by Jim Harrison
   have both died from want of her, cut off well past our prime.
   12
   I was proud at four that my father called me Little Turd of Misery.
   A special name somehow connected to all the cows and horses in
   the perpetual mire of the barnyard. It has a resonance to it un-
   known to president senator poet septic-tank cleaner critic butcher
   hack or baker liberal or snot, rightist and faker and faggot and
   cunt hound. A child was brought forth and he was named Little Turd
   of Misery and like you was thrown into the lake to learn how to
   swim, owned dogs that died stupidly but without grief. Why does
   the dog chase his broken legs in a circle? He almost catches them
   like we almost catch our unruly poems. And our fathers and uncles
   had ordinary pursuits, hunted and fished, smelled of tobacco and
   liquor, grew crops, made sauerkraut and wine, wept in the dark,
   chased stray cows, mended fences, were hounded as they say by
   creditors. Barns burned. Cabbages rotted. Corn died of drought
   before its holy ears were formed, wheat flattened by hail and wind and
   the soup grew only one potato and a piece of salt pork from its
   center. Generations of slavery. All so we could fuck neurotically
   and begin the day rather than end it drinking and dreaming of dead
   dogs, swollen creeks with small bridges, ponds where cows are caught
   and drown, sucked in by the muck. But the wary boy catches fish
   there, steals a chicken for his dog’s monthly birthday, learns
   to smoke, sees his first dirty picture and sings his first dirty
   song, goes away, becomes deaf with song, becomes blinded by love,
   gets letters from home but never returns. And his nights become less black
   and holy, less moon-blown and sweet. His brain burns away like
   gray paraffin. He’s tired. His parents are dead or he is dead
   to his parents. He smells the smell of a horse. The room is
   cold. He dims the light and builds a noose. It works too well.
   13
   All of those little five-dollar-a-week rooms smelling thick of
   cigarette smoke and stale tea bags. The private bar of soap
   smearing the dresser top, on the chair a box of cookies and a letter
   from home. And what does he think he’s doing and do we all begin our
   voyage into Egypt this way. The endless bondage of words. That’s why
   you turned to those hooligan taverns and vodka, Crane to his
   sailors in Red Hook. Four walls breathe in and out. The clothes on
   the floor are a dirty shroud. The water is stale in its glass.
   Just one pull on the bottle starts the morning faster. If you
   don’t rouse your soul you will surely die while others are having
   lunch. Noon. You passed the point of retreat and took that dancer,
   a goad, perhaps a goddess. The food got better anyhow and the
   bottles. This is all called romantic by some without nostrils
   tinctured by cocaine. No romance here, but a willingness to age
   and die at the speed of sound. Outside there’s a successful revolution
   and you’ve been designated a parasite. Everywhere crushed women
   are bearing officious anti-Semites. Stalin begins his diet of
   iron shavings and blood. Murder swings with St. Basil’s bell, a
   thousand per gong free of charge. North on the Baltic Petrodvorets
   is empty and inland, Pushkin is empty. Nabokov has sensibly flown
   the shabby coop. But a hundred million serfs are free and own
   more that the common bread; a red-tinged glory, neither fire nor
   sun, a sheen without irony on the land. Who could care that you
   wanted to die, that your politics changed daily, that your songs
   turned to glass and were broken. No time to marry back in Ryazan,
   buy a goat, three dogs, and fish for perch. The age gave you a
   pistol and you gave it back, gave you two wives and you gave
   them both back, gave you a rope to swing from which you used wisely.
   You were good enough to write that last poem in blood.
   14
   Imagine being a dog and never knowing what you’re doing. You’re
   simply doing: eating garbage, fawning, mounting in public with
   terrible energy. But let’s not be romantic. Those curs, however
   sweet, don’t have souls. For all of the horrors at least some of
   us have better lives than dogs. Show me a dog that ever printed
   a book of poems read by no one in particular before he died at
   seventeen, old age for a dog. No dog ever equaled Rimbaud for
   grace or greatness, for rum running, gun running, slave trading
   and buggery. The current phrase, “anything that gets you off,”
   includes dogs but they lack our catholicity. Still, Sergei, we never
   wanted to be dogs. Maybe indians or princes, Caesars or Mongolian
   chieftains, women in expensive undergarments. But if women, lesbians
   to satisfy our ordinary tastes for women. In a fantasy if you
   become a woman you quickly are caressing your girlfriend. That
   pervert. I never thought she would. Be like that. When she’s away
   from me. Back to consciousness, the room smells like a locker room.
   Out the window it’s barely May in Moscow and the girls have shed
   their winter coats. One watches a group of fishermen. She has
   green eyes and is recent from the bath. If you were close enough
   which you’ll never be you could catch her scent of lemon and
   the clear softness of her nape where it meets her hair. She’ll
   probably die of flu next year or marry an engineer. The same
   things really as far as you’re concerned. And it’s the same in this
   country. A fine wife and farm, children, animals, three good reviews.
