Read Anatomy of Melancholy and Other Poems Online
Authors: Robert Wrigley
Tags: #Poetry, #American, #General
LEGEND
It is the legend, regarding the hole at the Big Eddy
of the Clearwater River, that it be not bottomless
but a might-as-well-be warren of shelves, caves,
and chambers, lost and cast-off sand and silt makings
so churned by the river’s hydraulics that every depth-gauge
sinker has spun from it a wasted mile or two
of horizontal measurement that is never returned.
Which is why we have had to imagine,
these forty and more years after the incident, the three
witnesses now gone, how carefully
the doctor’s wife must have driven the Cadillac down
the boat ramp and into the water, and how the car
strangely floated, turning slowly, sunk to the roofline,
until it vanished at what must have been the very mouth
of the myth of bottomlessness itself: one Coupe de Ville
Cadillac, 1963, yellow, windows according to witnesses
rolled up tight, and holding the driver, presumed to be
a twenty-nine-year-old mother of three children,
presumed also to have been inside. Such is the power
of plain police reportage, and also of the grappling hooks
that over the next week brought to the surface
twelve sunken logs and the carcass of a drowned moose,
before the search was abandoned and a service performed
on the beach there. Here is a black-and-white picture
of several hundred mourners. Late spring. The beach is pale sand,
and white shoes dangle from the fingers of several of the women.
From this angle, the highway roadbed looking down,
the river turns above the eddy like water in a drain.
Go down there now, in the turn of it, and see
the Cadillac descend among the many oscillating logs
untouched, scraping not the least outcropping and coming
at last to rest on an only slightly slanted shelf,
a right rear wheel over the edge and slowing
to a stop. By now the rubber window gaskets
will have disintegrated, and sometimes a sturgeon
longer than the Coupe de Ville itself
will slide its soft sucker mouth along a glassy seam
for no reason but the dim reminder of a soup
it sipped there once. Such is the power of memory,
which this is not. Not of the doctor’s yellow Cadillac, nor
of his beautiful wife behind the wheel and headed out of town.
She looked your way, but you did not see her see you at all.
MERCURY
Some thug or other was always vanishing.
East St. Louis, my father said. He always said that.
City of my birth. The new highway made it possible
to pass the place by, ill-lit, seemingly unpeopled.
He drove fast. The windows were down.
He’d let me extend the blade of my hand
into the wind of our going, and we were passing
a large trailer-truck loaded with crushed,
compacted cars—a recognizable Chevrolet emblem
on one, and from another, a slip of fabric,
headliner or upholstery, black and pointed
at its end, resembling, I remember, a necktie.
THE HISTORY OF GODS
When a lesser species rises among them
to consume the sun immemorially theirs,
redwoods will sometimes let go a great limb
and crush the interloper where it stands,
implying intent and therefore what we know
as consciousness. It is theorized they may be able,
via their massive and elaborate root systems,
to command the groundwater itself, for the benefit
only of their kind—a government and fealty of trees.
Though perhaps what seems intentional
is simply part of the balance they exemplify,
the fallen limb afflicted by a disruption
in the nutrient flow precisely above where a hemlock
or pine has sprung forth, suggesting the decision
is no decision at all but simply cause and effect,
silvicultural machinery, as though it were not the mind
of a god but a body, reflexive to stimulus and wound,
actions neither revenge nor damnation nor self-preservation.
Although the darkness they rise from is their own creation,
and high in their canopies, lichens not found below,
delicate as fog, and birds that might as well be angels.
BABEL
The language he speaks and writes is spoken
and written by no one but him, which solves,
for him at least, the problem of audience.
Unless somehow, against the odds, he believes
there is someone to whom his alphabet speaks,
and his words—if they are words and not notes
of some other sort of singing, a system of clicks
and impossible vowels, the strange habitats
in which his bent and prickly syllables live.
The patience with which he clears his throat
and nods to us and begins, mild and tentative
at first, to read, or sing, or ceremonially recite
the epic of his people or the story of his God
or the description of his lost beloved’s body,
moves us so each time, we concentrate and nod
but understand nothing at all of what he
has said. When he’s finished, he looks at us
expectantly, and we, in our own inadequate tongues,
and often gesticulating wildly, discuss
the majesty of his accomplishment, which no one
fathoms any part of, least of all our praise,
if that’s what it is, since we too are the last
or perhaps the only ones ever to raise
into the air such utterances—from the past
or the future or from this very moment in time,
when no one knows what anyone means to say or tell,
not even at night, when we seem to pray, then recline
on our bunks, each in his own terrible, familiar cell,
with the toilet and the night-light, with the reams
of paper, filled and yet to be, that surround us,
and he goes on speaking through our dreams,
where everything, making sense, astounds us.
SPRING IS HERE
The umbrellas misfired, the rain broke down,
all the seed-white dandelions were bludgeoned
to a fluffy paste. The bell tower ratcheted
up its terrible black birds. Negotiations
broke out between thunder and cell phones
despite the enormous vee of geese going by.
