Oblivion Banjo: The Poetry of Charles Wright
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The selected works of one of our finest American poets
The thread that dangles us
between a dark and a darker dark,
Is luminous, sure, but smooth sided.
Don’t touch it here, and don’t touch it there.
Don’t touch it, in fact, anywhere—
Let it dangle and hold us hard, let it flash and swing.
—from “Scar Tissue”
Over the course of his work—more than twenty books in total—Charles Wright has built “one of the truly distinctive bodies of poetry created in the second half of the twentieth century” (David Young, Contemporary Poets). Oblivion Banjo, a capacious new selection spanning his decades-long career, showcases the central themes of Wright’s poetry: “language, landscape, and the idea of God.” No matter the precise subject of each poem, on display here is a vast and rich interior life, a mind wrestling with the tenuous relationship between the ways we describe the world and its reality.
The recipient of almost every honor in poetry—the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Bollingen Prize, to name a few—and a former poet laureate of the United States, Wright is an essential voice in American letters. Oblivion Banjo is the perfect distillation of his inimitable career—for devout fans and newcomers alike.
Charles Wright
Charles Wright is the United States Poet Laureate. His poetry collections include Country Music, Black Zodiac, Chickamauga, Bye-and-Bye: Selected Later Poems, Sestets, and Caribou. He is a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the National Book Award, the Griffin Poetry Prize, and the 2013 Bollingen Prize for American Poetry. Born in Pickwick Dam, Tennessee in 1935, he currently lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.
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Oblivion Banjo - Charles Wright
FROM
HARD FREIGHT
(1973)
Homage to Ezra Pound
Past San Sebastiano, past
The Ogni Santi and San Trovaso, down
The Zattere and left
Across the tiered bridge to where
—Off to the right, half-hidden—
The Old Dogana burns in the spring sun:
This is how you arrive.
This is the street where Pound lives,
A cul-de-sac
Of rheumy corners and cracked stone,
At whose approach the waters
Assemble, the gulls cry out;
In here—unspeaking, unturned—he waits,
Sifting the cold affections of the blood.
Others have led the way,
Vanishing in their sleep, their beds
Unmade, the sheets still damp
From what has set them apart—
Cancer or bad lungs, the wrack
Of advancing age, the dull
Incense of suicide …
And he has survived,
Or refused to follow, and now
Walks in the slow strobe of the sunlight,
Or sits in his muffled rooms,
Wondering where it went bad,
And leans to the signal, the low
Rustle of wings, the splash of an oar.
Today is one of those days
One swears is a prophesy:
The air explicit and moist,
As though filled with unanswered prayers;
The twilight, starting to slide
Its sooty fingers along the trees;
And you, Pound,
Awash in the wrong life,
Cut loose upon the lagoon (the wind
Off-shore, and gaining), the tide going out …
Here is your caul and caustic,
Here is your garment,
Cold-blooded father of light—
Rise and be whole again.
VENICE
Homage to Arthur Rimbaud
Laying our eggs like moths
In the cold cracks of your eyes,
Brushing your hands with our dark wings
—Desperate to attempt
An entrance, to touch that light
Which buoys you like a flame,
That it might warm our own lives—,
We cluster about your death
As though it were reachable.
For almost a hundred years
We’ve gathered outside your legend (and been afraid
Of what such brilliance affords;
And knew the while you were risen, your flight
Pneumatic and pure, invisible as a fever;
And knew the flight was forever,
Leaving us what we deserve:
Syllables, flowers, black ice;
The exit, the split cocoon …
CHARLEVILLE
Homage to Baron Corvo
Of all the poses, of all the roles,
This is the one I keep: you pass
On the canal, your pope’s robes
Aflame in a secret light, the four
Oars of your gondola white
As moth wings in the broken dark,
The quail-eyed fisher-boys
Sliding the craft like a coffin out to sea;
The air grows hard; the boat’s wake
Settles behind you like a wasted breath.
(For months, Corvo, you floated through my sleep
As I tried to track you down:
That winter you lived in a doorway;
The days and nights on these back canals
You spent in a musty blanket,
Your boat both bed and refuge—
And writing always
The book, the indescribable letters …
Was it the vengeance only
That kept you alive, the ripe corkscrew
Twisted and deep in the bottle’s throat?
One afternoon—in the late spring—I went
To San Michele, to see
The sealed drawer that holds your name,
To take you flowers, as one
Is moved to do for the dead, and found
Not even a vase to put them in.
