Blessed as We Were

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by Blessed as We Were (retail) (epub)


  and dry lyrics three times at least in the Cantos,

  but tell me where that snow is now and tell me—

  as in where is Tangerine and where is Flora—

  how old Ruth is and where does she live and does she

  still dance the Locomotive and does she bundle.

  Hydrangea

  I was pleased by blue hydrangea because at

  last I had a flower from a gorgeous

  family I could hate just as when certain

  say Jewish poets, whom I’m supposed to revere

  because they’re Jewish and not to love them would be

  an act of betrayal to all eleven prophets;

  dozens of kings and clothing manufacturers;

  dentists, chess players, swimmers, stockbrokers, English teachers;

  psychiatrists, painters, physicists, salesmen, violinists;

  social workers, merchants, lawyers, cutters, trimmers;

  critics; reveal themselves as snobs and bigots

  and analytical and anti-passionate which could be

  for all I know another side of Judaism

  since Judaism has three sides as in the

  Mercy, as in the Exceptions, as in the Melancholies,

  which takes me back to the blue hydrangea I see

  between an opening in the fence, it looks like

  the blue was painted on, I hate it, I also

  hate the red carnation, I love the cream

  and when it’s cone-shaped, I even like the pink,

  may God forgive me, Lord of the lost and destitute.

  Spider

  How you like these threads, said white spider

  traveling back and forth between two rooms in

  Lambertville, New Jersey, his web a work of

  art, truly excessive, spit from his soul,

  and the first case of any spit, it came from

  my own soul since I am a mimic neurotic.

  But how you like my steel? You like my window?

  You like my big eye waiting? How you like my

  chandelier? How you like fate? You like

  my silk? Do cover your legs, do tighten

  the arms a little, do tighten around the neck.

  And how you like my kiss? How about

  my rasping bloody tongue? Weren’t those herbs

  and such like any household, giant unkempt

  Russian sage, the better to smell you, my dear,

  and spicy rosemary beside the orange and

  purple echinacea, all that a little

  to placate—though I know you don’t believe it,

  for nature is nature—your perverted Isaiah

  from running around like crazy in the meat markets.

  Iris

  The lock was on the right although I had to

  open it from the left so I could use

  my other hand to turn the knob and there were

  four windows facing the street and for a

  study I put my feet on the painted board

  that covered the radiator and that’s where I

  slept for an hour since it was too exhausting

  to cross the room, and when I got up I walked

  downstairs so I could sit in the square on one

  of the cold benches behind the limp flags

  for it was two in the morning and the prostitutes

  were making faces at the slow-moving cop cars

  and smoking cigarettes the secondhand smoke of

  which I moved two benches away to escape

  though I didn’t say a word nor did they ask me

  for anything more than a cigarette, and one of them

  gave me a flower, it was a faded blue iris,

  and it was cold that night, I put it inside

  my shirt so I could hurry home to adore it.

  Grand Hotel

  The time I took Anne Marie to what had been

  a Nazi brothel in Prague some tourists were standing

  under the chandelier and some leftover communist

  stood there explaining the thickness of glass and what

  the history was of glassmaking in the Czech

  Republic, and we walked through them to get

  seats so we could suck in the Art Nouveau

  over our coffee and undercooked pancakes

  before we got into the ancient elevator

  and went back to our room, en suite, as it were,

  and dirty, dark, and seedy at that, and looked

  in the bottom of the wardrobe, behind the blankets,

  to see what they did with love—the pricks—and could

  we sleep on that mattress, and how thick was the window glass,

  and this time walked down the great marble staircase

  holding hands the whole way down, nor did I

  bark even once or say fuck you to the Germans.

  Sam and Morris

  I had two uncles who were proletarians

  and one of them was a housepainter and one of them

  was a carpenter—they beat their wives

  regularly and they had nineteen children

  between them. Once a month or so my father

  would go to one of their houses to intervene

  and once I remember a police car with a dog.

  When I was home on a short furlough I went

  with my mother and father to a Jewish restaurant

  and there, sitting in the back, were my two uncles,

  in their seventies by then, and eating together,

  chicken, chopped liver, God knows what, but pickles

  and coleslaw, there always were pickles and coleslaw

  and they were almost conspiring, it seemed to me

  then, so young I was, and I was reading my

  Ezra Pound already and I was ashamed of

  what he said about Jews. Of usury those

  two unshaven yidden, one of them red-eyed

  already from whiskey, they knew nothing, they never

  heard of Rothschild. Their hands were huge and stiff,

  they hardly could eat their kreplach, Pound, you bastard!

