The Lost Lunar Baedeker (4 page)

BOOK: The Lost Lunar Baedeker
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And at a given spot

There is one

Who

Having the concentric lighting focussed precisely upon her

Prophetically blossoms in perfect putrefaction

Yet            there are cabs outside the door.

III. Magasins du Louvre

All the virgin eyes in the world are made of glass

Long lines of boxes

Of dolls

Propped against banisters

Walls and pillars

Huddled on shelves

And composite babies with arms extended

Hang from the ceiling

Beckoning

Smiling

In a profound silence

Which the shop walker left trailing behind him

When he ambled to the further end of the gallery

To annoy the shop-girl

All the virgin eyes in the world are made of glass

They alone have the effrontery to

Stare through the human soul

Seeing nothing

Between parted fringes

One cocotte wears a bowler hat and a sham camellia

And one an iridescent boa

For there are two of them

Passing

And the solicitous mouth of one is straight

The other curved to a static smile

They see the dolls

And for a moment their eyes relax

To a flicker of elements unconditionally primeval

And now averted

Seek each other's               surreptitiously

To know if the other has seen

While mine are inextricably entangled with the pattern of the carpet

As eyes are apt to be

In their shame

Having surprised a gesture that is ultimately intimate

All the virgin eyes in the world are made of glass.

Sketch of a Man on a Platform

Man of absolute physical equilibrium

You stand so straight on your legs

Every plank or clod you plant your feet on

Becomes roots for those limbs

Among the men you accrete to yourself

You are more heavy

And more light

Force being most equitably disposed

Is easiest to lift from the ground

So at the same time

Your movements

Unassailable

Savor of the airy-fairy of the ballet

The essence of a Mademoiselle Genée

Winks in the to-and-fro of your cuff-links

Your projectile nose

Has meddled in the more serious business

Of the battle-field

With the same incautious aloofness

Of intense occupation

That it snuffles the trail of the female

And the comfortable

Passing odors of love

Your genius

So much less in your brain

Than in your body

Reinforcing the hitherto negligible

Qualities

Of life

Deals so exclusively with

The vital

That it is equally happy expressing itself

Through the activity of pushing

THINGS

In the opposite direction

To that which they are lethargically willing to go

As in the amative language

Of the eyes

Fundamentally unreliable

You leave others their initial strength

Concentrating

On stretching the theoretic elastic of your conceptions

Till the extent is adequate

To the hooking on

Of any— or all

Forms of creative idiosyncracy

While the occasional snap

Of actual production

Stings the face of the public.

Virgins Plus Curtains Minus Dots

Latin Borghese

Houses hold virgins

The door's on the chain

‘Plumb streets with hearts'

‘Bore curtains with eyes'

Virgins               without dots
*

Stare                   beyond probability

See the men pass

Their hats are not ours

We                  take a walk

They are going somewhere

And they        may look everywhere

Men's eyes                 look into things

Our eyes               look out

A great deal of ourselves

We offer to the mirror

Something less to the confessional

The rest          to Time

There is so much         Time

Everything is full of it

                       Such a long time

Virgins may whisper

‘Transparent nightdresses made all of lace'

Virgins may squeak

‘My dear           I should faint'

Flutter..… flutter.… flutter.…

.…‘And then        the man—'

Wasting our giggles

For we have no dots

We have been taught

Love is a god

White              with soft wings

                        Nobody shouts

            Virgins for sale

Yet where are our coins

For buying a purchaser

Love is a god

             Marriage expensive

A secret well kept

Makes the noise of the world

Nature's arms spread wide

Making room for us

             Room for all of us

Somebody who was never

                                a virgin

Has bolted the door

Put curtains at our windows

See the men pass

They                are going somewhere

Fleshes like weeds

Sprout in the light

So much flesh in the world

                     Wanders at will

Some          behind curtains

Throbs to the night

Bait               to the stars

Spread it with gold

And you carry it home

Against your shirt front

To                  a shaded light

With the door locked

Against virgins who

Might               scratch

Babies in Hospital

I.

Small Elena

Of shrunken limbs

And ample sex

Who

Having filched

The atrophied

Woman-smile of your mother

Scatter it

On the eating unseen

Tuberculous

Inaudible hands

On the counter-pane

It might have been

Impossible

Fingers should be so long

Being so tiny

But Nature

Needing no microscope

In her laboratory

Found it just as easy

Marshalling imperceptible

Hosts

To bone of your arm

Among overlapping of lint

Attaining a dignity

Unworthy of your years

Two and a half!

II.

