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Poems 1959-2009

Page 13

by Frederick Seidel


  Loved. The fever breaks.

  42. BLOOD

  The yellow sunlight with

  The milky moonlight makes

  An egg without cholesterol

  And I will live.

  O tree of brains

  And sound of leaves.

  The day is green.

  And now I pray.

  I thank the cotton

  For the shirt.

  I thank the glass that holds me

  In, that I see through into out there.

  I’m driving to the car wash

  And the dogs are getting haircuts

  And the motorcycles drive by

  And I ask for mine,

  My body in your hands

  To live.

  The bay is blue

  To me means that.

  The saline breeze says that

  The soft is firm enough today

  To hold the water up

  With gulls on top that won’t

  Sink in.

  I don’t know when.

  I don’t know how.

  I don’t know I.

  I tell the cardiologist that

  I’m in love.

  The needle draws the champagne

  Into crystal flutes the lab will love.

  43. HOLLY ANDERSEN

  I describe you.

  I have a chart to.

  I hold your

  Heart. I feel.

  The motor

  Of your life

  Is not diseased or weak

  Or real until

  I stress it from the

  Outside, how

  You test anyone before you

  Find them true.

  Totally in

  Your power,

  The stethoscope

  Puts its taproot to your chest, and flowers.

  The miles of

  Treadmill agnostically

  Takes core samples.

  The bolus which jump-starts us back to life is love.

  The light leaps and is living

  On the screen

  As the mine-detector mechanism

  Looks for mines.

  Take a deep breath.

  You stopped smoking cigarettes.

  Breathe out through your mouth.

  How many years ago.

  We are made of years

  That keep on living.

  We are made of tears

  That as your doctor I can’t cry.

  44. AT NEW YORK HOSPITAL

  I enter the center.

  I open the book of there.

  I leave my clothes in a locker.

  I gown myself and scrub in.

  Anything is possible that I do.

  Cutting a person open

  Is possible without pain. An entourage rolls

  In a murderous head of state with beautiful big breasts—

  Who is already under and extremely nude

  On the gurney. Her sheet has slipped off.

  Her perfect head has been shaved

  Bald. And now a target area

  On the top of the skull will

  Be painted magenta. Her body is rewrapped.

  Her face gets sealed off. Her crimes against humanity

  Will be lasered.

  I am a Confederate scout, silence in the forest.

  The all eyes and stillness

  Of a bird watcher has stumbled on

  A Yankee soldier asleep.

  The dentist’s drill drills a hole and

  The drill slips and whines out of control,

  But no matter. The electric saw cuts

  Out a skullcap of bone.

  The helicopter descends from Olympus to within an

  Inch of touching down

  On the wrinkled surface, when a tool falls incredibly

  To the floor and I pick it up and am thanked.

  The anesthesiologist for my benefit joyously

  Declaims Gerard Manley Hopkins.

  The surgeon recites a fervent favorite childhood hymn.

  He slaps the monster tenderly to wake her up. Wake up, darling.

  45. DRINKS AT THE cARLYLE

  The pregnant woman stares out the spaceship window at space—

  But is listening carefully.

  The man is looking at the inward look on her face.

  The man is answering her question while they leave the galaxy.

  Why they are on this space voyage neither stranger quite knows.

  There is something that

  Someone watching them

  Might feel almost shows,

  But would not be able to say what.

  She was describing the American child

  She was, the athlete who played the violin,

  Who grew up on Earth upstate.

  He sees American thrust, the freckled ignition

  Who vanished in a puff of smoke on stage—and the power and

  Grandly pregnant happily married woman physician

  There on stage when the smoke cleared. He looks at her left hand

  And her bow hand. He sees the child lift the half-size violin

  From its case, and take the bow,

  And fit the violin to her shoulder and chin,

  And begin to saw, sweetly, badly,

  While she asks him what it is like to be him,

  To be a space commander, revered.

  He stares softly at her severed

  Connection to him as she again looks inward

  And very distantly smiles

  While he tries to think what she is asking him and answer.

  She is smartly dressed in black,

  Blond midnight in the air-conditioned hot middle of summer.

  She has smilingly said she is the only doctor in town on

  Fridays in July, so she knows everything.

  It is amazing what people actually do.

  I am not possible to know.

  46. CHIQUITA GREGORY

  Sagaponack swings the Atlantic around its head

  Like an athlete in the windup for the hammer throw.

  It is a hurricane and the radio

  Predicts a tornado will follow.

