Read Collected Earlier Poems Online
Authors: Anthony Hecht
It’s stifling. And the thick leaves’ rasping sound
Is enough all by itself to make you sweat.
What seems to be a small dot in the dark
Could only be one thing—a star. On the deserted ground
Of a basketball court a vagrant bird has set
Its fragile egg in the steel hoop’s ravelled net.
There’s a smell of mint now, and of mignonette.
Like a despotic Sheik, who can be untrue
To his vast seraglio and multiple desires
Only with a harem altogether new,
Varied and numerous, I have switched Empires.
A step dictated by the acrid, live
Odor of burning carried on the air
From all four quarters (a time for silent prayer!)
And, from the crow’s high vantage point, from five.
Like a snake charmer, like the Pied Piper of old,
Playing my flute I passed the green janissaries,
My testes sensing their pole axe’s sinister cold,
As when one wades into water. And then with the brine
Of sea-water sharpness filling, flooding the mouth,
I crossed the line
And sailed into muttony clouds. Below me curled
Serpentine rivers, roads bloomed with dust, ricks yellowed,
And everywhere in that diminished world,
In formal opposition, near and far,
Lined up like print in a book about to close,
Armies rehearsed their games in balanced rows
And cities all went dark as caviar.
And then the darkness thickened. All lights fled,
A turbine droned, a head ached rhythmically,
And space backed up like a crab, time surged ahead
Into first place, and streaming westwardly,
Seemed to be heading home, void of all light,
Soiling its garments with the tar of night.
I fell asleep. When I awoke to the day,
Magnetic north had strengthened its deadly pull.
I beheld new heavens, I beheld the earth made new.
It lay
Turning to dust, as flat things always do.
Being itself the essence of all things,
Solitude teaches essentials. How gratefully the skin
Receives the leathery coolness of its chair.
Meanwhile my arm, off in the dark somewhere,
Goes wooden in sympathetic brotherhood
With the chair’s listless arm of oaken wood.
A glowing oaken grain
Covers the tiny bones of the joints. And the brain
Knocks like the glass’s ice-cube tinkling.
It’s stifling. On a pool hall’s steps, in a dim glow,
Somebody striking a match rescues his face
Of an old black man from the enfolding dark
For a flaring moment. The white-toothed portico
Of the District Courthouse sinks in the thickened lace
Of foliage, and awaits the random search
Of passing headlights. High up on its perch,
Like the fiery warning at Belshazzar’s Feast,
The inscription,
Coca-Cola
, hums in red.
In the Country Club’s unweeded flowerbed
A fountain whispers its secrets. Unable to rouse
A simple
tirra lirra
in these dull boughs,
A strengthless breeze rustles the tattered, creased
News of the world, its obsolete events,
Against an improvised, unlikely fence
Of iron bedsteads. It’s stifling. Leaning on his rifle,
The Unknown Soldier grows even more unknown.
Against a concrete jetty, in dull repose
A trawler scrapes the rusty bridge of its nose.
A weary, buzzing ventilator mills
The U.S.A.’s hot air with metal gills.
Like a carried-over number in addition,
The sea comes up in the dark
And on the beach it leaves its delible mark,
And the unvarying, diastolic motion,
The repetitious, drugged sway of the ocean
Cradles a splinter adrift for a million years.
If you step sideways off the pier’s
Edge, you’ll continue to fall toward those tides
For a long, long time, your hands stiff at your sides,
But you will make no splash.
The change of Empires is intimately tied
To the hum of words, the soft, fricative spray
Of spittle in the act of speech, the whole
Sum of Lobachevsky’s angles, the strange way
That parallels may unwittingly collide
By casual chance some day
As longitudes contrive to meet at the pole.
And the change is linked as well to the chopping of wood,
To the tattered lining of life turned inside out
And thereby changed to a garment dry and good
(To tweed in winter, linen in a heat spell)
And the brain’s kernel hardening in its shell.
In general, of all our organs the eye
Alone retains its elasticity,
Pliant, adaptive as a dream or wish.
For the change of Empires is linked with far-flung sight,
With the long gaze cast across the ocean’s tide
(Somewhere within us lives a dormant fish)
And the mirror’s revelation that the part in your hair
That you meticulously placed on the left side
Mysteriously shows up on the right,
Linked to weak gums, to heartburn brought about
By a diet unfamiliar and alien,
To the intense blankness, to the pristine white
Of the mind, which corresponds to the plain, small
Blank page of letterpaper on which you write.
But now the giddy pen
Points out resemblances, for after all,
The device in your hand is the same old pen and ink
As before, the woodland plants exhibit no change
Of leafage, and the same old bombers range
The clouds toward who knows what
Precisely chosen, carefully targeted spot.
And what you really need now is a drink.
New England towns seem much as if they were cast
Ashore along its coastline, beached by a flood-
Tide, and shining in darkness mile after mile
With imbricate, speckled scales of shingle and tile,
Like schools of sleeping fish hauled in by the vast
Nets of a continent that was first discovered
By herring and by cod. But neither cod
Nor herring have had any noble statues raised
In their honor, even though the memorial date
Could be comfortably omitted. As for the great
Flag of the place, it bears no blazon or mark
Of the first fish-founder among its parallel bars,
And as Louis Sullivan might perhaps have said,
Seen in the dark,
It looks like a sketch of towers thrust among stars.
Stifling. A man on his porch has wound a towel
Around his throat. A pitiful, small moth
Batters the window screen and bounces off
Like a bullet that Nature has zeroed in on itself
From an invisible ambush,
Aiming for some improbable bullseye
Right smack in the middle of July.
