Read This Blue : Poems (9781466875074) Online
Authors: Maureen N. McLane
Somewhere over yesterday's
rainbow the clouds compact
of mysteries rise
and billow, ample sheets
in the blue. The line
is an orienting
thing. The horizon
the plumb line the halyard
we tightened for good
sailing. How we want
the world rigged tight
yet not rigged against
us. In Texas Montana
Dakota they know it
the cattle rounded
up for decades
into a genre near dead
as the passenger
pigeons that famously
darkened the sky
V
HOROSCOPE
Again the white blanket
icicles pierce.
The fierce teeth
of steel-framed snowshoes
bite the trail open.
Where the hardwoods stand
and rarely bend
the wind blows hard
an explosion of snow
like flour dusting
the baker in a shop
long since shuttered.
In this our post-shame century
we will reclaim
the old nouns
unembarrassed.
If it rains
we'll say oh
there's rain.
If she falls
out of love
with you you'll carry
your love on a gold plate
to the forest and bury it
in the Indian graveyard.
Pioneers do not
only despoil.
The sweet knees
of oxen have pressed
a path for me.
A lone chickadee
undaunted thing
sings in the snow.
Flakes appear
as if out of air
but surely they come
from somewhere
bearing what news
from the troposphere.
The sky's shifted
and Capricorns abandon
themselves to a Sagittarian
line. I like
this weird axis.
In 23,000 years
it will become again
the same sky
the Babylonians scanned.
MOSS LAKE
I eat this silence
like bread.
The white lake
replaces my head.
I am cold & calm
as the untracked snows.
SKYWATCH
a brace of stars
a shivered benediction
of moon
Latin splashes
the firmament
as if it were universal
as the Milky Way
scanned by Chinese poets
& Egyptian astrologers
how not to fall
in the permanent black
unrelieved
except tonight
by this light
QUIET CAR
the willow's lost its hair
the snow's receded almost everywhere
and you are riding in the quiet car
the branches mostly bare
but the thin icesheets that cracked and chimed the pond
                           have vanished into water
while you are riding in the quiet car
walking around the reservoir
              canvasbacks gliding on the water
the path two miles, perhaps a bit more
while you are riding in the quiet car
soon I will climb in the old blue car
and drive to Back Bay, not too far
from you my love now riding in the quiet car
SONG
Love's in Gloucester
setting a lobster pot
in her mind.
Love's in Gloucester
feeling the wind's effect
on inner and outer shoreline.
Love's in Gloucester
where the whalers once sailed
and the cod's collapsed
but the sea the sea
calls to whoever
has ears for what's leaving and left.
HER SUMMERMINDEDNESS
Her summermindedness
embraces all full green things
& banishes nothing.
The dragonfly helicoptering
over the pond the deerflies
harassing the swimmers
& the leech on the leg linger forever.
Everything a scale
of clear intervals
no roadkill can mar.
The baby spiny thing
rubbing itself against
or was it scratching
the bark of a thin tree
by the roadside.
The speechless waddle
caught in the headlights
of late cars by the lake
moonlit and perfect
for canoeing in her summer mind.
O porcupine
spine in the mind
even a blithe summer mind
swerves from your shine
LOCAL HABITATION
The wildflowers
of New Hampshire
have yet to earn their names.
Flagrant apparent
they litter the meadow
casual sprays in patches
on the edges the gravel
almost reaches.
Sure there are
daisies and clover
beyond that
things remain
unspecified.
It seems rude
to pry. Elsewhere
it's called good
old simple asking.
Here wonder's
best kept secret.
Don't leak
your want
I've learned
not a native
but not wild enough
to resist
what constricts
a field
of uncut flowers.
THE FACT OF A MEADOW
North of Boston
roads diverge.
Downed birches
clog the Nubanusit.
A meadow made
a lightning field
by flashing flies
reclaims its green
each morning.
What the clouds now pass
you will not pass.
Those flies
were beetles.
Pine needles grow
in fascicles sewn
like Dickinson's poems.
A stone wall
stumbled on
stubs the mind
into an old acheâ
what did you make
what did you make
of all diminished things
MÃRCHEN
The timbering done
the afternoon rings out
an aftermath.
What euphemism
would you not choose
in this multi-use
forest? I've left
crumbs for returning
the way back
marked by tiretracks,
lopped branches.
I've left words
in woods the thrushes
sing in refusing
the extinction
of the day. Pines
guard the path.
The way we come
back will not
be this way.
ELSEWHERE
The beer was nice
but not what we wanted
nor the rain nor the century
nor the actual children
we had. Let's not talk
about the parents. The forsythia
yellowed the hedges.
So there
sd the spring.
So what
the jay shrieked. A concussion
of air stripped the inner ear
vessels clean but for the gist
we needed to hear by.
A siren sang this evening's aria
after a basketball'd
recitative. In other places
other people thought through
different birds. They eat
dog meat there. We refrain
from outright condemnation.
Everywhere we know
the sun is setting
in an absolute sky.
ENOUGH WITH THE SWAN SONG
The woods are words
the turkeys spell
with their feet
their pine-needled path
a wild way
we won't take.
The sheep that bleats
in the night escapes
a starry declivity
we must be rescued from.
The rocks rest
below mosses, the pines
outtop the hemlock.
Flat ferns fan the wind
that will not break
this heat. I am lonely
with the sculpted edges
of fat leaves on low shrubs.
Ingrate soloist the chorus
is just beginning
and that bodacious robin
doesn't care if you join.
ENVOI
yesterday
I sat on a swing
and swung
will I do this for ever
will I never
not be a child
the grave
my last crib
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I noticed to-day under a tree
nobody was singing to me
but oh there was singing
and there was that one tree
Acknowledgments
Thanks to the editors and publishers of the following journals and forums, where some of these poems first appeared, sometimes in different form: The Academy of American Poets “Poem-A-Day” series,
The American Reader, The Cortland Review, Grey, The Kenyon Review, Literary Imagination, The New Yorker, nonsite.org, The Paris Review, Plume, Poetry, Port, Psychology Tomorrow Magazine, Shearsman,
and
The Wallace Stevens Journal.
My deepest gratitude as well to the Liguria Study Center for the Arts and Humanities / The Bogliasco Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and Yaddo, which granted residencies that supported the writing of this book. Their air is everywhere here.
To Jeff Clark, again. To Christopher Richards.
And to Eric William Carroll, of the blue line.
To Jonathan Galassi, compadre.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
For L:
mio disio però non cangia il verde.
Also by Maureen N. McLane
Same Life
World Enough
My Poets
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
18 West 18th Street, New York 10011
Copyright © 2014 by Maureen N. McLane
All rights reserved
First edition, 2014
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eISBN 9781466875074
First eBook edition: June 2014