Leaving, I spread them on the lagoon,
Ungraftable shoots of blood. There is, you said,
A collusion of things in this world …)
And so you escape. What books there are,
Old hustler, will never exhume you,
Nor places you stayed.
Hadrian, Nicholas Crabbe, you hide
Where the dust hides now,
Your con with its last trick turned,
Stone nightmare come round again—
Fadeout: your boat, Baron, edges
Toward the horizon, a sky where toads,
Their eyes new fire,
Alone at the landings blink and blink.
VENICE
Homage to X
The red earth, the light diffuse
In the flat-leaved limbs of the trees;
A cold, perpetual rain
As though from a heaving breast;
O loved ones, O angels …
The thing, as always, begins
In transit, the water infusion
Oily and phosphorescent—
The vine is a blue light,
The cup is a star.
In the dream you will see a city,
Foreign and repetitious,
The plants unspeakably green;
That is of no concern; your job
Is the dust, the belly-relinquishing dust.
It’s the day before yesterday,
It’s the other side of the sky:
The body that bears your number
Will not be new, will not be your own
And will not remember your name.
PRAGUE / PRAGUE - STRASHNITZ
The New Poem
It will not resemble the sea.
It will not have dirt on its thick hands.
It will not be part of the weather.
It will not reveal its name.
It will not have dreams you can count on.
It will not be photogenic.
It will not attend our sorrow.
It will not console our children.
It will not be able to help us.
Portrait of the Poet in Abraham von Werdt’s Dream
Outside, the Venice skyline, and stars
Half-seen through an opened window;
Inside, it’s the Renaissance,
The men in hose,
The furnishings elegant, but spare;
A griffin rears in the archway;
An eagle dives from the ceiling;
And over the far wall—like Dürer’s—
Two cherubs support the three
Disordered initials of my signature.
Paper is stacked in neat piles, as I
First drew them; square blocks of type, their beds
Tilted and raised, their letters reversed,
Glisten among the shadows;
Two men in the foreground work
A press, inking and setting; a third
Is washing his hands, kneeling
In front of a tub; a fourth, his right arm
Extended, adjusts the unused type;
A fifth is correcting proof.
Alone in an alcove, a sixth man, unnoticed
And unfamiliar, his strange clothes
Centuries out of date, is writing, his back turned
To what I tried to record.
The lines, a spidery darkness, move
Across the page. Now
He looks this way. And now he rises
—XYZ, his mouth says, XYZ—,
Thrusting the paper into my hands.
These words are the words he has written.
Chinoiserie
Why not? The mouths of the ginger blooms slide open,
The willows drag their knuckles across the earth;
Each year has its fields that no one tends.
Our days, unlike the long gasps of the wind,
Stay half in love with the rushes, and half with the water reeds.
Outside the body, all things are encumbrances.
One Two Three
A shift in the wind the darkness
Beading about your eyelids
The sour pull of the blood
Everything works against you
The way the evening comes down
Its trellises one rose at a time
The watery knots of light
That lap at your memory
The way you thought of your life once
An endless falling of seeds
Already places exist
Which cannot reshelter you
Hands you have clasped for the last time
Familiar mirrors remain
That will not contain your face
Words you have uttered
That will not remember your tongue
The sofas that held your sleep
Gradually rise to assume
Their untouched shapes and their dreams
The wave will deliver you
Your arms thrown out like driftwood the shore
Eroding away at your touch
Your fingers ingrained in its loose skin
The idea of absence
Sprouting like grass from your side
Your autobiography
Completed no less than what
Always you claimed it would be the stone
That no one will roll away
Slides of Verona
1. Here where Catullus sat like snow
Over the Adige the blooms drift
West on the west-drifting wind
2. Cangrande mellifluous ghost sails
His stone boat above the yard
3. St George and Trebizond each
Elsewhere still hold their poses still burn
4. Death with its long tongue licks
Mastino’s hand affection he thinks
Such sweetness such loyalty
5. Here comes Whatever Will Come
His shoulders hunched under lost baggage
6. Two men their necks broken hang
Opposite where the hill once was
And that’s where the rainbow ends
7. The star of the jasmine plant
Who follows you now who leads
8. The great gates like wings unfold
The angel gives him a push
The rosaries click like locks
9. White glove immaculate touch
How cold you are how quiet
Grace
Its hair is a fine weed,
Matted, where something has lain,
Or fallen repeatedly:
Its arms are rivers that sink
Suddenly under the earth,
Elbow and wristbone: cold sleeve:
Its face is a long soliloquy,
A language of numerals,
Impossible to erase.
