New and Selected Poems

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New and Selected Poems Page 15

by Charles Simic


  And cursing the mist and the potholes.

  In the Street

  He was kneeling down to tie his shoes, which she mistook for a proposal of marriage.

  —Arise, arise, sweet man, she said with tears glistening in her eyes while people hurried past them as if stung by bees.

  —We shall spend the day riding in a balloon, she announced happily.

  —My ears will pop, he objected.

  —We’ll throw our clothes overboard as we rise higher and higher.

  —My cigar that may sputter and cause fireworks.

  —Don’t worry, my love—she hugged him—even where the clouds are darkest, I have a secret getaway.

  Filthy Landscape

  The season of lurid wildflowers

  Sprawled shamelessly over the meadows,

  Drunk with necking and kissing

  Every hot breeze that comes along.

  A small stream opens its legs

  In the half-undressed orchard

  Teeming with foulmouthed birds

  And swarms of smutty fruit flies

  In scandalous view of a hilltop

  Wrapped in pink clouds of debauchery.

  The sun peeking between them,

  Now and then like a whoremaster.

  Prison Guards Silhouetted Against the Sky

  I never gave them a thought. Years had gone by.

  Many years. I had plenty of other things

  To worry about. Today I was in the dentist’s chair

  When his new assistant walked in

  Pretending not to recognize me in the slightest

  As I opened my mouth most obediently.

  We were necking in some bushes by the riverbank,

  And I wanted her to slip off her bra.

  The sky was darkening, there was thunder

  When she finally did, so that the first large

  Raindrop wet one of her brown nipples.

  That was nicer than what she did to my mouth now,

  While I winced, while I waited for a wink,

  A burst of laughter at the memory of the two of us

  Buttoning ourselves, running drenched

  Past the state prison with its armed guards

  Silhouetted in their towers against the sky.

  Jackstraws

  My shadow and your shadow on the wall

  Caught with arms raised

  In display of exaggerated alarm,

  Now that even a whisper, even a breath

  Will upset the remaining straws

  Still standing on the table

  In the circle of yellow lamplight,

  These few roof beams and columns

  Of what could be a Mogul Emperor’s palace.

  The Prince chews his long nails,

  The Princess lowers her green eyelids.

  They both smoke too much,

  Never go to bed before daybreak.

  School for Visionaries

  The teacher sits with eyes closed.

  When you play chess alone it’s always your move.

  I’m in the last row with a firefly in the palm of my hand.

  The girl with red braids, who saw the girl with red braids?

  •

  Do you believe in something truer than truth?

  Do you prick your ears even when you know damn well no one is coming?

  Does that explain the lines on your forehead?

  Your invisible friend, what happened to her?

  •

  The rushing wind slides to a stop to listen.

  The prisoner opens the thick dictionary lying on his knees.

  The floor is cold and his feet are bare.

  A chew toy of the gods, is that him?

  Do you stare and stare at every black windowpane

  As if it were a photo of your unsmiling parents?

  Are you homesick for the house of cards?

  The sad late-night cough, is it yours?

  Ambiguity’s Wedding

  for E. D.

  Bride of Awe, all that’s left for us

  Are vestiges of a feast table,

  Levitating champagne glasses

  In the hands of the erased millions.

  Mr. So-and-So, the bridegroom

  Of absent looks, lost looks,

  The pale reporter from the awful doors

  Before our identity was leased.

  At night’s delicious close,

  A few avatars of mystery still about,

  The spider at his trade,

  The print of his vermilion foot on my hand.

  A faded woman in sallow dress

  Gravely smudged, her shadow on the wall

  Becoming visible, a wintry shadow

  Quieter than sleep.

  Soul, take thy risk.

  There where your words and thoughts

  Come to a stop,

  Encipher me thus, in marriage.

  Ancient Divinities

  They dish out the usual excuses to one another:

  Don’t forget, darling, we saw it coming.

  The new rationality inspired by geometry

  Was going to do us in eventually. Being immortal

  Was not worth the price we paid in ridicule.

  I feel like I’ve been wearing a cowbell

  Around my neck for two thousand years,

  Says one with a shoulder-length blond wig

  Raising a champagne glass to her lips

  And acknowledging me at the next table,

  While at her elbow, next to a napkin

  Bloodied by her lipstick, I saw a fly crawling

  Out of her overflowing ashtray

  Like some poor Trojan or Greek soldier

  Who’s had enough of wars and their poets.

  Obscurely Occupied

  You are the Lord of the maimed,

  The one bled and crucified

  In a cellar of some prison

  Over which the day is breaking.

  You inspect the latest refinements

  Of cruelty. You may even kneel

  Down in wonder. They know

  Their business, these grim fellows

  Whose wives and mothers rise

  For the early Mass. You, yourself,

  Must hurry back through the snow

  Before they find your rightful

  Place on the cross vacated,

  The few candles burning higher

  In your terrifying absence

  Under the darkly magnified dome.

  Head of a Doll

  Whose demon are you,

  Whose god? I asked

  Of the painted mouth

  Half buried in the sand.

  A brooding gull

  Made a brief assessment,

  And tiptoed away

  Nodding to himself.

  At dusk a firefly or two

  Dowsed its eye pits.

  And later, toward midnight,

  I even heard mice.

  On the Meadow

  With the wind gusting so wildly,

  So unpredictably,

  I’m willing to bet one or two ants

  May have tumbled on their backs

  As we sit here on the porch.

  Their feet are pedaling

  Imaginary bicycles.

  It’s a battle of wits against

  Various physical laws,

  Plus Fate, plus—

  So-what-else-is-new?

