Earlier Poems

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Earlier Poems Page 6

by Franz Wright


  of what might have been

  aged them

  Their million mute

  unnoticed acts of insubordination

  and inconsequential

  cruelty changed them—

  Yellow window

  in the blue dawn

  lost is lost

  and gone is gone but

  be there

  if I wake again, don't abandon me

  defend me.

  Clearlake Oaks (I)

  Konocti's summit

  sunlit

  on the other shore …

  To sleep in the mountains

  (when have I

  ever slept) blissfully

  sown

  through an infinite imageless brightness—

  inspected and forgotten by a grass-green dragonfly.

  Clearlake Oaks (II)

  The hawk rises

  into the sun;

  the lizard goes testing the dust

  with its tongue—

  stationary

  hour, above

  the windless

  blond and shadow of the hill.

  And I am

  here to say this,

  my mysterious

  privilege and joy.

  Mercy

  I embarrass you, don't I— whining for change and making you quicken your pace; or worse staring as you pass by,

  without the tact to disappear and die.

  The Drunk

  I don't understand any more

  than you do. I only know

  he stays here

  like some huge wounded animal—

  open the door and he will gaze at you and

  linger Close the door and he will break it down

  The Angel (I)

  {in memory of Marguerite Young}

  Decay of a tone, decay of the sun

  Green eyes unseen among the leaves

  The reader's lips

  the dreamer's lids

  Moon dissolving under the tongue

  Messenger from a word a noun with an imaginary corresponding entity in space

  The human face about to come

  Midnight's world-altering name

  And someone gives birth to a child

  And laboring someone gives death to himself

  The objects in the room lit up with pain

  The Angel (II)

  No one loves them because they are ugly

  They are ugly because no one loves them …

  One of the racists of beauty

  I feel three green voices

  gazing at me—

  My very existence inexpiable—

  the gardener at the tomb.

  The Angel (III)

  —the reality of the imagination —KEATS

  In 4 o'clock in the morning insomnia's eeriest men's room—dropped in on while driving alone around town—after catching a glimpse of my face in the minutely blood-spattered mirror, suddenly into my mind, God knows from where, comes the vivid thought of transformations the face undergoes when it is crying: its ugliness. How ugly it is. When it ought to become beautiful to whoever looks on— not just any stranger's, but even the most beloved face grows ugly! How can this be? Aren't we most human when crying; and if we are most human, then aren't we approaching (we can only approach) a condition beyond what is human? I think the angels must look something like this, like somebody weeping—only there this expression is seen as one of great beauty and a sign of unsurpassable happiness. And yet can one speak of the angel at all?

  The angel is a word. This

  sound of human breath exists:

  thus to the mind rendering visible

  a being. And whether this being

  occupies a place in space

  is irrelevant, of no concern

  to the physical being crying alone

  and the unsayable solitude

  of a grief for which I would like to envision

  an unseen companion without

  whom—let him be a word,

  a sob, a thing imagined—

  we are the ones who do not really exist.

  Theory

  What do I care about walking erect,

  the fingers freed

  to clutch large sticks, the hand

  to hide behind the back—

  bared teeth

  slowly learning to form

  an expression of welcome and pleasure …

  Man was born when an animal wept.

  The Door

  Going to enter the aged horizontal cellar door

  (the threshing leaves, the greenish light of the approaching storm)

  you suddenly notice you're opening the cover of an enormous book.

  One that's twice as big as you are—

  but you know all about that:

  the groping descent alone in total darkness,

  toward—what ?

  You know what you're looking for, and you forget; and maybe you have no idea

  yet. But you know something is down there, and a light you need to find,

  before you can even begin to search.

  Thoughts of a Solitary Farmhouse

  And not to feel bad about dying. Not to take it so personally—

  it is only

  the force we exert all our lives

  to exclude death from our thoughts which confronts us, when it does arrive,

  as the horror of being excluded— … something like that, the Canadian wind

  coming in off Lake Erie

  rattling the windows, horizontal snow

  appearing out of nowhere

  across the black highway and fields like billions of white bees.

  Before the Storm

  The poem seeks not to depict a place but to become one—

  synonymous

  summer and loneliness …

  Mute child-ghost

  of yourself

  at the screen door

  Tidepool: Elk, California

  Skirting such thick undulating underwater hair, the unseen

  crevice-haunting eel, the handlike crab

  and moon-dilated anemones, I remember

  hunting the tremendous boulders' undersides—, how then

  armed with these long knives we pried

  the abalone's unrelenting

  nursing from its stone.