Because watches keep ticking, pain washes away
With the years. If time picks up the knack
Of panacea, it’s because time can’t abide
Being rushed, or finally turns insomniac.
And walking or swimming, the dreams of one hemisphere (heads)
Swarm with the nightmares, the dark, sinister play
Of its opposite (tails), its double, its underside.
Stifling. Great motionless plants. A distant bark.
A nodding head now jerks itself upright
To keep faces and phone numbers from sliding into the dark
And off the precarious edge of memory.
In genuine tragedy
It’s not the fine hero that finally dies, it seems,
But, from constant wear and tear, night after night,
The old stage set itself, giving way at the seams.
Since it’s too late by now to say “goodbye”
And expect from time and space any reply
Except an echo that sounds like “here’s your tip,”
Pseudo-majestic, cubing every chance
Word that escapes the lip,
I write in a sort of trance,
I write these words out blindly, the scrivening hand
Attempting to outstrip
By a second the “how come?”
That at any moment might escape the lip,
The same lip of the writer,
And sail away into night, there to expand
By geometrical progress,
und so weiter
.
I write from an Empire whose enormous flanks
Extend beneath the sea. Having sampled two
Oceans as well as continents, I feel that I know
What the globe itself must feel : there’s nowhere to go.
Elsewhere is nothing more than a far-flung strew
Of stars, burning away.
Better to use a telescope to see
A snail self-sealed to the underside of a leaf.
I always used to regard “infinity”
As the art of splitting a liter into three
Equal components with a couple of friends
Without a drop left over. Not, through a lens,
An aggregate of miles without relief.
Night. A cuckoo wheezes in the Waldorf-
Inglorious. The legions close their ranks
And, leaning against cohorts, sleep upright.
Circuses pile against fora. High in the night
Above the bare blue-print of an empty court,
Like a lost tennis-ball, the moon regards its court,
A chess queen’s dream, spare, parqueted, formal and bright.
There’s no life without furniture.
Only a corner cordoned off and laced
By dusty cobwebs may properly be called
Right-angled; only after the musketry of applause
And “bravos” does the actor rise from the dead;
Only when the fulcrum is solidly placed
Can a person lift, by Archimedian laws,
The weight of this world. And only that body whose weight
Is balanced at right angles to the floor
Can manage to walk about and navigate.
Stifling. There’s a cockroach mob in the stadium
Of the zinc washbasin, crowding around the old
Corpse of a dried-up sponge. Turning its crown,
A bronze faucet, like Caesar’s laureled head,
Deposes upon the living and the dead
A merciless column of water in which they drown.
The little bubble-beads inside my glass
Look like the holes in cheese.
No doubt that gravity holds sway,
Just as upon a solid mass,
Over such small transparencies as these.
And its accelerating waterfall
(Thirty-two feet per sec. per sec.) refracts
As does a ray of light in human clay.
Only the stacked, white china on the stove
Could look so much like a squashed, collapsed pagoda.
Space lends itself just to repeatable things,
Roses, for instance. If you see one alone,
You instantly see two. The bright corona,
The crimson petals abuzz, acrawl with wings
Of dragonflies, of wasps and bees with stings.
Stifling. Even the shadow on the wall,
Servile and weak as it is, still mimics the rise
Of the hand that wipes the forehead’s sweat. The smell
Of old body is even clearer now
Than body’s outline. Thought loses its defined
Edges, and the frazzled mind
Goes soft in its soup-bone skull. No one is here
To set the proper focus of your eyes.
Preserve these words against a time of cold,
A day of fear : Man survives like a fish,
Stranded, beached, but intent
On adapting itself to some deep, cellular wish,
Wriggling toward bushes, forming hinged leg-struts, then
To depart (leaving a track like the scrawl of a pen)
For the interior, the heart of the continent.
Full-breasted sphinxes there are, and lions winged
Like fanged and mythic birds.
Angels in white, as well, and nymphs of the sea.
To one who shoulders the vast obscurity
Of darkness and heavy heat (may one add, grief?)
They are more cherished than the concentric, ringed
Zeroes that ripple outwards from dropped words.
Even space itself, where there’s nowhere to sit down,
Declines, like a star in its ether, its cold sky.
Yet just because shoes exist and the foot is shod
Some surface will always be there, some place to stand,
A portion of dry land.
And its brinks and beaches will be enchanted by
The soft song of the cod:
“Time is far greater than space. Space is a thing.
Whereas time is, in essence, the thought, the conscious dream
Of a thing. And life itself is a variety
Of time. The carp and bream
Are its clots and distillates. As are even more stark
And elemental things, including the sea-
Wave and the firmament of the dry land.
Including death, that punctuation mark.
At times, in that chaos, that piling up of days,
The sound of a single word rings in the ear,
Some brief, syllabic cry,
Like ‘love,’ perhaps, or possibly merely ‘hi!’
But before I can make it out, static or haze
Trouble the scanning lines that undulate
And wave like the loosened ripples of your hair.”
Man broods over his life like night above a lamp.
At certain moments a thought takes leave of one
Of the brain’s hemispheres, and slips, as a bedsheet might,
From under the restless sleeper’s body-clamp,
Revealing who-knows-what-under-the-sun.
Unquestionably, night
Is a bulky thing, but not so infinite
As to engross both lobes. By slow degrees
The africa of the brain, its europe, the asian mass of it,
As well as other prominences in its crowded seas,
Creaking on their axis, turn a wrinkled cheek
Toward the electric heron with its lightbulb of a beak.