   Then a foggy day in late March with dozens of crows in the air
   and a girl on a horse passes you in the woods. Your dog barks.
   The girl stops, laughing. She has green eyes. Your heart is off
   and running. Your groin hopes. You pray not to see her again.
   15
   The soul of water. The most involved play. She wonders if she
   is permitted to name the stars. Tell her no. This month, May,
   is said to be “the month of tiny plant-sucking pests.” So even
   nature is said to war against us though those pests it seems are
   only having lunch. So the old woman had named the stars above
   her hut and wondered if god had perhaps given them other names that
   she didn’t know about. Her priest was always combing his hair
   and shining his shoes. We were driven from the church, weren’t we
   Sergei? In hearses. But is this time for joking? Yes. Always.
   We wonder if our fathers in heaven or hell watch when we are about
   our lying and shameful acts. As if they up or down there weren’t
   sick enough of life without watching for eternity some faulty
   version of it, no doubt on a kind of TV. Tune the next hour out
   dad, I’m going to be bad. Six lines of coke and a moronic twitch.
   Please don’t watch. I can’t help myself. I provide for my children.
   They’re delighted with the fish I catch. My wife smiles hourly.
   She has her horses, dogs, cat, barn, garden. But in New York twenty
   layers above the city some cloud or stratum of evil wants to enter
   me and I’m certainly willing. Even on ground level in Key West.
   Look she has no clothes on and I only wanted to be 
a friend and
   maybe talk about art. Only a lamb. Of course this Little Boy Blue
   act is tiresome and believed by no one on earth, heaven or hell.
   So we’ve tried to name the stars and think we are forgiven in
   advance. Rimbaud turned to black or arab boys remembering when he
   was twelve and there was no evil. Only a helpless sensual wonder.
   Pleasure gives. And takes. It is dark and hot and the brain is
   howling with those senseless drugs. Mosquitoes land upon those
   fields of sweat, the pool between her breasts. You want to be home
   rocking your child in a sunny room. Now that it’s over. But wait.
   16
   Today we’ve moved back to the granary again and I’ve anointed
   the room with Petrouchka. Your story, I think. And music. That
   ends with you floating far above in St. Petersburg’s blue winter
   air, shaking your fist among the fish and green horses, the dim-
   inuitive yellow sun and chicken playing the bass drum. Your
   sawdust is spilled and you are forever borne by air. A simple story.
   Another madman, Nijinsky, danced your part and you danced his.
   None of us apparently is unique. Think of dying waving a fist full
   of ballpoint pens that change into small snakes and that your
   skull will be transposed into the cymbal it was always meant to be.
   But shall we come down to earth? For years I have been too ready
   to come down to earth. A good poet is only a sorcerer bored with
   magic who has turned his attention elsewhere. O let us see wonders
   that psilocybin never conceived of in her powdery head. Just now
   I stepped on a leaf that blew in the door. There was a buzzing
   and I thought it concealed a wasp, but the dead wasp turned out to be
   a tiny bird, smaller than a hummingbird or june bug. Probably one
   of a kind and I can tell no one because it would anger the swarm
   of naturalists so vocal these days. I’ll tuck the body in my hair
   where it will remain forever a secret or tape it to the back of
   your picture to give you more depth than any mirror on earth.
   And another oddity: the record needle stuck just at the point
   the trumpet blast announced the appearance of your ghost in the
   form of Petrouchka. I will let it repeat itself a thousand times
   through the afternoon until you stand beside the desk in your
   costume. But I’ve no right to bring you back to life. We must
   respect your affection for the rope. You knew the exact juncture
   in your life when the act of dangling could be made a dance.
   17
   Behind my back I have returned to life with much more surprise
   than conviction. All those months in the cold with neither
   tears nor appetite no matter that I was in Nairobi or Arusha, Rome,
   the fabled Paris flat and dry as a newsphoto. And lions looked
   like lions in books. Only the rumbling sound of an elephant shooting
   water into his stomach with a massive trunk made any sense. But I
   thought you would have been pleased with the Galla women in Ethiopia
   and walking the Colonnade near the Vendôme I knew you had walked
   there. Such a few signs of life. Life brings us down to earth he
   thinks. Father of two at thirty-five can’t seem to earn a living.
   But whatever muse there is on earth is not concerned with groceries.
