Come on All You Ghosts

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Come on All You Ghosts Page 4

by Matthew Zapruder


  no great watchman comes

  with claws to take him

  in the night before he can master

  techniques of gliding

  from tree to tree, so he can

  find just what he needs, for that

  is what he is looking for.

  Starry Wizards

  Under the dark blue pre-night sky I stood

  holding a flag I had cut from an obsolete windbreaker

  and painted with the green fluorescent initials

  of our brand new organization. Because of some

  quality of the disintegrated light everyone

  was a silhouette. William teetered on stilts beneath

  the unmistakable hat of Abraham Lincoln. Lula

  was the adorable giant robotic rabbit that marched

  through our favorite television program harmlessly

  ruining the plans of the space fleet authorities

  as they endlessly circled our atmosphere in the not

  too distant future, waiting for enemy beings

  or rogue asteroids that never came. We were

  a ragtag collection of young collectors.

  We felt enthusiasm for the tentative friendships

  we had after long years of hiding from each other

  on the breezeway at last and almost too late

  aggregated to protect our enthusiasms. Someone’s

  pet cat was lazily stalking someone else’s

  giant pet snail. It was all too good to be true

  or last. Soon we would all be graduating and along

  would amble the appropriate goons to gather

  us into the welcoming arms of our new apprenticeships.

  We knew if we went wherever we wanted

  the starry wizards would guide us, and

  if we didn’t we would never see them again.

  Paper Toys of the World

  Friends, what is beauty? Right now for me these paper replicas

  I glanced at in a book I did not buy. Paper Toys of the World. I hardly

  think of anyone but myself. For a little while right now

  I know many tiny pagodas were built with knowledge they are not

  meant to last. There was paper and there was time someone

  had to consider, time no one was in crisis, time no one was dying.

  I think each breath the maker sent through them is like

  a trusting class of architects sent through an ancient building

  where used to be copied terrifying decrees. I bet people

  who build pagodas are people who think they won’t ever see them.

  That thought is true, people know people and I am one. I like

  saying this morning in Houston contains many tiny pagodas of wishing

  for better things for people we do not know. I like knowing

  somewhere social workers consider their clients. Last night Tonya said

  I worry too much, she said it softly and firmly because she hardly knows me

  and knew I worry I worry she’s wrong. Here she is in my thoughts

  along with all this beautiful silver fear, beautiful because

  it with a silver penumbra protects the family readying itself

  for school and work. So I choose to believe and choose to ask you

  to believe it too. Today we are driving through the Painted Desert

  where a few people live and breathe, it seems possible, Vic says look out

  the window and feel and that’s what I’m going to do.

  Poem

  Your eyes are not always brown. In

  the wild of our backyard they are light

  green like a sunny day reflected

  in the eyes of a frog looking

  at another frog. I love your love,

  it feels dispensed from a metal tap

  attached to a big vat gleaming

  in a giant room full of shiny whispers.

  I also love tasting you after a difficult

  day doing nothing assiduously.

  Diamond factory, sentient mischievous

  metal fruit hanging from the trees

  in a museum people wander into thinking

  for once I am not shopping. I admire

  and fear you, to me you are an abyss

  I cross towards you. Just look

  directly into my face you said and I felt

  everything stop trying to fit. And

  the marching band took a deep collective

  breath and plunged back into its song.

  Poem for Ferlinghetti

  Everything I know about birds

  is I can’t remember plus

  two of the four mourning

  also known as rain

  doves, the young ones

  born in my back yard

  just this April. I saw

  them moving their wings

  very rapidly in a back

  and forth motion

  particular to their species.

  Monica said it means

  they want to be fed.

  Their parents are likely

  deeper in the stand

  of trees being careful.

  The wind has a metal hand.

  Around them the city

  explodes with helicopters

  and tourists but here

  on Francisco Street where

  you also live this yard

  is protected but not quiet.

  I can hear the Russian

  woman talking out

  the window, I catch

  a few words, one

  of which sounds like

  “object force.” It makes

  me think of Anna

  who is probably married

  to that Finnish Brazilian

  martial arts instructor.

  That was afternoon.

