Authors: C. K. Williams
are like anvils to them the world an
anvil they want to take whole buildings
in their arms they want
to come in the windows to run antennas
through their ducts like ramrods and women
these poor women who dream and dream of
the flower they can’t sniff it sends buds
into their brain they feel their neural
river clot with moist fingers the ganglia
hardening like ant eggs the ends
burning off
pity them these people there are no wars
for them there is no news no
summer no reason they are so humble they want
nothing they have no hands or faces
pity them at night whispering I love
you to themselves and during the day how they
walk along smiling and suffering pity
them love them they are
angels
The Long Naked Walk of the Dead
for Arthur Atkins
As long as they trample the sad smiles of guitars
the world won’t burn. The mother speaks to her daughter
and explains: it is the breath of money in the trees
that drives angels; it is the stillness from morning
to morning when the horses of life have fallen
under their traces in the street and shudder and vanish.
It is the man who meets no one who will touch us
with sharp hands that shake over the concrete
like branches. Or the songs muttering on the paths
crisscrossing the grasses. A bench leaning back.
The sweet arms of gardeners. An enemy passing
with sons and grandsons, all just soldiers.
In flesh that only moves and speaks, the players
slide out like empty trailers to the temple country.
Six hundred thousand on the mountain when it opened.
Every word of the scream, six hundred thousand faces.
The dark metal man gleaming in the talons of silence.
Halfway down in the house of suffering, it is starting.
In There
Here I am, walking along your eyelid again
toward your tear duct. Here are your eyelashes
like elephant grass and one tear
blocking the way like a boulder.
It probably takes me a long time
to figure it out, chatting with neighbors,
trying penicillin, steam baths, meditation
on the Shekinah and sonnet cycles
and then six more months blasting
with my jackhammer before I get in there
and can wander through your face, meeting you
on the sly, kissing you from this side.
I am your own personal verb now. Here I come,
“dancing,” “loving,” “making poems.”
I find a telescope
and an old astronomer
to study my own face with,
and then, well, I am dreaming behind your cheekbone
about Bolivia and tangerines and the country
and here I come again, along your eyelid, walking.
Loss
In this day and age Lord
you are like one of those poor farmers
who burns the forests off
and murders his land and then
can’t leave and goes sullen and lean
among the rusting yard junk, the scrub
and the famished stock.
Lord I have felt myself raked
into the earth like manure,
harrowed and plowed under,
but I am still enough like you
to stand on the porch
chewing a stalk or drinking
while tall weeds come up dead
and the house dogs, snapping
their chains like moths, howl
and point towards the withering
meadows at nothing.
The Hard Part
Do you remember when we dreamed about the owl
and the skeleton, and the shoe
opened and there was the angel
with his finger in the book, his smile like chocolate?
And remember? Everything that had been crushed
or burned, we changed back.
We turned the heart around
in the beginning, we closed the blossom, we let the drum go.
But you’re missing now. Every night I feel us crying
together, but it’s late —
the white bear and the lawyer
are locking the house up and where are you?
The wind walking, the rock turning over with worms
stuck to its haunches —
how will I know what loves me now
and what doesn’t? How will I forgive you?
The World’s Greatest Tricycle-Rider
The world’s greatest tricycle-rider
is in my heart, riding like a wildman,
no hands, almost upside down along
the walls and over the high curbs
and stoops, his bell rapid firing,
the sun spinning in his spokes like a flame.
But he is growing older. His feet
overshoot the pedals. His teeth set
too hard against the jolts, and I am afraid
that what I’ve kept from him is what
tightens his fingers on the rubber grips
and drives him again and again on the same block.
The Sorrow
with huge jowls that wobble with sad o
horribly sad eyes with bristles with
clothes torn tie a rag hands trembling this
burnt man in my arms won’t listen he
struggles pulls loose and is going
and I am crying again Poppa Poppa it’s me Poppa
but it’s not it’s not me I am not
someone who with these long years will
so easily retreat I am not someone after
these torments who simply cries so
I am not so unquestionably a son or
even daughter or have I face or voice
bear with me perhaps it was me who
went away perhaps I did dream it and give
birth again it doesn’t matter now I stay
in my truck now I am loaded with
fruit with cold bottles with documents
of arrest and execution Father do you
remember me? how I hid and cried to you?
how my lovely genitals were bound up?
I am too small again my voice thins my
small wrists won’t hold the weight again
what is forgiven? am I forgiven again?
The Man Who Owns Sleep
The man who owns sleep
is watching the prisoners being beaten
behind the fence.
His eye pressed to the knothole,
he sees the leather curling into smiles
and snapping, he sees the intricate geography
of ruined backs,
the faces propped
open like suitcases
in the sunlight.
Who is this man
who’s cornered the market
on sleeping?
He’s not quite finished.
He bends over with a hand on his knee
to balance him
and from the other side they see
that clear eye in the wall
watching unblinking.
They see it has slept,
prisoners and guards: it drives them
to frenzies. The whips hiccup
and shriek. Those dead already roll over
and rub their retinas into the pebbles.