   We like to believe that Getty couldn’t buy a good line for a billion
   dollars. When we first offered ourselves up to her when young and
   in our waking dreams she promised nothing. Not certainly that we
   could buy a bike for our daughter’s birthday or eat good cuts of
   beef instead of hamburger. She doesn’t seem to care that our wine
   is ordinary. She walks in and out the door without knocking. She takes
   off her clothes and ruins the marriage bed. She out-and-out killed
   you Sergei for no reason I can think of. And you might want to
   kill her but she changes so fast whether into a song, a deer, a pig,
   the girl sitting on the pier in a short dress. You want to fish
   but you turn and there larger than any movie are two thighs and louder
   than any howl they beckon you to the life they hold so gently. We
   said that her eyes were bees and ice glistened in her hair. And we
   know she can become a rope but then you’re never sure as all rope
   tends to resemble itself though it is common for it to rest in coils
   like snakes. Or rope. But I must earn our living and can’t think
   about rope though I am to be allowed an occasional girl drawing up
   her thighs on a pier. You might want her even in your ghostly form.
   18
   Thus the poet is a beached gypsy, the first porpoise to whom it
   occurred to commit suicide. True, my friend, even porpoises have
   learned your trick and for similar reasons: losing hundreds of
   thousands of wives, sons, daughters, husbands to the tuna nets.
   The seventh lover in a row disappears and it can’t be endured.
   There is some interesting evidence that Joplin was a porpoise and
   simply decided to stop breathing at an unknown depth. Perhaps the
   navy has her body and is exploring ways to turn it into a weapon.
   Off Boca Grande a baby porpoise approached my boat. It was a girl
   about the size of my two-year-old daughter who might for all I know
   be a porpoise. Anyway she danced around the boat for an hour
   while her mother kept a safer distance. I set the mother at ease by
   singing my infamous theme song: “Death dupe dear dingle devil flower
   bird dung girl” repeating seven times until the mother approached
   and I leaned over the gunnel and we kissed. I was tempted to swim
   off with them but remembered I had a date with someone who tripled
   as a girl, cocaine dealer and duck though she chose to be the last,
   alas, that evening. And as in all ancient stories I returned to the
   spot but never found her or her little girl again. Even now mariners
   passing the spot deep in the night can hear nothing. But enough
   of porpoise love. And how they are known to beach themselves. I’ve
   begun to doubt whether we ever would have been friends. Maybe. Not
   that it’s to the point – I know three one-eyed poets like myself
   but am close to none of them. These letters might have kept me
   alive – something to do you know as opposed to the nothing you chose.
   Loud yeses don’t convince. Nietzsche said you were a rope dancer
   before you were born. I say yes before breakfast but to the smell
   of bacon. Wise souls move through the dark only one step at a time.
   19
   Naturally we would prefer seven epiphanies a day and an earth
   not so apparently devoid of angels. We become very tired with
   pretending we like to earn a living, with the ordinary objects and
   events of our lives. What a beautiful toothbrush. How wonderful
   to work overtime. What a nice cold we have to go with the cold
   crabbed spring. How fun to have no money at all. This thin soup
   tastes great. I’m learning something every morning from cheap wine
   hangovers. These rejection slips are making me a bigger person.
   The mailbox is always so empty let’s paint it pink. It’s good for
   my soul that she prefers to screw another. Our cat’s right eyeball
   became ulcerated and had to be pulled but she�
��s the same old cat.
   I can’t pay my taxes and will be sent to prison but it will probably
   be a good experience. That rattlesnake striking at dog and daughter
   was interesting. How it writhed beautifully with its head cut
   off and dog and daughter were tugging at it. How purging to lose
   our last twenty dollars in a crap game. Seven come eleven indeed.
   But what grand songs you made out of an awful life though you had
   no faith that less was more, that there was some golden splendor
   in humiliation. After all those poems you were declared a coward
   and a parasite. Mayakovsky hissed in public over your corpse and
   work only to take his own life a little while later. Meanwhile
   back in America Crane had his Guggenheim year and technically jumped
   ship. Had he been seven hundred feet tall he would have been OK.
   I suspect you would have been the kind of friends you both needed
   so badly. So many husbands have little time for their homosexual
   friends. But we should never imagine we love this daily plate of shit.
   The horses in the yard bite and chase each other. I’ll make a carol
   of my dream: carried in a litter by lovely women, a 20 lb. bag of cocaine,
   angels shedding tunics in my path, all dead friends come to life again.
   20
   The mushrooms helped again: walking hangdoggedly to the granary
   after the empty mailbox trip I saw across the barnyard at the base
   of an elm stump a hundred feet away a group of white morels. How
   many there were will be kept concealed for obvious reasons. While
   I plucked them I considered each a letter from the outside world
   to my little cul-de-sac, this valley: catching myself in this act
   doing what I most despise, throwing myself in the laps of others.
   Save my life. Help me. By return post. That sort of thing. So we
   throw ourselves in the laps of others until certain famous laps
   grow tired, vigorous laps whose movement is slowed by the freight
   of all those cries. Then if you become famous after getting off
   so many laps you can look at the beautiful women at your feet and