Authors: Jack Gilbert
His spirit dances the long ago, and later.
Starlight on a country road in worn-out
western Pennsylvania. The smell of weeds
and rusting iron. And gladness.
His spirit welcomes the Italian New Year’s
in a hill town filled with the music
of glass crashing everywhere in the cobbled
streets. Champagne and the first kisses.
Too shy to look at each other and no language
between them. He dances alone, the dance
of after that. Now they sit amid the heavy
Roman sunlight and talk of the people
they are married to now. He secretly
dances the waltz she was in her astonishing
beauty, drinking wine and laughing, the window
behind her filled with winter rain.
Our heart wanders lost in the dark woods.
Our dream wrestles in the castle of doubt.
But there’s music in us. Hope is pushed down
but the angel flies up again taking us with her.
The summer mornings begin inch by inch
while we sleep, and walk with us later
as long-legged beauty through
the dirty streets. It is no surprise
that danger and suffering surround us.
What astonishes is the singing.
We know the horses are there in the dark
meadow because we can smell them,
can hear them breathing.
Our spirit persists like a man struggling
through the frozen valley
who suddenly smells flowers
and realizes the snow is melting
out of sight on top of the mountain,
knows that spring has begun.
For Michiko
The brain is dead and the body is
no longer infected by the spirit.
Now it is just machines talking
to the machine. Helping it back
to its old, pure journey.
We are given the trees so we can know
what God looks like. And rivers
so we might understand Him. We are allowed
women so we can get into bed with the Lord,
however partial and momentary that is.
The passion, and then we are single again
while the dark goes on. He lived
in the Massachusetts woods for two years.
Went out naked among the summer pines
at midnight when the moon would allow it.
He watched the aspens when the afternoon breeze
was at them. And listened to rain
on the butternut tree near his window.
But when he finally left, they did not care.
The difficult garden he was midwife to
was indifferent. The eight wild birds
he fed through both winters, when the snow
was starving them, forgot him immediately.
And the three women he ate of and entered
utterly then and before, who were his New World
as immensity and landfall, are now only friends
or dead. What we are given is taken away,
but we manage to keep it secretly.
We lose everything, but make harvest
of the consequence it was to us. Memory
builds this kingdom from the fragments
and approximation. We are gleaners who fill
the barn for the winter that comes on.
It is burden enough that death lies on all sides,
that your old kimono is still locked in my closet.
Now I wonder what would happen if my life did
catch on fire again. Would I break in half,
part of me a storm and part like ice in a silver bowl?
I lie awake remembering the birds of Kyoto
calling
No No,
unh unh.
No No,
unh unh. And you
saying yes all night. You said yes when I woke you
again in the dawn. And even disgracefully
at lunchtime. Until all the men at the small inn
roamed about, hoping to see whoever that voice was.
The Buddha tells us we should clear every obstacle
out of the way. “If you meet your mother in the path,
kill her. If the Buddha gets in the way, kill him.”
But my spirit sings like the perishing cicadas
while I sit in the back yard hitting an old pot.
The spirit opens as life closes down.
Tries to frame the size of whatever God is.
Finds that dying makes us visible.
Realizes we must get to the loin of that
before time is over. The part of which
we are the wall around. Not the good or evil,
neither death nor afterlife but the importance
of what we contain meanwhile. (He walks along
remembering, biting into beauty,
the heart eating into the naked spirit.)
The body is a major nation, the mind is a gift.
Together they define substantiality.
The spirit can know the Lord as a flavor
rather than power. The soul is ambitious
for what is invisible. Hungers for a sacrament
that is both spirit and flesh. And neither.
They piled the bound angels with the barley
in the threshing ring and drove the cow
and donkeys over them all day. Threw the mix
into the wind from the sea to separate
the blond grain from the gold of what
had been. It burned in the luminous air.
When the night came, the mound of chaff
was almost higher than the farmhouse. But there
were only eight sacks of the other.
Walked around Bologna at three in the morning.
Beautiful, arcaded, deserted piazza and winter rain.
Got the train at five of four. Slept badly
in a hot compartment, curled up on my half
of the seat. No real dawn. Beginning to see
a little into the mist. The looming mountain
brindled with snow. The higher pines crusted.
Oyster-white behind them. The train running along
a river between the hills. Mostly apple orchards
with occasionally pale apples still near the top.
Also vineyards. No feeling of Italy here.
No sense of the Umbrian peasants farming
with their white ocean. A tractor instead
putting out compost near an orchard with rotten
red squash gourds. Later another man standing
in the river with a long-handled net, looking
steadily down. Then the commuter line between
Bolzano and Merano. Changing pants on the toilet.
Checked my bag in the station and walked
to the center of the town. Hotels everywhere.
Mountain scenery in the summer, skiing in winter.
Went into the CIT and asked about Pound. (Because
the address had been left at home in Perugia.)
They said he was not there anymore. Went to
the tourist office. Herr Herschel said, yes, Pound
was still there. I came out chuckling, as though
I had been sly. Then, waiting for the first bus
to Tirolo. It leaves at ten-thirty. It’s supposed
to be a half hour’s walk from there.