  Burning

  Where is the mind that asked whether the drugstore

  that stood at the crest of a hill and had a beacon

  as its emblem, and I ate fruit salad sundaes there

  and grilled cheese sandwiches, was or wasn’t a tower,

  in the sense that there were porches, windows and staircases,

  in the sense that there were mirrors and shining lamps

  and one or two banners, and what was a tower doing there

  with me walking to the library and post office,

  and only a Chinese restaurant next door;

  and where is the mind that abided the large plaza

  outside the drugstore and made its own canopies

  and beautiful flying objects, and where did the tower

  come from and the dream of emptiness

  that has abided for more than fifty years,

  and the heart which burned, such was burning, and such

  was the tower, it also burned, only in that case

  it wasn’t attached to anything, it burned

  of its own volition and mountains in Pennsylvania

  still burn, alas, they have an abode, and empty

  bottles explode and paper flutes burn and birdsong.

  Studebaker

  Try a small black radio from any year

  and listen to the voices you get, they were

  much faster then, they raced ahead of us

  and rushed the music; love was in a rocking chair,

  the floor was crooked, the moon was already in

  the sky, though it was daylight still; or love

  was in a Studebaker, we were driving east

  and we had no idea how long the corporation

  would last, or if there was a corporation, how could we?

  And did it have its headquarters in Delaware

  for
taxes and connections, though the doors

  were heavy and solid, what was the year? ’55?

  The Lark appeared in 1958 or

  ’59—it was their last attempt,

  though I remember the Wagoneer, it was 19-

  66 and something called the Cruiser, we had

  Nat King Cole on the radio though static

  was bad in Pennsylvania, given the mountains,

  and there was a lever you pushed to make a bed—

  I hope I’m getting it right—the leaves on the windshield

  were large and wet, the song was “Unforgettable,”

  the tree was either a swamp maple or a sycamore.

  Cost

  From the beginning it was the money, how I

  could live on seven dollars a week anywhere

  outside the U.S. or go to France

  on the G.I. Bill, and learn to love cauliflower.

  Although the Caribbean was even cheaper

  and Mexico cheaper than that. You wouldn’t believe

  what life was like after the war, that was

  the time, if ever, to live on nothing. I was

  enflamed by an article in Look magazine,

  news went sideways then, but I had already

  spent a year in New York City. I was

  more or less getting ready, and it was odd

  that money would so engross me; I got started

  early and it went on for years; I kept

  notebooks then as I do now; I love

  looking at the stacks of figures, how much

  it cost to read Catullus in Latin, what it

  cost to understand Villon, including

  the price of books and bicycles, not to mention

  the price of a lost epic—by week or by month—

  and what my ignorance cost and what my stubbornness.

  Still Burning

  Me trying to understand say whence

  say whither, say what, say me with a pencil walking,

  say reading the dictionary, say learning medieval

  Latin, reading Spengler, reading Whitehead,

  William James I loved him, swimming breaststroke

  and thinking for an hour, how did I get here?

  Or thinking in line, say the 69 streetcar

  or 68 or 67 Swissvale,

  that would take me elsewhere, me with a textbook

  reading the pre-Socratics, so badly written,

  whoever the author was, me on the floor of

  the lighted stacks and sitting cross-legged,

  walking afterwards through the park or sometimes

  running across the bridges and up the hills,

  sitting down in our tiny dining room,

  burning in a certain way, still burning.

  Roses

  There was a rose called Guy de Maupassant,

  a carmine pink that smelled like a Granny Smith

  and there was another from the seventeenth century

  that wept too much and wilted when you looked;

  and one that caused tuberculosis, doctors

  dug them up, they wore white masks and posted

  warnings in the windows. One wet day

  it started to hail and pellets the size of snowballs

  fell on the roses. It’s hard for me to look at

  a Duchess of Windsor, it was worn by Franco

  and Mussolini, it stabbed Jews; yesterday I bought

  six roses from a Haitian on Lower Broadway;

  he wrapped them in blue tissue paper, it was

  starting to snow and both of us had on the wrong shoes,

  though it was wind, he said, not snow that ruined

  roses and all you had to do was hold them

  against your chest. He had a ring on his pinky

  the size of a grape and half his teeth were gone.

  So I loved him and spoke to him in false Creole

  for which he hugged me and enveloped me

  in his camel hair coat with most of the buttons missing,

  and we were brothers for life, we swore it in French.

