Read The Apple Trees at Olema Online
Authors: Robert Hass
New and Selected Poems
For Brenda
July Notebook:
The Birds
After Coleridge and for Milosz:
Late July
For C.R.:
What do you mean you have nothing?
August Notebook:
A Death
1.
River Bicycle Peony
2.
Sudden and Grateful Memory of Mississippi John Hurt
3.
You can fall a long way in sunlight
4.
Today his body is consigned to the flames
September Notebook:
Stories
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Adhesive:
For Earlene
Palo Alto:
The Marshes
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Not Going to New York:
A Letter
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Iowa City:
Early April
A Note on “Iowa City:
Early April”
Shame:
An Aria
Frida Kahlo:
In the Saliva
English:
An Ode
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CzesÅaw MiÅosz:
In Memoriam
Horace:
Three Imitations
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J
ULY
N
OTEBOOK
:
T
HE
B
IRDS
Sleep like the down elevator's
imitation of a memory lapse.
Then early light.
Why were you born, voyager?
one is not born for a reason,
though there is a skein of causes.
out of yellowish froth,
cells began to divide, or so they say,
and feed on sunlight,
for no reason.
After that life wanted life.
You are awake now?
I am awake now.
In front of me six African men, each of them tall
and handsome, all of them impeccably tailored;
all six ordered Coca-Cola at dinner (Muslim,
it seems, a trade delegation? diplomats?);
the young American girl next to me
is a veterinary assistant from DC;
I asked her if she kept records
or held animals. A little of both,
she says. She 's on her way to Stockholm.
The young man in the window seat, also American,
black hair not combed any time
in recent memory, expensive Italian shirt,
gold crucifix fastened to his earlobe,
scarab tattooed in the soft skin
between thumb and forefinger of his left hand,
is reading a Portuguese phrasebook.
A lover perhaps in Lisbon or Faro.
There should be a phrase for this passenger tenderness,
the flickering perceptions like the whitecaps
later on the Neva, when the wind
off the Gulf of Finland, roughens the surface
of the river and spills the small petals
of white lilacs on the gray stone
of the embankment. Above it two black-faced gulls,
tilted in the air, cry out sharply, and sharply.
The light this morning is touching everything,
the grasses by the pond,
and the wind-chivvied water,
and the aspens on the bank, and the one white fir on its sunward side,
and the blue house down the road
and its white banisters which are glowing on top
and shadowy on the underside,
which intensifies the luster of the surfaces that face the sun
as it does to the leaves of the aspen.
Are you there? Maybe it would be best
to be the shadow side of a pine needle
on a midsummer morning
(to be in imagination and for a while
on a midsummer morning
the shadow side of a pine needle).
The sun has concentrated to a glowing point
in the unlit bulb of the porchlight on the porch
of the blue house down the road.
It almost hurts to look at it.
Are you there? Are you soaked in dreams still?
The sky is inventing a Web site called newest azure.
There are four kinds of birdsong outside
and a methodical early morning saw.
No, not a saw. It's a boy on a scooter and the sun
on his black helmet is concentrated to a point of glowing light.
He isn't death come to get us
and he isn't truth arriving in a black T-shirt
chevroned up the arms in tongues of flame.
Are you there? For some reason I'm imagining
the small hairs on your neck, even though I know
you are dread and the muse
and my mortal fate and a secret.
It's a boy on a scooter on a summer morning.
Did I say the light was touching everything?
After Coleridge and for Milosz:
Late July
I didn't go hiking with the others this morning
on the dusty trail past the firehouse,
past the massive, asymmetrical, vanilla-scented
Jeffrey pine, among the spikes of buckbrush
and the spicy sage and the gray-green ceanothus,
listening to David's descriptions of the terrifying
efficiencies of a high mountain ecosystem,
the white fir's cost-benefit analysis
of the usefulness of its lower limbs,
the ants herding aphidsâthey store the sugars
in the aphid's rich excretionsâon the soft green
mesas of a mule ear leaf. I think of the old man's
dark study jammed with books in seven languages
as the headquarters of his military campaign
against nothingness. Immense egoism in it,
of course, the narcissism of a wound,
but actual making, actual work. one of the things
he believed was that our poems could be better
than our motives. So who cares why
he wrote those lines about the hairstyle
of his piano teacher in Wilno in the 1920s
or the building with spumy baroque cornices
that collapsed on her in 1942. David and the others
would by now have reached the waterfall.
There were things he could not have known
as he sat beside her on the mahogany bench,
that he could only have seen, or recomposed,
remembering the smell of her powder,
as a sixty-five-year-old man on another continent.