  Now it is later,

  much, the absolute

  worst pure center

  of night, for an hour

  in bed I resisted coming

  here to my desk

  to search for those terrible

  destructive questions still

  hiding from me.

  Do you do that? Or

  is there some other way?

  I thought I might

  but I can’t see

  the yard at all, just

  some yellow safety

  lights in the alley. I try

  to keep the chair

  from creaking, I know

  Sarah knows in her sleep

  I am in my study,

  disturbed. I wish

  I could send the word

  asylum out very far

  into the air like a clear

  colorless substance

  all my friends could

  breathe in sleep, you

  can never protect

  everyone. That constant

  humming sound is time

  coming to take us

  away from each other.

  Or the refrigerator,

  keeping the milk cold

  and pure. So much

  noise all the time

  in the city, do you like it?

  You must, you stay.

  Last week I limped

  in my giant ridiculous cast

  one block to get coffee

  on the corner and sat

  outside feeling very sorry

  but also happy. You

  sat next to me and I was

  pretty sure you

  were you but I didn’t

  know. I gave you

  my New York Times

  and we talked about torture

  and baseball and how

  many more weeks

  are left for newspapers.

  And then you asked me

  if I’d ever be able to walk again.

  That’s what it’s like

  to be eighty I thought

  but I don’t know. Nothing’s

  natural to me anymore.

 
I forgot to buy a light bulb.

  Now in the afternoon

  the blades of grass

  are completely still. No one

  tends a little television

  in the Russian woman’s window.

  All I know is I have tried

  for a long time to be useful,

  like everyone I am also

  always balancing

  on the small blade of not

  letting other people down.

  Now it is getting darker.

  Orange nasturtiums

  you can go out and gather

  and place directly into a salad

  are glowing, and pink

  roses wander along

  the very old green wooden

  trellis towards the blue shed

  where Ephraim carefully traces

  his engineering plans

  for great structures

  that will never be built

  at least in the few

  decades of his lifetime

  remaining. He walks

  with a little hunch towards

  me to collect my rent

  check and I am holding it

  out to him both of us

  with matching apologetic smiles.

  In Oklahoma once

  I ate blueberries, I

  recall they tasted like lake.

  If dust is particles

  of our skin why

  is there more each

  time I return?

  I know tomorrow

  I will sit in that dark

  before daylight without

  a name, and feeling

  the last few drops

  of water from the shower

  still on her shoulders

  she will come and stand

  next to me where I am

  at my desk pushing

  against one word feeling

  its hinge creak like wind

  would a gate if it could feel

  anything at all.

  III

  Journey Through the Past

  Listening to Neil Young in California

  is like throwing away the old pills

  that used to cure something and turning

  your face towards the day, i.e. the ocean

  filling the window with grey boats

  floating in totally bright present aloneness.

  For several weeks on my laptop

  I had a picture of the space shuttle docking.

  Then I replaced it with the ravenous

  woolly adelgid covering a blighted eastern hemlock.

  One branch looks like a limb

  destroyed by an improvised explosive device.

  Friend whose father is dying,

  let us exchange dreams.

  I am strong enough for yours

  and you can move

  down the long boring beige literal corridor

  and replace the batteries in the thermostat,

  fingering a diamond hair clip.

  Travelers Among Mountains and Streams

  Today I have the feeling no matter

  which way I turn my head I am

  into ideas like everyone is freer than me

  painlessly bonking whatever

  is the mental equivalent of my nose.

  My actual one itches, it’s the plum

  trees shedding invisible sexual particles.

  Onto the streets I go and see the horrible

  charming Victorians of my new home

  San Francisco where I have moved for love.

  Like purple plastic wedding dresses

  they are ready to be left out imperviously

  in the rain. Let’s put down the book

  about the later phase of Le Corbusier

  when he planned the perfect harmonic

  Indian city of Chandigarh and pick up

  one about makers of an early type

  of Japanese kimono called the kosode.

  On them sometimes artists painted

  landscapes such as Kosode with Tree

  and Flowering Plants by Sakai Hōitsu.

  Like the little figures in the picture

  through the picture we journey slowly

  with our eyes closely observing mountain

  formations, a waterfall, trees, a village,

  and tiny figures of travelers just like us.