Negatives
This is the light we dream in,
The milk light of midnight, the full moon
Reversing the balance like shapes on a negative:
The chalk hills, the spectral sky,
The black rose in flame,
Its odors and glittery hooks
Waiting for something to snag.
The mulberries wink like dimes;
Fat sheep, the mesquite and chaparral
Graze at their own sweet speed,
The earth white sugar;
Two miles below, and out,
The surf has nothing to add.
—Is this what awaits us, amorphous
Cobalt and zinc, a wide tide
Of brilliance we cannot define
Or use, and leafless, without guilt;
No guidelines or flutter, no
Cadence to pinpoint, no no?
Silence. As though the doorway behind
Us were liquid, were black water;
As though we might enter; as though
The ferry were there,
Ready to take us across,
—Remembering now, unwatermarked—
The blackout like scarves in our new hair.
Dog Creek Mainline
Dog Creek: cat track and bird splay,
Spindrift and windfall; woodrot;
Odor of muscadine, the blue creep
Of kingsnake and copperhead;
Nightweed; frog spit and floating heart,
Backwash and snag pool: Dog Creek
Starts in the leaf reach and shoal run of the blood;
Starts in the falling light just back
Of the fingertips; starts
Forever in the black throat
You ask redemption of, in wants
You waken to, the odd door:
Its sky, old empty valise,
Stands open, departure in mind; its three streets,
Y-shaped and brown,
Go up the hills like a fever;
Its houses link and deploy
—This ointment, false flesh in another color.
Five cutouts, five silhouettes
Against the American twilight; the year
Is 1941; remembered names
—Rosendale, Perry and Smith—
Rise like dust in the deaf air;
The tops spin, the poison swells in the arm:
The trees in their jade death-suits,
The birds with their opal feet,
Shimmer and weave on the shoreline;
The moths, like forget-me-nots, blow
Up from the earth, their wet teeth
Breaking the dark, the raw grain;
The lake in its cradle hums
The old songs: out of its ooze, their heads
Like tomahawks, the turtles ascend
And settle back, leaving their chill breath
In blisters along the bank;
Locked in their wide drawer, the pike lie still as knives.
Hard freight. It’s hard freight
From Ducktown to Copper Hill, from Six
To Piled High: Dog Creek is on this line,
Indigent spur; cross-tie by cross-tie it takes
You back, the red wind
Caught at your neck like a prize:
(The heart is a hieroglyph;
The fingers, like praying mantises, poise
Over what they have once loved;
The ear, cold cave, is an absence,
Tapping its own thin wires;
The eye turns in on itself.
The tongue is a white water.
In its slick ceremonies the light
Gathers, and is refracted, and moves
Outward, over the lips,
Over the dry skin of the world.
The tongue is a white water.)
Blackwater Mountain
That time of evening, weightless and disparate,
When the loon cries, when the small bass
Jostle the lake’s reflections, when
The green of the oak begins
To open its robes to the dark, the green
Of water to offer itself to the flames,
When lily and lily pad
Husband the last light
Which flares like a white disease, then disappears:
This is what I remember. And this:
The slap of the jacklight on the cove;
The freeze-frame of ducks
Below us; your shots; the wounded flop
And skid of one bird to the thick brush;
The moon of your face in the fire’s glow;
The cold; the darkness. Young,
Wanting approval, what else could I do?
And did, for two hours, waist-deep in the lake,
The thicket as black as death,
Without success or reprieve, try.
The stars over Blackwater Mountain
Still dangle and flash like hooks, and ducks
Coast on the evening water;
The foliage is like applause.
I stand where we stood before and aim
My flashlight down to the lake. A black duck
Explodes to my right, hangs, and is gone.
He shows me the way to you;
He shows me the way to a different fire
Where you, black moon, warm your hands.
Sky Valley Rider
Same place, same auto-da-fé:
Late August, the air replete, the leaves
Grotesque in their limp splendor,
The dust like guilt on the window sills,
On the pressed pants of suits
Hung like meat on their black hooks:
I walked these roads once, two steps
Behind my own life, my pockets stuffed with receipts
For goods I’d never asked for:
Complacency, blind regret; belief;
Compassion I recognized in the left palm;
Respect, slick stick, in the right:
One I have squandered, one
I have sloughed like a cracked skin; the others,
Small charms against an eventual present,
I keep in the camphor box
Beside my handkerchiefs, the slow roll
Of how I’ll unravel, signatures.
