so white

  as the pale moonlight on it.

  TRANSGRESSIONS

  He thinks about how important the sinning was,

  how much his equity was in simply being alive.

  Like the sloth. The days and nights wasted,

  doing nothing important adding up to

  the favorite years. Long hot afternoons

  watching ants while the cicadas railed

  in the Chinese Elm about the brevity of life.

  Indolence so often when no one was watching.

  Wasting June mornings with the earth singing

  all around. Autumn afternoons doing nothing

  but listening to the siren voices of streams

  and clouds coaxing him into the sweet happiness

  of leaving all of it alone. Using up what

  little time we have, relishing our mortality,

  waltzing slowly without purpose. Neglecting

  the future. Content to let the garden fail

  and the house continue on in its usual disorder.

  Yes, and coveting his neighbors’ wives.

  Their clean hair and soft voices. The seraphim

  he was sure were in one of the upstairs rooms.

  Hesitant occasions of pride, feeling himself feeling.

  Waking in the night and lying there. Discovering

  the past in the wonderful stillness. The other,

  older pride. Watching the ambulance take away

  the man whose throat he had crushed. Above all,

  his greed. Greed of time, of being. This world,

  the pine woods stretching all brown or bare

  on either side of the railroad tracks in the winter

  twilight. Him feeling the cold, sinfully unshriven.

  THE ABANDONED VALLEY

  Can you understand being alone so long

  you would go out in the middle of the night

  and put a bucket into the well

  so you could feel something down there

  tug at the other end of the rope?

  HAPPENING APART FROM WHAT’S

  HAPPENING AROUND IT

  There is a vividness to eleven years of love

  because it is over. A clarity of Greece now

  because I live in Manhattan or New England.

  If what is happening is part of what’s going on

  around what’s occurring, it is impossible

  to know what is truly happening. If love is

  part of the passion, part of the fine food

  or the villa on the Mediterranean, it is not

  clear what the love is. When I was walking

  in the mountains with the Japanese man and began

  to hear the water, he said, “What is the sound

  of the waterfall?” “Silence,” he finally told me.

  The stillness I did not notice until the sound

  of water falling made apparent the silence I had

  been hearing long before. I ask myself what

  is the sound of women?
What is the word for

  that still thing I have hunted inside them

  for so long? Deep inside the avalanche of joy,

  the thing deeper in the dark, and deeper still

  in the bed where we are lost. Deeper, deeper

  down where a woman’s heart is holding its breath,

  where something very far away in that body

  is becoming something we don’t have a name for.

  EXCEEDING THE SPIRIT

  Beyond what the fires have left of the cathedral

  you can see old men standing here and there

  in administration buildings looking out

  of the fine casements with the glass gone.

  Idle and bewildered. The few people who are

  in the weed-choked streets below carry things

  without purpose, holding fading memories inside

  of what the good used to be. Immense ships

  rise in the distance, beached and dying.

  Starving men crouch in the dirt of the plaza with

  a scrap of cloth before them, trying to sell nothing:

  one with dead fuses and a burnt-out light bulb,

  another with just a heavy bolt and screw

  rusted together. One has two Byzantine coins

  and a lump of oxidation which has a silver piece

  inside stamped with the face of Hermes, but he

  doesn’t know it. A strange place to look for

  what matters, what is worthy. To arrive now

  at the wilderness alone and striving harder

  for discontent, to need again. Not for salvation.

  To go on because there might be something like him.

  To visit what is importantly unknown of what is.

  MEDITATION ELEVEN:

  READING BLAKE AGAIN

  I remember that house I’d rented with them.

  The laughing and constant talk of love.

  The energy of their friends.

  And the sounds late at night.

  The sound of whipping. Urging and screams.

  Like the dead lying to each other.

  HOW MUCH OF THAT IS LEFT IN ME?

  Yearning inside the rejoicing. The heart’s famine

  within the spirit’s joy. Waking up happy

 

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