Looking out a small window at an early spring rain:
that, if she taught piano, she was an artistic girl,
that she didn't have family money, that she must have
dreamed once of performing and discovered
the limits of her gift and that her hair,
piled atop her head and, thickly braided,
wound about her beautifully shaped skull
(which the boy with his worn sheaf of Chopin études
would hardly have noticed) was formed
by some bohemian elegance and raffishness
in the style of her music-student youth, so that he,
the poet at the outer edges of middle age,
with what comes after that visible before him
could think unbidden of her reddish Belle Epoque hair
and its powdery faint odor of apricot
that he had not noticed and of the hours
she must have spent, thousands in a lifetime,
tending to her braids, and think that the young,
himself then with his duties and resentments,
are always walking past some already perished
dream of stylishness or beauty that survives
or half-survives in the familiar and therefore tedious,
therefore anonymous, outfitting of one 's elders,
and that her gentility would have required
(the rain in green California may have let up
a little and quieted to dripping in the ferns)
the smallest rooms in the most expensive quarter
of the city she could manageâhe'd have recalled
then rows of yellow bindings of French novels
on her well-dusted shelvesâand this was why
he visited her in that gleaming parlor room
on the Street of St. Peter of the Rock, and why,
he would hear years later in a letter
from a classmate, the stone that crushed her
was not concrete or the local limestone,
but pure chunks of white, carefully quarried
Carerra marble. Something in him identified,
must have, with the darkness he thought
he was contending against. A child practicing
holding its breath, as a form of power,
a threat (but against whom? To extort
what?). or a lover perfecting a version
of the silent treatment from some strategy
of anticipatory anger at the failure of love.
So he may have had to rouse himself
against the waste, against the vast stupidity
and cruelty and waste and wasted pathos,
to hear the music in which to say that he 'd noticed,
after all the years, that her small body
had been crushed expensively. one summer
by that waterfall I saw a hummingbird,
a calliope, hovering and glistening
above the water's spray and the hemlock,
then dropping down into it and rising
and wobbling and beating its furious wings
and dropping again and rising and glistening. The others
should be there by now, and it's possible the bird
is back this year. They'd have made their way
down the dusty trail and over the ledge of granite
to the creek's edge and that cascade of spray.
What do you mean you have nothing?
You can't have nothing. Aren't there three green apples
on the table in an earth-brown bowl? Weren't there
three apples for three goddesses in the story
and the fellow had to pickâno, there was one apple
and three goddesses, as in the well-known remark
that all of politics is two pieces of cake
and three children. Aren't there three yellow roses
on the counter in a clear glass vase among purple spikes
of another flower that resembles a little
the Nile hyacinth you saw in lush borders
along the green canal at Puerto Escondido?
Do you remember Juan called them “Lent flowers,”
which made you see that the white gush of the calyx
was an eastering, and you looked at Connie
with her shaved head after chemo and her bright,
wide eyes that wanted to miss nothing,
and do you remember that the surface of the water
came suddenly alive: a violent roiling and leaping
of small fish, and Juan, pointing into the water
at what had got them leaping, shouted “Barracuda,”
and that the young pelicans came swooping in
to practice their new awkward skill of fishing
on the small, terrified, silvery river fish? And
the black-headed terns, a flock of them,
joined in, hovering and plunging like needles
into the churning water? All in one explosion:
green lagoon, barracuda, silver fish, brown pelicans,
plunging terns, Juan's laugh, appalled, alive,
and Connie's wide blue eyes and the river smell
coming up as the water quieted again. of course,
there were three apples, one for beauty,
and one for terror, and one for Connie 's eyes
in the quiet after, mangrove swallows in the air,
shy, white-faced ibises foraging among the hyacinths.
Late afternoons in June the fog rides in
across the ridge of pines, ghosting them,
and settling on the bay to give a muted gray
luster to the last hours of light and take back
what we didn't know at midday we'd experience
as lack: the blue of summer and the dry spiced scent
of the summer woods. It's as if some cold salt god
had wandered inland for a nap. You still see
herons fishing in the shallows, a kingfisher or an osprey
emerges for a moment out of the high, drifting mist,
then vanishes again. And the soft, light green leaves
of the thimbleberry and the ridged coffeeberry leaves
and the needles of the redwoods and pines look more sprightly
in the cool gray air with the long dusk coming on,
since fog is their natural element. I had it in mind
that this description of the weather would be a way
to say things come and go, a way of subsuming
the rhythms of arrival and departure to a sense
of how brief the time is on a summer afternoon
when the sun is warm on your neck and the world
might as well be a dog sleeping on a porch, or a child
for whom an afternoon is endless, endless. Time:
thick honey, and no one saying good-bye.
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A
UGUST
N
OTEBOOK
:
A D
EATH
1.
River Bicycle Peony
I woke up thinking abouy my brothr's body.
that q That was my first bit of early morning typing
so the first dignity, it turns out, is to get the spelling right.
I woke up thinking about my brother's body.
Apparently it's at the medical examiner's morgue.
I found myself wondering whether he was naked
yet and whose job it was to take clothes off
and when they did it. It seemed unnecessary
to undress his body until they performed the exam
and that is going to happen later this morning
and so I found myself hoping that he was dressed
still, though smell may be an issue, or hygiene.
When the police do a forced entry for the purpose
of a welfare check and the deceased person is alone,
the body goes to the medical examiner's morgue
in the section for those deaths in which no evidence
of foul play is involved, so the examination
for cause of death is fairly routine. Two policemen,
for some reason I imagine they were young,
found my brother. His body was in the bed
which was a mattress on the floor. He was lying
on his back, according to Angela, my brother's friend,
who lives nearby and has her own troubles
and always introduced herself as my brother's
personal assistant, and he seemed peaceful.
There would have been nothing in the room
but the mattress and a microwave, an ashtray,
I suppose, cartons and food wrappers he hadn't
thrown away and the little plastic subscription
bottles that he referred to as his 'scrips.
They must have called the ME's ambulance
and that was probably a team of three.
When I woke, I visualized this narrative