The tinkly hymns, the wrong songs:
This one’s for you, 15, lost
On the wide waters that circle beneath the earth;
You touched me once, but not now,
Your fingers like blue streamers, the stump
Of your hand, perhaps, in time to that music still:
Down by the haying shed, the white pines
Commence with their broomy sounds;
The orchard, the skeletal trunks on Anne’s Ridge
—Stone and stone-colored cloud—
Gather the light and hold fast;
Two thousand acres of loneliness:
Leaf over leaf, the green sky:
Sycamore, black gum, oak, ash;
Wind-scythe at work in the far fields;
In the near, plum-flame of larkspur:
Whatever has been, remains—
Fox fire, pale semaphore in the skull’s night.
The past, wrecked accordion, plays on, its one tune
My song, its one breath my breath,
The square root, the indivisible cipher …
Northanger Ridge
Half-bridge over nothingness,
White sky of the palette knife; blot orange,
Vertical blacks; blue, birdlike,
Drifting up from the next life,
The heat-waves, like consolation, wince—
One cloud, like a trunk, stays shut
Above the horizon; off to the left, dream-wires,
Hill-snout like a crocodile’s.
Or so I remember it,
Their clenched teeth in their clenched mouths,
Their voices like shards of light,
Brittle, unnecessary.
Ruined shoes, roots, the cabinet of lost things:
This is the same story,
Its lips in flame, its throat a dark water,
The page stripped of its meaning.
Sunday, and Father Dog is turned loose:
Up the long road the children’s feet
Snick in the dust like raindrops; the wind
Excuses itself and backs off; inside, heat
Lies like a hand on each head;
Slither and cough. Now Father Dog
Addles our misconceptions, points, preens,
His finger a white flag, run up, run down.
Bow-wow and arf, the Great Light;
O, and the Great Yes, and the Great No;
Redemption, the cold kiss of release,
&c.; sentences, sentences.
(Meanwhile, docile as shadows, they stare
From their four corners, looks set:
No glitter escapes
This evangelical masonry.)
Candleflame; vigil and waterflow:
Like dust in the night the prayers rise:
From 6 to 6, under the sick Christ,
The children talk to the nothingness,
Crossrack and wound; the dark room
Burns like a coal, goes
Ash to the touch, ash to the tongue’s tip;
Blood turns in the wheel:
Something drops from the leaves; the drugged moon
Twists and turns in its sheets; sweet breath
In a dry corner, the black widow reknits her dream.
Salvation again declines,
And sleeps like a skull in the hard ground,
Nothing for ears, nothing for eyes;
It sleeps as it’s always slept, without
Shadow, waiting for nothing.
BIBLE CAMP, 1949
Primogeniture
The door to the book is closed;
The window which gives on the turned earth is closed;
The highway is closed;
Closed, too, are the waters, their lips sealed;
The door to the grass is closed.
Only the chute stays open,
The ruined chute, entering heaven—
Toehold and handhold, the wind like an accident,
The rain like mosquitoes inside your hair,
You stall still, you suffer it not.
—Rose of the afterlife, black mulch we breathe,
Devolve and restore, raise up:
Fireblight and dead bud; rust; spot;
Sore skin and shot hole:
Rechannel these tissues, hold these hands.
Nightdream
Each day is an iceberg,
Dragging its chill paunch underfoot;
Each night is a tree to hang from,
The wooden knife, the mud rope
You scratch your initials on—
Panoply, panoply.
Up and up from his green grave, your father
Wheels in the wind, split scrap of smoke;
Under him stretch, in one file, Bob’s Valley, Bald Knob,
The infinite rectitude
Of all that is past: Ouachita,
Ocoee, the slow slide of the Arkansas.
Listen, the old roads are taking flight;
Like bits of string, they, too,
Rise in the pendulous sky,
Whispering, whispering:
Echo has turned a deaf ear,
The wayside is full of leaves.
Your mother floats from her bed
In slow-motion, her loose gown like a fog
Approaching, offering
Meat; across the room, a hand
Again and again
Rises and falls back, clenching, unclenching.
The chambers you’ve reached, the stones touched,
All stall and worm to a dot;
Sirens drain through the night; lights
Flick and release; the fields, the wet stumps,
Shed their hair and retire;
The bedroom becomes a rose:
(In Kingsport, beneath the trees,
A Captain is singing Dixie; sons
Dance in their gold suits, clapping their hands;
And mothers and fathers, each
In a soft hat, fill
With dust-dolls their long boxes.)