  The air violently

  Smells fresh like nowhere else,

  And I am just assuming it is

  You calling to everyone lunch is ready.

  We are heads bowed

  At our place cards. Zeus is saying grace

  When the chairs begin to shake and lightning outside

  Shazams you back to life, tsunami

  Light as a feather, the feather of life,

  Very long legs,

  Very short shorts, a chef’s apron in front, so that from

  Behind … Goddess,

  You have returned to earth in a mood and

  In a storm, and I have no doubt that

  Irreplaceable trees on Sagg Main are davening

  Themselves to the ground. They

  Rend their clothes and tear their hair out out

  Of joy. Chiquita, how can anyone be so

  Angry who has died? The whirling light in

  The drive is the police, here

  To urge the last holdouts in houses near the

  Ocean to leave. To help us

  Decide, they suavely ask for the name of next of kin.

  The ocean bursts into towering flames of foam.

  The lobsters in the pot are screaming

  Inside the reddening roar.

  Your aproned ghost keeps boiling more, keeps boiling more,

  And turns to serve the gore.

  47. TO START AT END

  To start at End

  And work back

  To the mouth

  Is the start—

  Back to the black hole

  That ate the meal,

  Back from the universe

  And the book

  To the illiteracy

  Of the much too

  Compressed pre-universe

  To release. So it was

  The
hands of fingers on

  The keyboard bringing up on the screen

  The something thirteen

  Billion light-years back that happened,

  The Gentlemen, start your engines!

  That made it start,

  Which is the mouth

  Of the music.

  The uncontrollable

  Is about to happen—

  A gash in the nothingness invisibly

  Appears.

  The uncontrollable is about

  To happen—the strings (of string theory)

  Are trembling unseen ecstatically

  Before they even are touched by the bow.

  It all happened so fast.

  The fall weather was vast.

  At either end of spacetime the armies massed.

  Youth was past.

  48. WE HAVE IGNITION

  Infinity was one of many

  In a writhing pot of spaghetti.

  One among many

  Intestines of time.

  The

  Trembling the size and color

  Of boiled lobster coral

  Was trying

  More violently than anything

  Could and still live. The

  Subatomic particles

  Were

  The truth. One of them became

  The universe at once

  While the others fled.

  And one—

  Not our universe—

  Became something else.

  Don’t think about it

  And you won’t.

  The landmass of the continental

  United States compared to an open

  Manhole

  On the bitter boulevard where citizens buy crack

  Is how much bigger the human brain is

  Than the entire universe was at the start,

  When it was the prickle

  Before the zit.

  Godspeed, John Glenn.

  Fly safely high

  In your seventy-seven-year-old

  Head thirteen billion years old.

  49. ETERNITY

  A woman waits on a distant star she is traveling to.

  She waits for herself to arrive.

  But first she has to embark.

  3, 2, 1 … ignition.

  All systems are go for the facelift.

  Her face lifts off into space.

  She heads for the distant star

  And the young woman waiting for her there.

  A man who wanted to look better

  But not younger is red

  Swells of raw.

  Later they will remove the staples.

  Ten weeks later

  They are younger.

  They pull over

  Their head a sock of skin.

  One day the girl sees in the mirror a girl

  Laughing so hard her face falls off in her hands.

  You can see the inside of the face.

  The front of her head is an amputee’s smooth stump.

  Her old woman’s body is a bag of spotted slop.

  The gentleman at least is doing fine.

  His face peeks through the shower curtains

  Of his previous face.

  In the tomb air

  Of the spacecraft they get more perfumed

  As they painstakingly near

  The hot banks of the Nile, so green and fertile.

  Heart is safe in a dish of preservative.

  Face is a box for the telemetry for the journey.

  Perishable slaves caravan the monumental blocks of stone to the site.

  The faceless likeness deafens the desert.

  50. THE MASTER JEWELER JOEL ROSENTHAL

  What’s Joel

  Got to do but let the jewel

  Hatch

  The light and hook

  It to the flesh

  It will outlast

  And point the staring

  Woman at a mirror?

  The stone alone was fireworks

  But is Star Wars in his choker.

  Of course Joel wears no jewelry himself but

  Makes it for these reasons rhyme.

  The staring woman is starving and

  Eating her own face and

  Stares with a raving smile

  At her undying love.

  The things they

  Have to have

  Are his

  Designs on them.

