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Selected Poems

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by Thomas Lux




  THOMAS LUX

  SELECTED POEMS

  After starting out as a neo-surrealist American poet in the 1970s, Thomas Lux ‘drifted away from surrealism and the arbitrariness of all that. I got more interested in subjects, identifiable subjects other than my own angst or ennui. The later Lux writes more directly in response to more familiar but no less strange human experience, creating a body of work that is at once simple and complex, wildly imaginative and totally relevant. Like Billy Collins, he prefers his poetry to be called not ‘accessible’ but ‘hospitable’ to readers. He uses humour or satire ‘to help combat the darkness…to make the reader laugh – and then steal that laugh, right out of the throat. Because I think life is like that, tragedy right alongside humour.’

  Each of Lux’s multi-faceted poems is self-contained, whether it is musing or ranting, lamenting or lambasting, first person personal or first person universal. ‘Usually, the speaker of my poems is a little agitated,’ says Lux, ‘a little smart-ass, a little angry, satirical, despairing. Or, sometimes he’s goofy, somewhat elegiac, full of praise and gratitude.’

  ‘The latest collection of dazzlers from one of the few poets writing today who fills me with envy. Lux is such an antidote to the post-confessional poetry that’s all about your broken heart… He’s interested in history, geology, oceanography. His poems are based on the world, though I’m sure he’s writing about himself’ – Billy Collins.

  ‘Simultaneously funny, sad, ironic, compassionate, mocking and spiritual. There is such emotional and tonal range…yet a definite common-sense, serio-comic down-to-earthiness lurks throughout the collection as if implying that we humans should know better, be above all the nonsense to which we seem endlessly addicted’ – Sally Molini, Cerise Press.

  COVER IMAGE

  Radioactive Cats © 1980 Sandy Skoglund

  THOMAS LUX

  SELECTED

  POEMS

  1982-2012

  …but in what is

  ours, here, let

  justice be primary

  when we sing,

  my dear.

  HAYDEN CARRUTH

  to the most remote cell in the big toe.

  SHERWIN B. NULAND

  The general was busy with the ant farm

  in his head.

  CHARLES SIMIC

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Epigraph

  from HALF PROMISED LAND (1986)

  The Milkman and His Son

  The Thirst of Turtles

  At the Far End of a Long Wharf

  Tarantulas on the Lifebuoy

  The Night So Bright a Squirrel Reads

  It Must Be the Monk in Me

  The Dark Comes on in Blocks, in Cubes

  Wife Hits Moose

  The Swimming Pool

  from THE DROWNED RIVER (1990)

  Backyard Swingset

  Old Man Shoveling Snow

  Cellar Stairs

  So You Put the Dog to Sleep

  Traveling Exhibit of Torture Instruments

  Walt Whitman’s Brain Dropped on Laboratory Floor

  Bodo

  Floating Baby Paintings

  The Garden

  Upon Seeing an Ultrasound Photo of an Unborn Child

  A Little Tooth

  Great Advances in Vanity

  from SPLIT HORIZON (1994)

  The People of the Other Village

  An Horatian Notion

  The Neighborhood of Make-Believe

  Amiel’s Leg

  Frankly, I Don’t Care

  Endive

  The Driver Ant

  Kalashnikov

  Money

  The Big Picture

  Grim Town in a Steep Valley

  River Blindness (Onchocerciasis)

  History Books

  Shaving the Graveyard

  Pecked to Death by Swans

  Autobiographical

  Emily’s Mom

  ‘Mr John Keats Five Feet Tall’ Sails Away

  ‘I Love You Sweatheart’

  from NEW AND SELECTED POEMS (1997)

  Refrigerator, 1957

  Criss Cross Apple Sauce

  The Voice You Hear When You Read Silently

  This Space Available

  Commercial Leech Farming Today

  A Small Tin Parrot Pin

  from THE STREET OF CLOCKS (2001)

  Cucumber Fields Crossed by High-Tension Wires

  The Man into Whose Yard You Should Not Hit Your Ball

  Plague Victims Catapulted over Walls into Besieged City

  Bonehead

  In the Bedroom Above the Embalming Room

  Thomas the Broken-Mouthed

  The Handsome Swamp

  Grain Burning Far Away

  The Doldrum Fracture Zone

  The Poison Shirt

  A Bird, Whose Wingtips Were on Fire,

  Slimehead (Hoplostethus atlanticus)

  Salve

  Regarding (Most) Songs

  A Library of Skulls

  The Fish-Strewn Fields

  Unlike, for Example, the Sound of a Riptooth Saw

  Cordon Sanitaire

  The Language Animal

  Pencil Box Shaped Like a Gun

  The Corner of Paris and Porter

  The Bandage Factory

  from THE CRADLE PLACE (2004)

