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Collected Poems

Page 5

by Jack Gilbert


  Those lovely, long-ago night bells that I did not notice grow

  more and more apparent in me. Like pewter expanding as it cools.

  Yes, like a king halted in the great forest of Pennsylvania.

  Like me singing these prison songs to praise the gray,

  to praise her, to tell of me, yes, and of you, my King.

  NIGHT AFTER NIGHT

  He struggles to get the marble terrace clear

  in his dreams. Broad steps going down.

  A balustrade cut into the bright moonlight.

  Love is pouring out and he is crying.

  All the romantic equipment. But it is not that.

  He looks down on the gray night in the black pool.

  Sculpture glimmers in the weeds around it.

  Why is the small-headed Artemis so moving,

  and the Virtues with their pretty breasts?

  He is not foolish. He knows better.

  The scuffing of his shoes on the stairs is loud.

  What is he searching for among the banal statues?

  When he touches the chapped plinths, his spirit twangs.

  Derision protects him less and less. He goes

  shamelessly among them, trembling, fashioning a place.

  HUNGER

  Digging into the apple

  with my thumbs.

  Scraping out the clogged nails

  and digging deeper.

  Refusing the moon color.

  Refusing the smell and memories.

  Digging in with the sweet juice

  running along my hands unpleasantly.

  Refusing the sweetness.

  Turning my hands to gouge out chunks.

  Feeling the juice sticky

  on my wrists. The skin itching.

  Getting to the wooden part.

  Getting to the seeds.

  Going on.

  Not taking anyone’s word for it.

  Getting beyond the seeds.

  SECTS

  We were talking about tent revivals

  and softshell Baptists and the one-suspender Amish

  and being told whistling on Sunday made the Madonna cry.

  One fellow said he was raised in a church that taught

  wearing yellow and black together was an important sin.

  It got me thinking of the failed denomination

  I was part of: that old false dream of woman.

  I believed it was a triumph to have access to their mystery.

  To see the hidden hair, to feel my spirit topple over,

  to lie together in the afternoon while it rained

  all the way to Indonesia. I had crazy ideas of what it was.

  Like being in a dark woods at night

  when an invisible figure crosses the stiff snow,

  making a sound like some other planet’s machinery.

  THEY CALL IT ATTEMPTED SUICIDE

  My brother’s girlfriend was not prepared for how much blood

  splashed out. He got home in time, but was angry

  about the mess she had made of his room. I stood behind,

  watching them turn it into something manageable. Thinking

  how frightening it must have been before things had names.

  We say peony and make a flower out of that slow writhing.

  Deal with the horror of recurrence by calling it

  a million years. The death everywhere is no trouble

  once you see it as nature, landscape, or botany.

  MENISCUS

  The French woman says, Stop, you’re breaking my dress.

  She tells him she must meet her friends in the Plaka.

  His heels click back and forth. Stop that,

  she says, you know I don’t like being hit.

  More bickering and hitting and then her shutter

  closes. Fifteen minutes later, the light goes on

  and they are lovers. They speak to each other

  in ordinary voices as I watch the moon rise.

  WHO’S THERE

  I hear the trees with surprise after California,

  having forgotten the sound that filled my childhood.

  I hear the maples and vast elms again. American oak,

  English oak, pin oak. Honey locust and mountain ash.

  Catalpa, beech, and sycamore. I hear the luxury again

  just before autumn. And remember the old riddle:

  Winter will take it all, the trees will go on.

  This grass will die and this lawn continue. What then

  goes on of the child I was? Of that boy taunted

  by the lush whispering every summer night in Pittsburgh?

  All those I have been are the generalization that tastes

  this plum. Brothers who knew all the women I loved.

  But did we share or alternate? Was I with Gianna

  among the olive trees those evenings in Perugia?

  Am I the one who heard with Linda the old Danish men

  singing up out of the snow and dark far down below us?

  MEANING WELL

  Marrying is like somebody

  throwing the baby up.

  It happy and them throwing it

  higher. To the ceiling.

  Which jars the loose bulb

  and it goes out

  as the baby starts down.

  TEMPLATE

  Our slow crop is used up within an hour. So I live

  effortlessly by the ocean, where the sun bestows

  and bestows and I return nothing. Go cross-grain through

  the fire and call my style lust. But the night forces me.

  I get so quiet lying under the stars I can’t regulate

  the sound of owls altering me. In that dark in front

  of the house, I often think of an old man at Sadler’s Wells.

  The only one left who had seen the famous dances.