The man who owns sleep has had it.
He’s tired.
Taking an ice-cream cone
from the little wagon
he yawns and licks it.
Walking away, he yawns, licking it.
Before This
we got rid of the big people
finally we took grandpa and put half
on the mack truck and half on
the bottom grandma
we locked in with her watches
mommy and daddy had to be cut apart but they
are in separate icebergs you can’t
see them under
the red lid
one place or another they are all gone
and it’s hard to remember
cars? furcoats? the office?
now all there are
are roomfuls of children sleeping as far
as you can see little mattresses and
between them socks balled up and
underwear and scuffed shoes
with their mouths open.
but how am I here? I feel
my lips move I count breaths I hear somebody
cry out
MOTHER HELP ME
somebody’s hand
touches me peacefully across boundaries
kiss? hit? die? the blankets
harden with urine the fuzz
thins holes come
HOW AM I HERE? MOTHER
HOW AM I HERE
?
Dimensions
There is a world somewhere else that is unendurable.
Those who live in it are helpless in the hands of elements,
they are like branches in the deep woods in wind
that whip their leaves off and slice the heart of the night
and sob. They are like boats bleating wearily in fog.
But here, no matter what, we know where we stand.
We know more or less what comes next. We hold out.
Sometimes a dream will shake us like little dogs, a fever
hang on so we’re not ourselves or love wring us out,
but we prevail, we certify and make sure, we go on.
There is a world that uses its soldiers and widows
for flour, its orphans for building stone, its legs for pens.
In that place, eyes are softened and harmless like God’s
and all blend in the traffic of their tragedy and pass by
like people. And sometimes one of us, losing the way,
will drift over the border and see them there, dying,
laughing, being revived. When we come home, we are half way.
Our screams heal the torn silence. We are the scars.
To Market
suppose I move a factory
in here in my head in my
breast in my left hand I’m moving
dark machines in with gear boxes
and floaters and steel cams
that turn over and start things
I’m moving in fibers through
my left nostril and trucks
under my nipples and the union
has its bathroom where I think
and the stockbroker his desk
where I love
and then if I started turning
out goods and opening
shops with glass counters and rugs
what if I said
to you this is how men live and I
want to would you believe me
and love me I have my little
lunch box and my thermos and
I walk along like one leg
on the way to work swearing
I love you and we have lunch
behind the boiler and I promise
I love you and meanwhile the oil
flowing switches steam wrenches
metal I love
you and things finish get shined
up packed in streamers
mailed and I love you
meanwhile all this while I love
you and I’m being bought pieces
of me at five dollars
and parts at ten cents and
here I am still saying I love
you under the stacks under
the windows with wires the smoke
going up I love
you I love you
What Is and Is Not
I’m a long way from that place,
but I can still hear
the impatient stamp of its hoof
near the fire, and the green clicking
of its voices and its body flowing.
At my window, the usual spirits,
the same silence. A child would see it
as my clothes hanging like killers
on the door, but I don’t, and it
doesn’t creak in the hallway for me.
It’s not death. In your face
I glimpse it. You are reaching
a hand out comfortingly
though it snarls, plunges,
and you know that the baby
won’t look up from its game
of beauty. It isn’t love or hate
or passion. It doesn’t touch us,
dream us, speak, sing or
come closer, yet we consume it.
Hood
Remember me? I was the one
in high school you were always afraid of.
I kept cigarettes in my sleeve, wore
engineer’s boots, long hair, my collar
up in back and there were always
girls with me in the hallways.
You were nothing. I had it in for you —
when I peeled rubber at the lights
you cringed like a teacher.
And when I crashed and broke both lungs
on the wheel, you were so relieved
that you stroked the hard Ford paint
like a breast and your hands shook.
On the Roof
The trouble with me is that whether I get love or not
I suffer from it. My heart always seems to be prowling
a mile ahead of me, and, by the time I get there to surround it,
it’s chewing fences in the next county, clawing
the bank-vault wall down or smashing in the window
I’d just started etching my name on with my diamond.
And that’s how come I end up on the roof. Because even if I talk
into my fist everyone still hears my voice like the ocean
in theirs, and so they solace me and I have to keep
breaking toes with my gun-boots and coming up here
to live — by myself, like an aerial, with a hand on the ledge,
one eye glued to the tin door and one to the skylight.
It Is This Way with Men
They are pounded into the earth
like nails; move an inch,
they are driven down again.
The earth is sore with them.
It is a spiny fruit
that has lost hope
of being raised and eaten.
It can only ripen and ripen.
And men, they too are wounded.
They too are sifted from their loss
and are without hope. The core
softens. The pure flesh softens
and melts. There are thorns, there
are the dark seeds, and they end.
Sleeping Over
for Dave and Mark Rothstein
There hasn’t been any rain
since I arrived. The lawns
are bleached and tonight goldenrod
and burnt grass reflect
across my walls like ponds.
After all these days
the textures and scents of my room