  Hearts

  The larger our hearts were, the more

  blurred our love was, the softer

  our arrows became, the vaguer

  our initials, the deeper

  the woods were and more abandoned

  the more distant we were and more

  absurdly hooked by those arrows

  and linked by those bulging valves

  whose soft contours were widened

  with time and roughened at the edges

  whatever you were, whatever

  the life was that kept us connected,

  buried in a birch too close

  for comfort to a black locust

  whose one side was destroyed

  more than half a century

  after we stopped downstream

  to look at the stone farmhouse,

  a fence holding up a dead

  rosebush, another birch

  starting to sprout, some clattering

  and croaking in both directions.

  Slash of Red

  It was another one of his petite visions

  and he had one every day now—at Optiques,

  at Gold and Silver—and he ended up,

  for it was hard work, sitting against a wall;

  and when he looked at the yard he knew the dimensions

  were ancient, holy he called them, and made comparisons

  to African and Turkish rectangles,

  only his yard was bare, there were two trees,

  and a brick walk going from the gate to the steps.

  He said it was Zen-like, only he meant he resisted

  the fountaineers and their computer drawings;

  it was a straight line, there wasn’t a curve

  in the middle, there wasn’t a jog at the end,

  considering that he never used a string,

  and he was proud that he had only a trowel

  and a little sand to place the bricks. He counted

  320, some broken, some not,

  and thought about it as a slash of red

  against a background of green. This is how

  he entered the twenty-first century. More charitable now.

  Box of Cigars

  I tried either one or two but they were stale

  and broke like sticks or crumbled when I rolled them

  and lighting a match was useless nor could I

  put them back in the refrigerator—

  it was too late for that—even licking them

  filled my mouth with ground-up outer leaf,

  product of Lancaster or eastern Virginia,

  so schooled I am with cigars, it comes in the blood,

  and I threw handfuls of them into the street

  from three floors up and, to my horror, sitting

  on my stoop were four or five street people

  who ran to catch them as if they were suddenly rich,

  and I apologize for that, no one should

  be degraded that way, my hands were crazy,

  and I ran down to explain but they were smoking

  already nor did I have anything to give them

  since we were living on beans ourselves, I sat

  and smoked too, and once in a while we looked

  up at the open window, and one of us spit

  into his empty can. We were visionaries.

  Justice

  Only, to hear him scream, you had to know

  that he was in the body of the worm

  and even the robin could hear the scream, so close

  she was to the shaking ground, and though the struggle

  was over in less than a minute, the sun turned red,

  as you could see between the birches, but that

  was just a decoration, a brief statement

  as on a gravestone, Here lies such and such,

  and at the bottom, below a lily, the worm

  will
lie down with the robin, or it was

  two carved roses intertwined, or maybe

  the sun was more pink, more from shame, it only

  lasted a few seconds considering the

  size of things, and more and more the hopping

  and screaming, whatever he was, however he was

  dismembered, and as for justice, it was redder

  still, you would say carmine, you would say ruby,

  my clothes were red, my neck and face were scarlet.

  American Heaven

  A saltwater pond in the Hamptons near David

  Ignatow’s house, the water up to my chest,

  an American Heaven, a dog on the shore, this time

  his mouth closed, his body alert, his ears

  up, a dog belongs in heaven, at least our

  kind. An egret skidding to a stop, I’m sure

  water snakes and turtles, grasses and weeds,

  and close to the water sycamores and locusts,

  and pitch pine on the hill and sand in the distance,

  and girls could suckle their babies standing in water,

  so that was our place of origin, that was

  the theory in 1982—David

  had his own larder, Rose had hers, he brought

  tuna fish into her kitchen, it was a triptych,

  the centerpiece was the pond, the left panel

  was his, his study, and he was stepping naked

  across the frame into the pond holding an

  open can and hers was the right, her arms had

  entered the pond, holding a bowl, it was her

  studio, we ate on a dry stone

  and talked about James Wright and Stanley Kunitz,

  and there was a star of the fourth magnitude

  surrounded by planets, shining on all of us.

  from Everything Is Burning

  La Pergola

  Finally daisies and tomatoes, I have settled for

  that and bushes more important than fruit and

  flowers and one gray squirrel running back and forth on

  the fence and leaping onto the humbled sunflower,

  how deep it bows, the tomatoes are only green

  and as we speak I am out there bending over,

  making a bouquet of daisies, you can

  count them, I have five fedoras, there in

 

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