  Wondering if anyone’s coming to their aid

  Bringing cake crumbs,

  Miniature editions of the Bible,

  A lost thread or two

  Cleverly tied end to end.

  Empty Rocking Chair

  Talking to yourself on the front porch

  As the night blew in

  Cold and starless.

  Everybody’s in harm’s way,

  I heard you say,

  While a caterpillar squirmed

  And oozed a pool of black liquid

  At your feet.

  You
turned that notion

  Over and over

  Until your false teeth

  Clamped shut.

  Three Photographs

  I could’ve been that kid

  In the old high school photograph

  I found in a junk shop,

  His guileless face circled in black.

  In another, there was a view of Brooklyn Bridge

  And a tenement roof with pigeons flying

  And boys with long poles

  Reaching after them into the stormy sky.

  In the third, I saw an old man kneeling

  With a mouth full of pins

  Before a tall, headless woman in white.

  I had no money and it was closing time.

  I was feeling my way uncertainly

  Toward the exit in the evening darkness.

  The Toy

  The brightly painted horse

  Had a boy’s face,

  And four small wheels

  Under his feet,

  Plus a long string

  To pull him this way and that

  Across the floor,

  Should you care to.

  A string in waiting

  That slipped away

  With many wiles

  From each and every try.

  •

  Knock and they’ll answer,

  My mother told me,

  So I climbed the four flights

  And went in unannounced.

  And found the small toy horse

  For the taking.

  In the ensuing emptiness

  And the fading daylight

  That still gives me a shudder

  As if I held in my hand

  The key to mysteries.

  •

  Where is the Lost and Found

  And the quiet entry,

  The undeveloped film

  Of the few clear moments

  Of our blurred lives?

  Where’s the drop of blood

  And the tiny nail

  That pricked my finger

  As I bent down to touch the toy,

  And caught its eye?

  •

  Wintry light,

  My memories are

  Steep stairwells

  In dusty buildings

  On dead-end streets,

  Where I talk to the walls

  And closed doors

  As if they understood me.

  The wooden toy sitting pretty.

  No quieter than that.

  Like the sound of eyebrows

  Raised by a villain

  In a silent movie.

  Psst, someone said behind my back.

  Talking to the Ceiling

  1

  The moths rustle the pages of evening papers.

  A beautiful sleepwalker terrorizes a small town in Kansas.

  I was snooping on myself, pointing a long finger.

  In my youth, boys used to light farts in the dark.

  Whose angel wings are that? the cop asked me.

  If only I had the instruments for a one-man band

  I’d keep the Grim Reaper laughing all the way home.

  Oh to press a chimney to my heart on a night like this!

  2

  Madame Zaza, come to think of it, stays open late.

  Go ahead and cut the cards with your eyes closed.

  Hangman’s convention: ropemaker’s workshop.

  A hundred horror films were playing in my head.

  Mister, would these shoes look good in my coffin? I asked.

  Next time, I’ll go beddie-bye on a ghost ship.

  Next time, I’ll befriend a few thimbleweeds

  And roll across the Nevada desert as the sun sets.

  3

  Small-beer metaphysician, king of birdshit,

  Coming down from the trees was our first mistake.

  The insomniac’s brain is a choo-choo train

  Dodging sleep like a master criminal was my only talent.

  As for Virginia and her new red bikini,

  I hear she’s been made the official match vendor

  Of my dark night of the soul.

  Unknown namesake in a roach hotel, go to sleep.

  4

  And whose exactly are these whispers in my ear?

  The colonel on TV praised the use of torture.

  He had a pair of eyes I once saw on a dragon riding

  The merry-go-round in Texas with a bunch of kids!

  The air is sultry, ice melts in a glass alongside a dead fly!

  Is that Jesus turning up scared at my bedroom door

  Asking to sleep in my old dog’s bed?

  Selling sticks of gum door-to-door will be all our fate.

  5

  When I toss and turn and bump my head against the wall

  I’m the first to profusely apologize.

  That’s the way I’ve been brought up.

  On the gallows, with a noose around my neck,

  I’ll pass out cookies my mother made,

  Lift the lid of my coffin to tip the gravediggers,

  All because some girl thumbed her nose at me once.

  O memory, making me get out to push the hearse!

  6

  There must be millions of zeros crowding for warmth

  Inside my head and making it heavy.

  St. John of the Cross and Blaise Pascal coming

  With a pair of scales to check for themselves.

  Every day, gents, I’m discovering serious new obstacles

  To my guaranteed pursuit of happiness.

  Naked truth you ought to see the boobs on her!

  Here, throw my hat into the lion’s cage, I said.

  7

  What could be causing all this, Doctor?

  The old blues, the kind you never lose.

  I’m not just any flea on your ass,

  I told God apropos of nothing earlier this evening.

  Your future is your past, the rain sang softly

  Like a scratchy record left to skip on a turntable.

  Clock on the wall, have you at least once

  Taken a sip of the wine eternity drinks?

  Mystic Life

  for Charles Wright

  It’s like fishing in the dark.

  Our thoughts are the hooks,

  Our hearts the raw bait.

  We cast the line past all believing

  Into the night sky

  Until it’s lost to sight.

  The line’s long unraveling

  Rising in our throats like a sigh.

  •

  One little thought

  Leaping into the unthinkable,

  Waving an imaginary saber,

  Or perhaps a white flag?

  The fly and the spider on the ceiling

  Looking on in disbelief.

  •

  It takes a tiny nibble

  From time to time

  And sends a shiver

  Down our spines.

  Like hell it does!

  •

 

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