  Say You’re Breathing

  Dry Bite

  Debate Regarding the Permissibility of Eating Mermaids

  Rather

  The American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association

  To Help the Monkey Cross the River,

  The Devil’s Beef Tub

  Boatloads of Mummies

  The Magma Chamber

  Guide for the Perpetually Perplexed

  The Year the Locust Hath Eaten

  Burned Forests and Horses’ Bones

  Myope

  To Plow and Plant the Seashore

  Goofer-Dust

  The Ice Worm’s Life

  Hospitality and Revenge

  Breakbone Fever

  Monkey Butter

  Can’t Sleep the Clowns Will Eat Me

  Render, Render

  from GOD PARTICLES (2008)

  Behind the Horseman Sits Black Care,

  The Hungry Gap-Time,

  Hitler’s Slippers

  Sleep’s Ambulance

  Lump of Sugar on an Anthill

  Stink Eye:

  The Lead Hour

  The First Song

  The General Law of Oblivion,

  Midmorning,

  The Republic of Anesthesia

  Man Pedaling Next to His Bicycle

  Her Hat, That Party on Her Head

  God Particles

  Their Feet Shall Slide in Due Time

  Invective

  Jesus’ Baby Teeth

  How Difficult

  Apology to My Neighbors for Beheading Their Duck

  The Joy-Bringer

  The Happy Majority

  Cliffs Shining with Rain

  The Shooting Zoo

  Mole Emerging from Trench Wall, Verdun, 1916

  The Grand Climacteric

  Sex After Funerals

  Autobiographophobia

  Blue Vistas Glued

  Sugar Spoon

  A Clearing, a Meadow, in Deep Forest

  from CHILD MADE OF SAND (2012)

  The Moths Who Come in the Night to Drink Our Tears

  You and Your Ilk

  Nietzsche Throws His Arms Around the Neck of a Dray Horse

  A Frozen Ball of Rattlesnakes

  The Queen of Truth

  A Delivery of Dung

  Elegy

  Every Time Someone Masturbates God Kills a Kitten

  West Shining Tree

&nbs
p; Rue de la Vieille Lanterne

  Like Tiny Baby Jesus, in Velour Pants, Sliding Down Your Throat (A Belgian Euphemism)

  Not the Same Kind of Mud as in ‘Two Tramps in Mud Time’

  Why

  The Riverine Farmers

  Bricks Sinking in Deep Water

  Dead Horse

  Outline for My Memoir

  INDEX

  About the Author

  Copyright

  FROM

  Half Promised Land

  (1986)

  The Milkman and His Son

  (for my father)

  For a year he’d collect

  the milk bottles – those cracked, chipped,

  or with the label’s blue

  scene of a farm

  fading. In winter

  they’d load the boxes on a sled

  and drag them to the dump

  which was lovely then: a white sheet

  drawn up, like a joke, over

  the face of a sleeper.

  As they lob the bottles in

  the son begs a trick

  and the milkman obliges: tossing

  one bottle in a high arc,

  he shatters it in midair

  with another. One thousand astonished

  splints of glass

  falling.… Again

  and again, and damned

  if that milkman,

  that easy slinger

  on the dump’s edge (as the drifted

  junk tips its hats

  of snow), damned if he didn’t

  hit almost half! Not bad.

  Along with gentleness,

  and the sane bewilderment

  of understanding nothing cruel,

  it was a thing he did best.

  The Thirst of Turtles

  How parched, how marrow-dust dry

  they must get on their long surface and undersea

  journeys – huge stuffed husks,

  imperturbable swimmers grazing

  jellyfish abutting the bruised

  waters’ pasture. How thirsty

  a sixty-day swim, how graceful

  the winching back to one unforgotten

  shore. Plub, plub, sleepless

  the hull’s inner workings, their tails

  motorless rudderings; deep,

  deep their thirst and need. One hundred,

  one hundred and twenty: how long they live

  in their thirst, propelling

  the great bloody steaks of their bodies,

  dreaming, anticipating alert,

  single-purposed oblivions: sweet

  sweet turtle-sex – which excites

  the lonely watches of sailors – sometimes days

  joined in wave-riding rapture on the surface

  of the depths. And still more thirsty

  afterward, how alone later (currents

  having taken) – righted, relentless,

  back on course, collision, with centuries,

  with a shore: solitary, speechless,

  utterly buoyant, as unethereal

  as cabbage. How thirsty these

  both wise and clumsy, like us, feeding

  in ever-widening or diminishing circles,

  outward and inward, dropping

  great oily tears, killing themselves

  to beat a big hole in dirt,

  burying something, then retreating

  heavily on their own tracks, like rails,

  reaching forward to the sea.