  Once the silk over someone’s body

  rippled, now the kimono hangs

  on a wall. Oh lifestyle! Oh cake!

  Between my ears is drifting now

  the strange translucent golden word

  axolotl. Through its whole life it never

  grows any older. Through its shoulders

  you can see its blood. Thousands of miles

  away THE EAST a kingdom covered

  by giant clouds. Where was I born? Among

  human faces, deep in the sun of a real

  young mother, under blowing unmagical snow.

  Poem for San Francisco

  Afternoon, almost

  too bright to stare at directly,

  also contains dark shapes. Black windows

  in the old converted warehouses

  filled now with new industry.

  Shadows cast by telephone poles. So many

  wires everywhere, how is it

  I have never truly seen

  all the infrastructure and methods

  over my head everywhere

  in this city I go? I think

  they are quite beautiful. Always

  the wires are unexpectedly framing

  parts of the sky and all

  natural and human things it contains,

  making transitory paintings the very

  subject of which is cloud motion. Truly

  I fear animals. Now I am growing

  very analytical. A kind of

  peacefulness into me carefully

  moves like a grasshopper

  into a room full of totally believable metal

  grass and trees. There is one great bridge

  at the edge of the city falling asleep. And another

  humming an orange welcoming song.

  Kingdom Come

  She asked me how long it will be

  until the giant black rose

  she has seen in her dreams

  bursts out of the ocean just beyond

  the walls of the circular city

  and drips molten fire on the heads

  of likenesses of the smiling gods

  who sent a message from outside

  our solar system crying

  and swearing to protect us

  if we built them. Quite

  a long time. Probably many

  hundreds of years. First we must

  build the circular walls,

  then the towers and the steps.

  Then we must build the satellite array

  and send it into the atmosphere.

  And we don’t have that

  technology yet. The scientists

  who can dream of building it

  have not yet even been born. So

  for now I say to her let us live

  here in this apartment and make

  sounds of love on this futon

  while outside the window the orange

  extension cable strangles

  the white and green flowering branch

  and monks cry anciently on the radio.

  Letter to a Lover

  Today I am going to pick you up at the beige airport.

  My heart feels like a field of calves in the sun.

  My heart is wired directly to the power source of mediocre songs.

  I am trying to catch a ray of sunlight in my mouth.

  I look forward to showing you my new furniture.

  I look forward to the telephone ringing, it is not you,

  you are in the kitchen trying to figure out the coffeemaker,

  you are pouring out the contents of your backpack.
r />   I wonder if you now have golden fur?

  I wonder if your arsenal of kind remarks is empty?

  I remember when I met you you were wearing a grey dress,

  that was also blue, not unlike the water plus the sky.

  They say it’s difficult to put a leash on a hummingbird.

  So let us be no longer the actuary of each other!

  Let us bow no longer our heads to the tyranny of numbers!

  Hurry off the plane, with your rhinestone covered bag

  full of magazines that check up on the downfall of the stars.

  I will be waiting for you at the bottom of the moving stairs.

  Frankenstein Love

  I think there was a movie once

  where Frankenstein fell in love with a vampire.

  A small mummy at first interfered

  but later provided the requisite necessary

  clarifications. He can only

  meet you at night. Her face

  is scarred in a permanent expression

  of doom, but her bolt glows whenever

  she sees you. The rival for the vampire’s affections

  was a vaguely feminine zombie. Frankenstein

  felt not very mysterious. Many different

  feelings cycled below whoever’s

  skin she had been given. Did they even

  belong to her? In the many pages

  of the book of love this is only one story.

  But everyone goes through it once. The main

  question is, will you be the one unable

  to control your temper, sewed together

  as you are from the past? Or the one

  who always ends up turning away in search

  of another likeness?

  White Castle

  In Wichita Kansas my friends ordered square burgers

  with mysterious holes leaking a delicious substance

  that would fuel us in all sorts of necessary beautiful ways

  for our long journey eastward versus the night.

  I was outside touching my hand to the rough

  surface of the original White Castle. I was thinking

  major feelings such as longing for purpose

  plunge down one like the knowledge one

  has been drinking water for one’s whole life

  and never actually seen a well, and minor ones

  we never name are always across the surface

 

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