  1969

  Untitled

  I have to sleep to think sometimes—

  waking into sleep

  where you find a world reversed

  where muteness is speech, blindness

  sight, deafness music

  that haunts you alone, and that place

  exists where the poem is not

  written; it is the wrong

  word; where the need to write

  is not.

  And the tedious prose of the world vanishes

  from its ruined page leaving nothing

  but the effortlessness of a window

  looking out on precisely what is, i.e.

  the unsayable mystery

  pronouncing itself;

  text one has long sought to translate,

  even if poorly, only to read it—

  here for some moments

  weirdly improved on.

  Without wearing out one's knees

  or gnashing of teeth

  or pulling out of hair

  or disappointment, or terror

  or life darkened, permanently;

  but with a return

  to the original

  gratitude:

  as once at fifteen

  for perhaps half an hour—

  I remember and await

  Elegy: Breece D'J Pancake

  We can always be found

  seated at a bar

  the glass before us

  empty, with our halos

  of drunk flies—

  or standing

  in the dark across the street

  from the Sacramento

  Coroner's. (An
d my friend

  we're all in there

  floating along

  the ceiling, tethered

  to our laughing gas canisters.) We are

  old people shopping,

  next winter's ghosts,

  the prostitute

  in her mortician's makeup

  strolling York Avenue at 3 a.m.,

  the fellow in Atlantic City

  furtively pawning a doll.

  Quick suture,

  lightning,

  hush-finger—

  cheap eeriness of wind chimes—

  summer thunder

  from a cloudless sky …

  The abandoned abandon.

  There are no adults.

  You're dead,

  but look who's talking.

  The Spider

  For a long time I was attracted to small things. Spiders particularly: the spiders who lived in my house

  were simply not to be found although I had no wish to harm them. It's true I might have frightened some

  in my sleep, I might have stepped on one without seeing it, friendly. I did see one once

  but it ran off

  very quickly, like someone

  who notices a large

  crowd coming forward to stone him.

  Something about the thin shadow of a nail in the wall; the trees' shadows moving on the bed

  while a being casts

  its two inches of vision

  from a remote corner of the ceiling

  into the room.

  Once, at dawn, when I was sick I went through the house with my drug-lit eyes, I stopped by the window

  and sat down at the piano in order to type something about your childhood: a sip from an empty cup,

  a doll cemetery.

  A spider appeared, creeping

  toward my fingers

  like a little furry hand.

  I lie down,

  I press the place behind my ear

  where the vein is.

  Today

  I observe the absence of my brother sentience: the spider who lived in my room

  with its minute blood.

  Bild, 1959

  As the bourbon's level descended in the bottle his voice would grow lower and more indistinct, like a candle flame under a glass

  Sunlight in the basement room

  So he reads to me disappearing When he is gone

  I go over

  and secretly taste his drink

  Mushroom cloud of sunset

  Whispered Ceremony After Char

  Like a kneeling communicant offering his candle

  the white scorpion has lifted its lance and touched the right spot.

  Ambush has instructed it in invisible agility.

  Swollen currents will ravage this naive scene.

  Narcissus, gold buttons undoing themselves in the field's heart.

  The king of the alders is dying.

  Train Notes

  Voicing

  in itself

  was the allowing to appear

  of that which the voicing one saw

  because it once looked into him …

  Green desuetude of railroad

  tracks, wild

  apples, aging limestone

  angel's face and

  changing

  cloud

  Green lightning past the last trees, they are pure gaze

  I am wandering through the corridors of a deserted

  elementary school

  I am flying

  over a dark sea

  Jolted awake

  I meet my own eyes

  in the window staring back

  from badly executed features

  (Like a scar the face speaks for itself)

  But irises, iris—a meteor, chrysalis, a woman's

  name, a flower's unconscious light

  Green eyes the altering light alters

  Unlit

  until the sun

  Damned to language, we come from the sun

  From stars and weather flowing in opposite directions Stars slowly silently flowing and setting, beginningless

  Rorschach Test

  {1995}

  Voice

  I woke up at four in the afternoon. Rain woke me. Dark. Mail—a voice said, You'll have mail,

  scaring and gladdening my heart. Enough anyway to get it to leave the bed, attempt to make coffee, dress and begin limping downstairs. All

  the boxes were empty. Of course. A voice said, He just hasn't come yet. But I knew: it is four in the afternoon—the others have already taken

  the mail indoors. Hours ago. If this my box is empty now then it was always empty.