Hail to you

Bad little boy

Lying

In bound beauty

Of only a broken leg

And thank you

For throwing

Your bricks on the floor

For the third time

And the smack

You gave me

For the thermometer

Delightfully male

Already gallant

You smooth the mackintosh

For Elena to sit on beside you

Her fragility

Being irresistibly for you

You are very wise

Precocious coquette

Who never learnt to talk

To look at him

Before

Your semi-imbecile

Eyes shut

It is not given to each of us

To be desired.

III.

Tend

Do not touch

Apparent flowers

Of festering secret

And the fly-by-nights

Such little things

I cannot be your mother

There are already

So many ignorances

I am not guilty of.

Giovanni Franchi

The threewomen             who all walked

In           the same dress

And it had falling ferns on it

Skipped parallel

To the progress

Of Giovanni Franchi

Giovanni Franchi's wrists flicked

Flickeringly as he flacked them

His wrists explained things

Infectiously               by way of his adolescence

His adolescence was all there was of him

Whatever was left was rather awkward

His adolescence tuned to the tops of trees

Descended to the fallacious nobility

Of his first pair of trousers

They were tubular                     flapped friezily

The colour of coppered mustard

What matter

Were they not the first

No others could ever be the first again

The ferns on the flounces of the threewomen

Began fading as she thought of it

Tea-table problems for insane asylums

Are démodé

Démodé

Allow us to rely on our instincts

The threewomen was composed of three instincts

Each sniffing divergently directed draughts

The first instinct             first again             may

renascent gods save us from the enigmatic

penetralia of Firstness

Was to be faithful to a man                    first

The second            to be loyal to herself first

She would have to find which self first

The third which might as well have been first

Was to find out              how many toes         the

philosopher Giovanni Bapini had                  first

Giovanni Franchi hooligan-faced and latin-born

You imagine what he looked like

Looked it           as nearly as he could          as the

philosopher looked

His articulations were excellent

Still               where Giovanni Bapini was cymophanous

Giovanni Franchi was merely pale

His acolytian sincerity

The sensitive down among his freckles

Fell in with the patriotic souls of flags

Red white and green flags               filliping piazzas

When the “National Idea” arrived on the Milan Express

He scuttled winsomely

To its distribution from a puffer

For the declaration of War

Continually cutting off an angle from Paszkowski's

Through plate-glass swingings

To look as busy bodily

As the philosopher's brain was

As Giovanni Bapini importuned mobs

From monumental gums

To the sparky detritus

From the hurried cigarette

Of his disciple

Whose papa and mama kept a trattoria

Audaciously squatting right opposite the Pitti Palace

The Pitti Palace however stolid                     could hardly help noticing

Being an aristocrat it went on looking

As plainly piled up as ever

The Pitti Palace has never been known to mention the trattoria

Or mention Giovanni Franchi

Sitting in it

At a book

It could not see from that distance

Giovanni watching the munchers supporting his parents

With an eye

On assuring himself

Of their sufficient impression

By erudition

He was so young

That explains so much

No book ever explained what to be young is

But they look so much more important for that

Giovanni was in continuous exstacy

Induced by the imposing look of them

When Giovanni Bapini spoke of them

He could not tell

How completely more precious

Would be such knowledge

As how many toes the philosopher Giovanni Bapini had

Now the threewomen

For pity's sake

Let us think of her as she               to save time

Seeing the minor Giovanni

Sitting at the major Giovanni's feet

Made sure he must be counting his toes

All to the contrary             he was picking the philosopher's brains

Happy in the security that when he had done

He would still be youthful enough to sort out his own

He listened at the elder's lips

That taught him of earthquakes and women

Of women ———————

His manners were abominable

He would kill a woman

Quite inconspicuously it is true

And neglect to attend her funeral

I mean the older man

And what he told

Giovanni Franchi

About those pernicious persons

Was so extremely good for him

It entirely spoilt his first love-affair

To such an extent      it never came off

We have read of

Trattoria            meaning eating-house

Piazzas                or squares

The Pitti Palace                enormous

And Paszkowski's    for beer

All are in Firenze

Firenze is Florence

Some think it is a woman with flowers in her hair

But NO             it is a city with stones on the streets

Giovanni Bapini often said

Everybody in Firenze knows me

And everybody did

Excepting—— That is               she didn't

She never knew what he was

Or how he was himself

Yet she uniquely was the one

To speculate            upon the number of his toes

The days growing longer

Fulfilling her of curiosity

She made a moth's-net

Of metaphor and miracles

And on the incandescent breath of civilizations

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