Congenital
Here is where it begins here
In the hawk-light in the quiet
The blue of the shag spruce
Lumescent
night-rinsed and grand
It ends in the afterdamp the rails
Shinned the saltlamps unworkable
It ends in anatomy
In limp wheels in a wisp of skin
—These hands are my father’s hands these eyes
Excessively veined his eyes
Unstill ever-turning
The water the same song and the touch
Clinchfield Station
The road unwinds like a bandage.
These are the benchmarks:
A letter from Yucatan, a ball,
The chairs of the underlife.
Descent is a fact of speech,
A question of need—lampblack, cold-drill,
A glint in the residue:
Dante explained it, how
It bottoms out, becoming a threshold,
The light like a damp confetti,
The wind an apostrophe, the birds
Stone bone in the smooth-limbed trees.
Mums in a vase, flakes in a hope chest:
Father advise us, sift our sins—
Ferry us back and step down;
Dock at the Clinchfield Station:
Our Lady of Knoxville reclines there
On her hard bed; a golf club
Hums in the grass. The days, dry cat tracks, come round,
A silence beneath the leaves:
The way back is always into the earth.
Hornbeam or oak root, the ditch, the glass:
It all comes to the same thing:
A length of chain, a white hand.
FROM
BLOODLINES
(1975)
Virgo Descending
Through the viridian (and black of the burnt match),
Through ox-blood and ochre, the ham-colored clay,
Through plate after plate, down
Where the worm and the mole will not go,
Through ore-seam and fire-seam,
My grandmother, senile and 89, crimpbacked, stands
Like a door ajar on her soft bed,
The open beams and bare studs of the hall
Pink as an infant’s skin in the floating dark;
Shavings and curls swing down like snowflakes across her face.
My aunt and I walk past. As always, my father
Is planning rooms, dragging his lame leg,
Stroke-straightened and foreign, behind him,
An aberrant 2-by-4 he can’t fit snug.
I lay my head on my aunt’s shoulder, feeling
At home, and walk on.
Through arches and door jambs, the spidery wires
And coiled cables, the blueprint takes shape:
My mother’s room to the left, the door closed;
My father’s room to the left, the door closed—
Ahead, my brother’s room, unfinished;
Behind, my sister’s room, also unfinished.
Buttresses, winches, block-and-tackle: the scale of everything
Is enormous. We keep on walking. And pass
My aunt’s room, almost complete, the curtains up,
The lamp and the medicine arranged
In their proper places, in arm’s reach of where the bed will go …
The next one is mine, now more than half done,
Cloyed by the scent of jasmine,
White-gummed and anxious, their mouths sucking the air dry.
Home is what you lie in, or hang above, the house
Your father made, or keeps on making,
The dirt you moisten, the sap you push up and nourish …
I enter the living room, it, too, unfinished, its far wall
Not there, opening on to a radiance
I can’t begin to imagine, a light
My father walks from, approaching me,
Dragging his right leg, rolling his plans into a perfect curl.
That light, he mutters, that damned light.
We can’t keep it out. It keeps on filling your room.
Easter, 1974
Against the tin roof of the back porch, the twilight
Backdrops the climbing rose, three
Blood stars, redemptive past pain.
Trust in the fingernail, the eyelash,
The bark that channels the bone.
What opens will close, what hungers is what goes half-full.
Cancer Rising
It starts with a bump, a tiny bump, deep in the throat.
The mockingbird knows: she spreads it around
Like music, like something she’s heard, a gossip to be
Repeated, but not believed.
And the bump grows, and the song grows, the song
Ascendant and self-reflective, its notes
Obscuring the quarter-tone, the slick flesh and the burning.
And the bump drops off and disappears, but
Its roots do not disappear—they dig on through the moist meat.
The roots are worms, worms in a cheese.
And what they leave, in their blind passage,
Filtered, reorganized, is a new cheese, a cheese
For one palate and one tongue.
But this takes time, and comes later,
The small mounds, heaps of a requisite sorrow,
Choked and grown in the beds,
The channels no longer channels, but flesh of a kind
Themselves, the same flesh and the song …
Midnight again, the mockingbird, high
In the liquidambar, runs through her scales. What burdens
Down-shift and fall, their weights sprung:
The start, the rise, the notes
Oil for the ear of death, oil for the wind, the corpse
Sailing into the universe, the geranium …
The music, like high water, rises inexorably …
Toward heaven, that intergalactic queasiness
Where all fall to the same riff.