  When they did them again, despite the bad notation,

  he would watch patiently, saying, No, no, that’s not the way

  it was somehow. Until they got it right. But he died.

  SIEGE

  We think there is a sweetness concealed in the rain,

  a presence in the ebullient wet thicket.

  And we are wrong.

  Summer, the rain, oh Lord, the rain

  hammers us into a joy,

  which we call divinity.

  And we are mistaken.

  The heart’s weather of nipple and music

  condenses only on the soft metal of personal knowledge.

  Our presence is the savor.

  We must get to the iron valve in the center

  of that meaningless leafage.

  Going past even the statuary and the unnaturalness

  our faith is founded on.

  To close it down.

  To reduce that earthquake of flux.

  Reducing it to human use.

  TRANSLATION INTO THE ORIGINAL

  Apollo walks the deep roads back in the hills

  through sleet to the warm place she is.

  Eats her fine cunt and afterward they pretend

  to watch the late movie to cover their happiness.

  He swims with his body in the empty Tyrrhenian Sea.

  Comes out of that summer purple with his mind.

  Cherishes and makes all year in the city.

  But Apollo is not reasonable about desire.

  This wolf god, rust god, lord of the countryside.

  God of dance and lover of mortal women. Homer said he

  is fierce. His coming like the swift coming of night.

  That the gods feel fear and awe in the presence

  of this lawgiver, explainer of the rules of death.

  Averter of evil and praiser of the best.

  The violent indifference of Dionysus makes nothing

  live. Awful Apollo stands in the brilliant fields,

  watching the wind change the olive trees.

  He comes back through the dark singing

>   so quietly that you can hear nothing.

  BURNING AND FATHERING: ACCOUNTS OF MY COUNTRY

  The classical engine of death moves my day. Hurrying me.

  Harrowing. Tempering everything piece by piece

  in a mighty love of perfection, and leaving each part

  broken in turn. I walk through the energy of this slum,

  walking there by the Loire among the châteaux of my country.

  “Banquets where beautiful and virtuous ladies walked

  half-naked, with their hair loose like brides.” Or François

  Premier blossoming in that first spring of France.

  Flickering.

  As Diane de Poitiers flickers. As the ladies of Watteau flicker.

  As these fine houses blur to tenements. Beyond, in the park,

  the great eucalyptus are clearly provisional, waning in time.

  And there are gods in the palace of leaves, their faint glaze

  showing briefly as they promenade in the high air, going away.

  François Premier dimming. The trees shuddering. The gods,

  the Loire, flickering at night. My country, which does not exist,

  failing. I walk here singing there by the river with all times

  and places flickering and singing about me in their dialects

  as I go back into the slum dreaming of Helen washing her breasts

  in the Turkish morning.

  But she wavers and cracks. Suddenly

  the towers go down everywhere. Everything is breaking.

  Everything is lost in the fire and lost in the gauging. Fire

  burning inside of fire, where love celebrates but cannot preserve.

  The marble heart of the world fractures. The unrelenting engine

  tests everything with a steel exigence, and returns it maimed.

  And yet all we have is somehow born in that murdering.

  Born in the fire and born in the breaking. Something is perfected.

  François Premier changes as he watches the dying Leonardo drag

  through the splendid corridors. Pressure of that terrible intolerance

  gets brandy in the welter. Such honey of that heavy rider.

  THE FASHIONABLE HEART

  The Chinese, to whom the eighteenth-century English

  sent for their elaborate sets of dishes,

  followed the accompanying designs faithfully:

  writing red in the spaces where it said red,

  yellow where it said yellow.

  BREAKFAST

  It was a fine Leghorn egg,

  and inside, unexpectedly, was the city

  of Byzantium. Even from that height

  he could see the flash of bedding

  at the windows, the lump of Hagia Sophia,

  and blue flags on the enormous city walls.

  Clearly it was midsummer. Right,

  he thought, remembering about love.

  Not wanting the responsibility.

  Watching the flies begin at it.

  LOSING

  I worked my way up the terraced gardens behind the house

  and around to the side. Until I could see into the library.

  They were all there except Walter. It would have to do.

  I regretted the rain. It made me emotional.

  Anna had put a coat around her instead of dressing again.

  The men were gathered around the children.

  She was over by their mother looking at his Corot.

  I set up the detonator. There was still six minutes.

  It might be too long. Already memories were leaking in.

  How poor I was that year in Deauville. And how young.

  I thought of the Hôtel du Nord, and of the bar down the block

  where I used to meet her. (The rain and the smell of night

  pulled at me. Confused me.) Everything means a choice,

  she had said, getting one thing and losing one. The love still

  held me, but all at once I could, despite the rain, admit

  to myself what I really wanted was this clarity.