  At the Far End of a Long Wharf

  At the far end of a long wharf

  a deaf child, while fishing, hauls in

  a large eel and – not

  because it is ugly – she bashes its brains

  out of eeldom on the hot

  planks – whamp, whamp, whamp, a sound

  she does not hear. It’s the distance

  and the heat that abstracts

  the image for me. She also does not hear,

  nor do I, the splash the eel makes

  when she tosses it in her bucket,

  nor do we hear the new bait

  pierced by the clean hook, nor

  its lowering into the water again.

  Nobody could. I watch her

  all afternoon until, catching nothing

  else, she walks the wharf toward

  me, her cousin, thinking

  with a thousand fingers. Pointing

  at our boat she tells me

  to drag it to the water. She wants me to row

  her out to the deep lanes of fish.

  Poetry is a menial task.

  Tarantulas on the Lifebuoy

  For some semitropical reason

  when the rains fall

  relentlessly they fall

  into swimming pools, these otherwise

  bright and scary

  arachnids. They can swim

  a little, but not for long

  and they can’t climb the ladder out.

  They usually drown – but

  if you want their favor,

  if you believe there is justice,

  a reward for not loving

  the death of ugly

  and even dangerous (the eel, hog snake,

  rats) creatures, if

  you believe these things, then

  you would leave a lifebuoy

  or two in your swimming pool at night.

  And in the morning

  you would haul ashore

  the huddled, hairy survivors

  and escort them

  back to the bush, and know,

  be assured that at least these saved,

  as individuals, would not turn up

  again someday

  in your hat, drawer,

  or the tangled underworld

  of your socks, and that even –

  when your belief in justice

  merges with your belief in dreams –

  they may tell the others

  in a sign language

  four times as subtle

  and complicated as man’s

  that you are good,

  that you love them,

  that you would save them again.

  The Night So Bright a Squirrel Reads

  The night so bright a squirrel reads

  a novel on his branch

  without clicking on his lamp.

  You know you’re in a forest – the stars,

  the moon blaring

  off the white birch.… You could walk

  out with your wife

  into the forest, toward the fields beyond,

  you could walk apart from her,

  and still see her. It’s so bright

  you need not talk nor fear

  that particular sticky abrasion you get

  by walking into pine trees. You find

  a lucidity in this darkness.

  Your wife is here – three or four

  trees away – you recognise her profile,

  and you do not think she is anyone else,

  here with you, a hundred

  or so yards now from a field where,

  in an hour or so, you might see

  dawn’s first deer browsing, or an owl,

  soaring home after the shift he loves,

  a fat sack of field mice under his wing.

  It Must Be the Monk in Me

  It must be the monk in me,

  or the teenage girl. That’s why I’m always off

  somewhere in my mind with something

  stupid (like a monk) or spiritual

  (like a teenage girl). Sometimes, there’s vision,

  by reason of faith, in glimpses, or else,

  and more often, a lovely blank, a hunger

  like Moses’ hunger when with his fingernails

  he scraped the boulders of their meager lichen

  and then fiercely sucking them.… It’s a way

  of living on the earth – to be away

  from it part of the time. They say


  it begins in childhood: your dog

  gets runned over, your father

  puts a knife to your mother’s throat.…

  But those things only make you crazy

  and don’t account for scanning,

  or actually mapping, a galaxy inside. I believe

  it happens before birth, and has to do,

  naturally, with Mom. Not with what she eats,

  or does, or even thinks – but with what she doesn’t

  think, or want to: the knot of you growing larger

  and, therefore, growing away.

  The Dark Comes on in Blocks, in Cubes

  The dark comes on in blocks, in cubes,

  in cubics of black measured

  perfectly, perfectly

  filled. It’s subtle and it’s not,

  depending on your point of view.

  You can measure it best in a forest,

  or in a grassy lowland, or in any place

  where your lamp is the only lamp and you can turn it off.

  To describe it the usual adjectives

  of the gray/black genre will not do. It’s not light,

  nor is it the absence of light, but

  oh, it’s sweet, sweet like ink

  dropped in sugar, necessary and invisible

  like drafts of oxygen. Absolutely,

  in squares, in its containers of space,

  the darkness arrives – as daily

  as bread, as sad as a haymow

  going over and over a stubble field,

  as routine as guards

  climbing to gun towers

  along penitentiary walls, clicking

  on their searchlights

  against it.

  Wife Hits Moose

  Sometime around dusk moose lifts

  his heavy, primordial jaw, dripping, from pondwater

  and, without psychic struggle,

  decides the day, for him, is done: time

  to go somewhere else. Meanwhile, wife

  drives one of those roads that cut straight north,

 

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