Tallow, tallow and ash. The fire winds
Like a breath through the bone, a common tune,
Hummable, hard to extrapolate:
That song again, the song of burnt notes.
The blue it rises into, the cobalt,
Proves an enduring flame: Persian death bowl,
The bead, crystal
And drowned delta, Ephesian reed.
Blue of the twice-bitten rose, blue of the dove …
Tattoos
1.
Necklace of flame, little dropped hearts,
Camellias: I crunch you under my foot.
And here comes the wind again, bad breath
Of thirty-odd years, and catching up. Still,
I crunch you under my foot.
Your white stalks sequester me,
Their roots a remembered solitude.
Their mouths of snow keep forming my name.
Programmed incendiaries,
Fused flesh, so light your flowering,
So light the light that fires you
—Petals of horn, scales of blood—,
Where would you have me return?
What songs would I sing,
And the hymns … What garden of wax statues …
1973
2.
The pin oak has found new meat,
The linkworm a bone to pick.
Lolling its head, slicking its blue tongue,
The nightflower blooms on its one stem;
The crabgrass hones down its knives:
Between us again there is nothing. And since
The darkness is only light
That has not yet reached us,
You slip it on like a glove.
Duck soup, you say. This is duck soup.
And so it is.
Along the far bank
Of Blood Creek, I watch you turn
In that light, and turn, and turn,
Feeling it change on your changing hands,
Feeling it take. Feeling it.
1972
3.
Body fat as my forearm, blunt-arrowed head
And motionless, eyes
Sequin and hammer and nail
In the torchlight, he hangs there,
Color of dead leaves, color of dust,
Dumbbell and hourglass—copperhead.
Color of bread dough, color of pain, the hand
That takes it, that handles it
—The snake now limp as a cat—
Is halfway to heaven, and in time.
Then Yellow Shirt, twitching and dancing,
Gathers it home, handclap and heartstring,
His habit in ecstasy.
Current and godhead, hot coil,
Grains through the hourglass glint and spring.
1951
4.
Silt fingers, silt stump and bone.
And twice now, in the drugged sky,
White moons, black moons.
And twice now, in the gardens,
The great seed of affection.
Liplap of Zuan’s canal, blear
Footfalls of Tintoretto; the rest
Is brilliance: Turner at 3 a.m.; moth lamps
Along the casements. O blue
Feathers, this clear cathedral …
And now these stanchions of joy,
Radiant underpinning:
Old scaffolding, old arrangements,
All fall in a rain of light.
I have seen what I have seen.
1968
5.
Hungering acolyte, pale body,
The sunlight—through St Paul of the 12 Sorrows—
Falls like Damascus òn me:
I feel the gold hair of Paradise rise through my skin
Needle and thread, needle and thread;
I feel the worm in the rose root.
I hear the river of heaven
Fall from the air, I hear it enter the wafer
And sink me, the whirlpool stars
Spinning me down, and down. O …
Now I am something else, smooth,
Unrooted, with no veins and no hair, washed
In the waters of nothingness;
Anticoronal, released …
And then I am risen, the cup, new sun, at my lips.
1946
6.
Skyhooked above the floor, sucked
And mummied by salt towels, my left arm
Hangs in the darkness, bloodwood, black gauze,
The slow circle of poison
Coming and going through the same hole …
Sprinkle of rain through the pine needles,
Shoosh pump shoosh pump of the heart;
Bad blood, bad blood …
Chalk skin like a light,
Eyes thin dimes, whose face
Comes and goes at the window?
Whose face …
For I would join it,
And climb through the nine-and-a-half footholds of fever
Into the high air,
And shed these clothes and renounce,
Burned over, repurified.
1941
7.
This one’s not like the other, pale, gingerly—
Like nothing, in fact, to rise, as he does,
In three days, his blood clotted,
His deathsheet a feather across his chest,
His eyes twin lenses, and ready to unroll.
Arm and a leg, nail hole and knucklebone,
He stands up. In his right hand,
The flagstaff of victory;
In his left, the folds of what altered him.
And the hills spell V, and the trees V …
Nameless, invisible, what spins out
From this wall comes breath by breath,
And pulls the vine, and the ringing tide,
The scorched syllable from the moon’s mouth.
And what pulls them pulls me.
1963
8.
A tongue hangs in the dawn wind, a wind
That trails the tongue’s voice like a banner, star
And whitewash, the voice
Sailing across the 14 mountains, snap and drift,
To settle, a last sigh, here.