He wakes up in the silence of the winter woods,
the silence of birds not singing, knowing he will
not hear his voice all day. He remembers what
the brown owl sounded like while he was sleeping.
The man wakes in the frigid morning thinking
about women. Not with desire so much as with a sense
of what is not. The January silence is the sound
of his feet in the snow, a squirrel scolding,
or the scraping calls of a single blue jay.
Something of him dances there, apart and gravely mute.
Many days in the woods he wonders what it is
that he has for so long hunted down. We go hand
in hand, he thinks, into the dark pleasure,
but we are rewarded alone, just as we are married
into aloneness. He walks the paths doing the strange
mathematics of the brain, multiplying the spirit.
He thinks of caressing her feet as she kept dying.
For the last four hours, watching her gradually stop
as the hospital slept. Remembers the stunning
coldness of her head when he kissed her just after.
There is light or more light, darkness and less darkness.
It is, he decides, a quality without definition.
How strange to discover that one lives with the heart
as one lives with a wife. Even after many years,
nobody knows what she is like. The heart has
a life of its own. It gets free of us, escapes,
is ambitiously unfaithful. Dies out unaccountably
after eight years, blooms unnecessarily and too late.
Like the arbitrary silence in the white woods,
leaving tracks in the snow he cannot recognize.
She is never dead when he meets her.
They eat noodles for breakfast as usual.
For eleven years he thought it was the river
at the bottom of his mind dreaming.
Now he knows she is living inside him,
as the wind is sometimes visible
in the trees. As the roses and rhubarb
are in the garden and then not.
Her ashes are by the sea in Kamakura.
Her face and hair and sweet body still
in the old villa on a mountain where
she lived the whole summer. They slept
on the floor for eleven years.
But now she comes less and less.
I remember how I’d lie on my roof
listening to the fat violinist
below in the sleeping village
play Schubert so badly, so well.
The boat of his heart is tethered to the ancient
stone bridges. Beached on the Pacific hills with
thick evening fog flooding whitely over the ridge.
Running in front of the Provençal summer. Drowned
as a secret under the broad Monongahela River.
Forever richly laden with Oak Street and Umbria.
“There be monsters,” they warn in the blank spaces
of the old maps. But the real danger is the ocean’s
insufficiency, the senseless repetition throughout
the empty waters. Calm and storms and calm again.
Too impoverished for the human. We come to know
ourselves as immense continents and archipelagoes
of endless bounty. He waits now in the hold
of a wooden ship. Becalmed, maybe standing to.
Bobbing, rocking softly. The cargo of ghosts
and angels all around. The wraiths, surprisingly,
singing with the clear voices of young boys.
The angels clapping the rhythm. As he watches
for morning, for the dark to give way and show
his landfall, the new country, his native land.
For Kerry O’Keefe
She came into his life like arriving halfway
through a novel, with bits of two earlier lives
snagged in her. She was the daughter of
a deputy attorney general. And when
that crashed she tried singing and got married.
Now she is in trouble again, leaving soup
on his porch before really knowing him.
Saying she heard he had a bad cold, and besides
it was a tough winter. (It was like
his first wife who went to the department store
and bought a brass bed, getting a salesman
his size to lie down so she could see if it fit.
When she still knew him only at a distance.)
But when people grow up, they should know better.
You can’t call it romance when she already had
two children. He had decided never again to get
involved with love. Now everything
has gone wrong. She doesn’t just sing softly
up to his window. You can see them in the dark
upstairs, him singing badly and her not minding.
Gradually we realize what is felt is not so important
(however lovely or cruel) as what the feeling contains.
Not what happens to us in childhood, but what was
inside what happened. Ken Kesey sitting in the woods,
beyond his fence of whitewashed motorcycles, said when
he was writing on acid he was not writing about it.
He used what he wrote as blazes to find his way back
to what he knew then. Poetry registers
feelings, delights and passion, but the best searches
out what is beyond pleasure, is outside process.
Not the passion so much as what the fervor can be
an ingress to. Poetry fishes us to find a world
part by part, as the photograph interrupts the flux
to give us time to see each thing separate and enough.
The poem chooses part of our endless flowing forward
to know its merit with attention.
I can’t remember her name.
It’s not as though I’ve been in bed
with that many women.
The truth is I can’t even remember
her face. I kind of know how strong
her thighs were, and her beauty.
But what I won’t forget
is the way she tore open
the barbecued chicken with her hands,
and wiped the grease on her breasts.
When he wakes up, a weak sun is just rising
over the side of the valley. It is eight
degrees below zero in the house.
He builds a fire and makes tea. Puts out seeds
for the birds and examines the tracks
in fresh snow, still trying to learn
what lives here. He is writing a poem
when his friend calls. She asks what
he plans to do today. To write some
letters, he tells her (because he is falling
behind in his project of writing one
every day for a month).
She tells him how many letters famous poets
write each day. Says she doesn’t mean
that as criticism. After they hang up,
he stands looking at the unanswered mail
heaped high on the table. Gets back
in bed and starts reworking his poem.