  Rain. Darker

  now. By the time I had walked, more or less, back up the stairs, the treacherous voice had nothing more to say.

  Hope. They call it hope—

  that obscene cruelty, it never lets up for a minute.

  But not anymore—never again. If the telephone rings just don't answer it, said the voice. Very adaptable, the obsequious voice. If the mail does come put it in the garbage with its fellow trash;

  or set it on fire in that big metal can in the alley, you know, your publisher. Dark. Odd. It was light when I finally slept, I hear myself saying so out loud. I suppose I am insane again,

  on top of everything else. He talks to himself now, they'll say. Who. By the time you get back to your room you won't even exist. A bit mean now. And you will sit down in the chair with your back to the window, it observes.

  After a little I know for a fact you will open your notebook and write all this down,

  why I don't know. No doubt you will even show it to somebody, at some point: they'll talk to you, offer advice,

  admit admiration for this phrase,

  dislike for that. But they don't understand. You don't

  care now—how can you. No, I don't care what they say,

  what they do to me now. I used to. Terribly. And then you didn't.

  And then I didn't.

  Infant Sea Turtles

  Think of them setting out from their leather beached eggs to follow the moon to the sea and into the sea.

  The ones who make it. Think of them

  hatching, so strange—like some misshapen

  birds who haven't yet grown wings.

  But no, they are far in advance of that, returning

  to the sea that vast tear we came crawling out of. Led there by what we call the moon: Eve, or cesarean child.

  The moon which left the great scar called the sea when it tore itself from the earth's side and flung itself out into space,

  lover or child, to escape—but not far enough.

  The Comedian

  I was mad when I got home

  and smelled the alcohol.

  I thought he was sleeping, though

  the color of the skin, the

  breathing and the drool were strange.

  Impossible to touch him or get near.

  He started, as I guess

  I sort of barked at him through tears.

  All I asked for was an ambulance

  I'm sure, though don't remember phoning. Cops

  searched for drugs in my empty film canisters.

  Nobody really saw me.

  The “Final Wish,” as he put it

  in the almost illegible note that was pinned

  to the wall like a crucifix over the head

  of the bed of some lonely serious child:

  something having to do with cremation

  and scattering ashes on the Ohio. And do you know

  I laughed. I actually laughed—what does he think this is—

  left by myself in the house. It was a scream.

  Heaven

  There is a heaven.

  These sunflowers—those dark, wind-threshed oaks— …

  Heaven's all around you,

  though getting there is hard:

  it is death, heaven.

  But they are only words.<
br />
  One in the Afternoon

  Unemployed, you take a walk.

  At an empty intersection

  you stop to look both ways as you were taught.

  An old delusion coming over you.

  The wind blows through the leaves.

  Beginning of November

  The light is winter light.

  You've already felt it

  before you can open your eyes,

  and now it's too late

  to prepare yourself

  for this gray originless

  sorrow that's filling the room. It's not winter. The light

  is. The light is

  winter light,

  and you're alone.

  At last you get up:

  and suddenly notice you're holding

  your body without the heart

  to curse its lonely life, it's suffering

  from cold and from the winter

  light that fills the room

  like fear. And all at once you hug it tight,

  the way you might hug

  somebody you hate,

  if he came to you in tears.

  The Meeting

  I happened to be in a strange city

  drinking.

  One of those dives where you enter

  and just pull the covers over your head;

  where the gentleman sitting five inches away

  has lately returned from his mission in space

  in the one coeducational toilet stall

  existing on the premises,

  and will continue to sit there forever, nodding

  and peering down into his shot glass

  like a man struggling to keep awake over a bombsight;

  and the aged transsexual

  whore who never got around

  to the final operation in his youth

  seems to be pursing her lips

  in your direction, demurely, down bar.

  One of those places with windows

  the color of your glasses—

  a fact which in no way compels you

  to remove them. Nobody cares

  about your eyes: they'll go on serving you

 

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