That tongue is his tongue, the voice his voice:
Lifting out of the sea
Where the tongue licks, the voice starts,
Monotonous, out of sync,
Yarmulke, tfillin, tallis.
His nude body waist deep in the waves,
The book a fire in his hands, his movements
Reedflow and counter flow, the chant light
From his lips, the prayer rising to heaven,
And everything brilliance, brilliance, brilliance.
1959
9.
In the fixed crosshairs of evening,
In the dust-wallow of certitude,
Where the drop drops and the scalding starts,
Where the train pulls out and the light winks,
The tracks go on, and go on:
The flesh pulls back and snaps,
The fingers are ground and scraped clean,
Reed whistles in a green fire.
The bones blow on, singing their bald song.
It stops. And it starts again.
Theologians, Interpreters:
Song, the tracks, crosshairs, the light;
The drop that is always falling.
Over again I feel the palm print,
The map that will take me there.
1952
10.
It starts here, in a chair, sunflowers
Inclined from an iron pot, a soiled dishcloth
Draped on the backrest. A throat with a red choker
Throbs in the mirror. High on the wall,
Flower-like, disembodied,
A wren-colored evil eye stares out
At the white blooms of the oleander, at the white
Gobbets of shadow and shade,
At the white lady and white parasol, at this
Dichogamous landscape, this found chord
(And in the hibiscus and moonflowers,
In the smoke trees and spider ferns,
The unicorn crosses his thin legs,
The leopard sips at her dish of blood,
And the vines strike and the vines recoil).
1973
11.
So that was it, the rush and the take-off,
The oily glide of the cells
Bringing it up—ripsurge, refraction,
The inner spin
Trailing into the cracked lights of oblivion …
Re-entry is something else, blank, hard:
Black stretcher straps; the peck, peck
And click of a scalpel; glass shards
Eased one by one from the flesh;
Recisions; the long bite of the veins …
And what do we do with this,
Rechuted, reworked into our same lives, no one
To answer to, no one to glimpse and sing,
The cracked light flashing our names?
We stand fast, friend, we stand fast.
1958
12.
Oval oval oval oval push pull push pull …
Words unroll from our fingers.
A splash of leaves through the windowpanes,
A smell of tar from the streets:
Apple, arrival, the railroad, shoe.
The words, like bees in a sweet ink, cluster and drone,
Indifferent, indelible,
A hum and a hum:
Back stairsteps to God, ropes to the glass eye:
Vineyard, informer, the chair, the throne.
Mojo and numberless, breaths
From the wet mountains and green mouths; rustlings,
Sure sleights of hand,
The news that arrives from nowhere:
Angel, omega, silence, silence …
1945
13.
What I remember is fire, orange fire,
And his huge cock in his hand,
Touching my tiny one; the smell
Of coal dust, the smell of heat,
Banked flames through the furnace door.
Of him I remember little, if anything:
Black, overalls splotched with soot,
His voice, honey, O honey …
And then he came, his left hand
On my back, holding me close.
Nothing was said, of course—one
Terrible admonition, and that was all …
And if that hand, like loosed lumber, fell
From grace, and stayed there? We give,
And we take it back. We give again …
1940
14.
Now there is one, and still masked;
White death’s face, sheeted and shoeless, eyes shut
Behind the skull holes.
She stands in a field, her shadow no shadow,
The clouds no clouds. Call her Untitled.
And now there are four, white shoes, white socks;
They stand in the same field, the same clouds
Vanishing down the sky. Cat masks and mop hair
Cover their faces. Advancing, they hold hands.
Nine. Now there are nine, their true shadows
The judgments beneath their feet.
Black masks, white nightgowns. A wind
Is what calls them, that field, those same clouds
Lisping one syllable I, I, I.
1970
15.
And the saw keeps cutting,
Its flashy teeth shredding the mattress, the bedclothes,
The pillow and pillow case.
Plugged in to a socket in your bones,
It coughs, and keeps on cutting.
It eats the lamp and the bedpost.
It licks the clock with its oiled tongue,
And keeps on cutting.
It leaves the bedroom, and keeps on cutting.
It leaves the house, and keeps on cutting …
—Dogwood, old feathery petals,
Your black notches burn in my blood;
You flutter like bandages across my childhood.
Your sound is a sound of good-bye.
Your poem is a poem of pain.
1964
16.