  THE RAINY FORESTS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

  The fellow came back to rape her again last night,

  but this time her former husband was there.

  Why did you rape her, you son of a bitch? he said.

  I didn’t, he answered, she let me.

  Sure, because you hit her, that’s why she let you.

  And it dwindled away into definitions.

  IL MIO TESORO

  Most nights he would be upstairs with the wife

  while his friend in the living room played

  the same aria again and again, the pain

  flowing over their wet, happy bodies.

  DON GIOVANNI IN TROUBLE

  The orchard changed. His appetite drifted.

  In the bedrooms, on the ships, under bushes.

  He was distracted by the miscellany

  of their dressing tables, or the blonde’s

  small scar just as she began to yield.

  The contessa caught him looking past the nipples

  to her unusual toes. He hurried on,

  but she stayed uneasy. As he was.

  Still loving it, but thinking of the Lipizzaners:

  wondering what those horses were like before

  they became a beautiful performance.

  THE MOVIES

  He realized that night how much he was in their power.

  Ludwig was insolent from the time he arrived

  and insisted the projection should be on a plum.

  The purple made a poor screen, and at that distance

  it was impossible to get any sort of real focus.

  He could see the phosphorescence of her body

  in the stamp of light, but not her expression

  as she turned from kissing the Japanese. The man and bed

  drifted smaller and smaller as she came forward.

  He could feel his heart as he strained to see.

  She showed herself, as usual, naked except for

  the black stockings he sent last time. She continued

  toward the camera until the screen was an even white.

  He sat there in the kitchen thinking it had gone on

  so long now these people were the only family he had.

  BYZANTIUM BURNING

  When I looked at the stubborn dark Buddha

  high in the forest, I noticed crimson

  just along where his lips closed.

  And understood Byzantium was burning.

  So there would be no more injustice.

  Unless everyone can sit on a throne

  that rises and has enameled birds that sing,

  no one should sit on such a throne.

  Such a city measures the merit of villagers.

  So it was all perishing in there at last.

  The definitions of space by basilicas.

  The shape of law in the mind of Justinian.

  But how could he dare, this opulent Buddha

  with his temples and everyone adoring,

  preach to me of the ordinary? Who was he

  to subtract Byzantium from the size of my people?

  So I begin to sing. Build and sing.

  Sing and build inside my thin lips.

  THEY WILL PUT MY BODY INTO THE GROUND

  They will put my body into the ground.

  Chemistry will have its way for a time,

  and then large beetles will come.

  After that, the small beetles. Then

  the disassembling. After that, the Puccini

  will dwindle the way light goes

  from the sea. Even Pittsburgh will

  vanish, leaving a greed tough as winter.

  LOVE POEM

  The couple on the San Francisco bus looked Russian,

  and spoke what sounded like it. He was already an old man

  at fifty. She could have been his wife or daughter.

  At first I thought
she was retarded. She was probably drunk

  and maybe stupid. He had on a gray suit and was always angry.

  Whatever she did made him glare and tug at her sleeve.

  She fought back dutifully, but without conviction.

  Knowing her role was to be wrong. She was wrong. She had

  the whole bus watching. It was hard to quarrel properly,

  also because everything pleased her so much.

  She craned to read the advertisements

  or twisted around to see out the other window

  or stared with her mouth open at the people who got on.

  When there was a seat they could sit in together,

  she messed it up. He went to the rear.

  She kept whispering, and signaling who would get off next.

  He sat proud and closed on a seat that ran the wrong way,

  getting thrown about. She wore a cheap babushka

  and a foolish old coat and white socks.

  Even stopping for red lights pleased her.

  Finally a place was empty and she plunged into it,

  crying to him and making great scooping gestures.

  He pretended not to hear. But she just got louder in her delight,

  until she was standing, guarding the seat, and calling

  the length of the bus. He had no choice.

  She settled in as happy as anyone I ever saw,

  pointing out the ads for him all over again.

  ELEPHANT HUNT IN GUADALAJARA

  El Serape’s floor show finished at one. The lights

  went off and strong girls came like tin moths.

  To dance carefully with us for eight cents.

  Now at last the old tenor has begun the deadly

  three o’clock show with its granite Mexican music.

  The girls are asleep in the side booths.

  Where is it? Where in the name of Christ is it?

  PAVANE

  I thought it said on the girl’s red purse

  A kind of sad dance and all day

  wondered what was being defined.

 

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