  The richest in the world stick out their necks

  And hands and ears for JAR’s gems—

  Which they can ride through the eye of a needle

  To heaven. His genius is his

  Joy, is JAR, is

  Agonized obsession, is death is double-parked

  Outside the palace. Death is loading in the van

  The women and camels of King Solomon it is repossessing.

  Joel has designed a watch

  In platinum.

  This watch is the sequel

  To anyone you have ever lost.

  51. IN SPITE OF EVERYTHING

  I had a question about the universe

  On my way to my evening class,

  Stuck between stations on the No. 3 Express,

  And it was this.

  You don’t know what you mean

  And that’s what I mean.

  God is playing peekaboo,

  Not There behind the hands.

  Then peekaboo and you

  See face-to-face and bam.

  I’m getting old.

  I hid and I revealed myself.

  All the way down to the wharf

  All the way down to the wharf

  All the way down to the wharf

  He-wolf and she-wolf went walking.

  Shut up, darling! I’ll do the talking.

  All the way down to the wharf

  All the way down to the wharf

  The stalker was stalking.

  The talker was talking.

  You want to talk

  Until I droop.

  The river runs by

  Under the broken pier.

  All the great ocean liners left for France from here,

  Whose passengers are

  Now ghosts mostly. Loup and Louve howl

  To Neptune from their heaving gale-force stateroom—

  Walk through drought, walk through dew,

  Keep walking down the avenue,

  For richer for poorer, for better for worse, malgré tout.

  52. SPRINGTIME

  Sunset rolls out the red carpet

  For Charlotte as she walks

  To her appointment with life

  In the awed soft-focus.

  Charlotte sees the crimson trees

  With her famous eyes.

  Fat rises to the surface of the street in sunset flames.

  The magnolias are vomiting brightness

  In the mist. Spring in its mania refuses

  To take its medication. It

  Buys every newspaper left on the newsstand, then

  Sobs in a café, sobs with laughter.

  A car at a light rocks from side to side with the

  Windows down, letting in red, letting out rhythm—

  A pounding pulse of rap from the exophthalmic car radio.

  She would give anything to be able to

  Sleep in a shower of this fragrance.

  She is talking on her fear

  Phone to anyone in her mind. She is

  Saying in a red city

  I am alive at sunset.

  Charlotte is beautiful but

  Charlotte is so beautiful it is

  Insolence.

  A fan

  Asks for her autograph outside a restaurant.

  Horse carriages slowly carry

  Honeymooners through a fog of love as thick as snow.

  A slave to love

  Kisses a real slave she bought to free.

  The dominatrix is whipped by her slave—

  Who has made a mistake on the new rug and wags.


  53. SUMMER

  Kitsy and Bitsy and Frisky and Boo

  Stream by, memories of moist

  Moss—green morphine—

  On each bank of a stream.

  Fronds as delicate

  As my feelings present

  Those summers.

  You could drink the water you swam

  In, clear, cold, sweet, but August,

  But August in St. Louis,

  But August and the heat

  That slows the green smell of the lawns

  To tar, lyric

  Of humidity

  That thickens to a halt, but sweet, that swells

  Up, that you escaped to dreams

  From. In one,

  Beauty and kindness combined

  To walk across a room.

  The daughter of Colonel Borders, Kitsy,

  Means God has found a way, walks in through a door.

  The universe begins at once.

  The stars erupt a sky

  They can be stars in, that they can be

  Unicorns in a pen in.

  The perfect knight in armor to slay the fiery dragon

  Has sex with it instead.

  I wake from the dream in the dark.

  I barely see above

  The steering wheel at twelve years old.

  The park at night is warm.

  The air is sweet and moist and cool.

  54. FALL SNOWFALL

  The book of nothingness begins

  At birth.

  The pages turn and there

  Is far.

  There is far from where

  They start.

  The pages turn into

  The book.

  And everything and everyone and

  What is happening

  Is blood in urine.

  Ask the trees

  The leaves leave.

  They are left.

  They remove their wigs.

  They turn themselves in.

  They stand there blank.

  The now falls

  On the fields white.

  The smell of wood smoke stares and

  The no falls,

  Radios

  Of blank now

  On the fields.

  A black crow shakes the no off.

  Merrily we

  Go around circling

  The drain, life is but a dream.

  The doctors in their white

  No

  Fall

  On the fields.

  55. CHRISTMAS

  My Christmas is covered

  With goosepimples in the cold.

  Her arms are raised straight

  Above her head.

  She turns around slowly in nothing but a

  Garter belt and stockings outdoors.

  She has the powerful

 

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