All gloss, gothic and garrulous, staked
To her own tree, she takes it off,
Half-dollar an article. With each
Hike of the price, the gawkers
Diminish, spitting, rubbing their necks.
Fifteen, and staked to my tree,
Sap-handled, hand in my pocket, head
Hot as the carnival tent, I see it out—as does
The sheriff of Cherokee County,
Who fondles the payoff, finger and shaft.
Outside, in the gathering dark, all
Is fly buzz and gnat hum and whine of the wires;
Quick scratch of the match, cicadas,
Jackhammer insects; drone, drone
Of the blood-suckers, sweet dust, last sounds …
1950
17.
I dream that I dream I wake
The room is throat-deep and brown with dead moths
I throw them back like a quilt
I peel them down from the wall
I kick them like leaves I shake them I kick them again
The bride on the couch and the bridegroom
Under their gauze dust-sheet
And cover up turn to each other
Top hat and tails white veil and say as I pass
It’s mother again just mother the window open
On the 10th floor going up
Is Faceless and under steam his mask
Hot-wired my breath at his heels in sharp clumps
Darkness and light darkness and light
Faceless come back O come back
1955 FF.
18.
Flash click tick, flash click tick, light
Through the wavefall—electrodes, intolerable curlicues;
Splinters along the skin, eyes
Flicked by the sealash, spun, pricked;
Terrible vowels from the sun.
And everything dry, wrung, the land flaked
By the wind, bone dust and shale;
And hills without names or numbers,
Bald coves where the sky harbors.
The dead grass whistles a tune, strangely familiar.
And all in a row, seated, their mouths biting the empty air,
Their front legs straight, and their backs straight,
Their bodies pitted, eyes wide,
The rubble quick glint beneath their feet,
The lions stare, explaining it one more time.
1959
19.
The hemlocks wedge in the wind.
Their webs are forming something—questions:
Which shoe is the alter ego?
Which glove inures the fallible hand?
Why are the apple trees in draped black?
And I answer them. In words
They will understand, I answer them:
The left shoe.
The left glove.
Someone is dead; someone who loved them is dead.
Regret is what anchors me;
I wash in a water of odd names.
White flakes from next year sift down, sift down.
I lie still, and dig in,
Snow-rooted, ooze-rooted, cold blossom.
1972
20.
You stand in your shoes, two shiny graves
Dogging your footsteps;
You spread your fingers, ten stalks
Enclosing your right of way;
You yip with pain in your little mouth.
And this is where the ash falls.
And this is the time it took to get here—
And yours, too, is the stall, the wet wings
Arriving, and the beak.
And yours the thump, and the soft voice:
The octopus on the reef’s edge, who slides
His fat fingers among the cracks,
Can use you. You’ve prayed to him,
In fact, and don’t know it.
You are him, and think yourself yourself.
1973
Notes to Tattoos
1. Camellias; Mother’s Day; St Paul’s Episcopal Church, Kingsport, Tennessee.
2. Death of my father.
3. Snake-handling religious service; East Tennessee.
4. Venice, Italy.
5. Acolyte; fainting at the altar; Kingsport, Tennessee.
6. Blood-poisoning; hallucination; Hiwassee, North Carolina.
7. The Resurrection, Piero della Francesca, Borgo San Sepolcro, Italy.
8. Harold Schimmel’s morning prayers; Positano, Italy.
9. Temporary evangelical certitude; Christ School, Arden, North Carolina.
10. Visions of heaven.
11. Automobile wreck; hospital; Baltimore, Maryland.
12. Handwriting class; Palmer Method; words as ‘things’; Kingsport, Tennessee.
13. The janitor; kindergarten; Corinth, Mississippi.
14. Dream.
15. The day of my mother’s funeral, in Tennessee; Rome, Italy.
16. Sideshow stripper; Cherokee County Fair, Cherokee, North Carolina.
17. Recurrent dream.
18. The Naxian lions; Delos, Greece.
19. Death of my father.
20. The last stanza is an adaptation of lines from Eugenio Montale’s Serenata Indiana.
Hardin County
—CPW, 1904–1972
There are birds that are parts of speech, bones
That are suns in the quick earth.
There are ice floes that die of cold.
There are rivers with many doors, and names
That pull their thread from their own skins.
Your grief was something like this.
Or self-pity, I might add, as you did
When you were afraid to sleep,
And not sleep, afraid to touch your bare palm,
Afraid of the wooden dog, the rose
Bleating beside your nightstand; afraid
Of the slur in the May