Someone whispered the secret of the match
to a cigarette, and hail commenced
machine-gunning a delicate wing of smoke.
Cruel world for bathing beauties, though. The clatter
of flip-flops rose like an ovation for the nation
of May, and the Goth boy in his black greatcoat
pale as the Jesus over Rio and similarly stanced,
having raised his arms and brought to the air
not only the wail of the noon whistle
but also the howl of a hound dog leashed to a hydrant,
as though it, in the midst of such majesty,
in the last week of classes, were his wolf.
PART THREE
DARK BLUE MOUTH
GOLDFINCHES
He could not, he insisted, take his eyes
from the pistol’s muzzle, calculating
as he watched it, from the way it quivered—
and cocked, as it was, a single action,
it seemed—how easily that quivering
could cause it, without the man’s intending,
to discharge, as we say, and thinking too,
given its angle, what part of him would,
in that event, be thus sundered and torn.
Although, this was after the fact, later,
as he explained to the two policemen,
how he kept his left hand in front of him,
as though he might catch the slug, or block it,
even as he reached slowly behind him
and produced, with thumb and index finger,
the wallet he dropped mildly between them
and stepped back from as the mugger stepped forward
and bent to retrieve it.
Only then
did he see not the pistol, but the tattoo
of the birds on the other’s left forearm.
Sundered and torn, he’d said. Those were his words,
though the policeman writing it all down
did not write it all down that way, except
for the tattoo, its three colorful birds
and the leafy gray branch they perched upon.
Birds, he’d said, American goldfinches,
of the sort that winter in the canyons
east and south of the city, and which sing,
canary-like,
ti-dee-di-di
, sweetly,
and gather in flocks on winter mornings,
bobbing on the limbs of leafless birches,
to feed on the last dry catkins and fly
all at once, as one, with a single mind,
or none, startled by nothing, or by some move
nothing but one or all the birds could see.
Almost exactly life-size, and well done,
artistically, even, in the dim lights
of that backstreet he’d walked a thousand times.
Nicely rendered songbirds, he’d said, which were
how it was the culprit would be, as we say,
so easily apprehended, strung out,
asleep in an aging junker Plymouth
in the city’s best park, the pistol snugged,
the newspaper reported, “like a teddy bear,
directly under the suspect’s chin,
the victim’s wallet still in his pocket.”
It also spoke of the tattoo only
in the most general terms, as that which,
being the classic identifying mark,
along with the wallet, would convict him.
Still, thereafter, he, the victim, always
described the goldfinches in great detail,
feeling, as he’d come to, that it was they
who might well have saved him, remembering
how slowly he’d moved, so as not to startle
the birds outside his window, and not
to have to keep seeing, neither in memory
nor dream, the dark blue mouth of the pistol.
BLACKJACK
In fact, it’s a beautiful thing: expertly made,
the egg of lead in the business end
and the flexible leather braid
leading to a bulb for the hand
and the loop for the jacker’s wrist,
kinetic energy far superior to a fist’s.
It is also perfect for holding a book
open to a certain page or passage.
How it feels about such work,
we cannot know but can imagine,
being men and wondering, after all—
the thud and crumple, the fall.
In the palm of my left hand, I slap it; then
he, in his right, my left-handed, bookish friend.
DELICIOUS
He loves how cold she always is. Even sandwiched
in their matched, fully-zipped-together sleeping bags,
she presses herself to his back, chilled tomato to the ham of him.
It’s August, but the river runs an arm’s length below them,
runs her height from them southwest, and it is cold, colder
than she is, though here is where she loves to sleep,
inside the almost-kiss of it, the river’s endless consumption
of stones, its long nightly respirations risen into veils,
into vapor tatters a morning sun unwinds and licks away.
This is how it must be: her front sufficiently warmed, she turns
and he must also turn, the spoon of meat he is all night, and hot,
a film of almost-sweat across him like a condiment
she cannot get enough of. He is rich, he thinks. He is taste
and succulence. He is delicious. And if one bench of floodplain
farther up and away from where they lie would be warmer,
still he knows it would be too far, for her, from what she loves
as much as she loves his hands and chest, his salt-skin shoulders
and his breath: this river she cannot live without
for long. He does not mind such faithlessness as that.
She would be the trout she loves as much as she loves him,
so therefore he lives alongside the water, breathing with her also,
and when the sun at last clears the eastern ridge
and the dew from the tent’s dome, like the river’s mists,
is swallowed by the air, he like the mist rises,
pared away from her, and builds her
a small morning fire, and fires the water for coffee,
and is allowed, as the most modest recompense, to stand
and watch through the sliver of vent at the top of the tent door
as she rises too, bare and half warm, to dress again
for the day—the chilled breasts and backside
submerged inside her clothes as the trout is
in the river—for though he also loves the trout
and will be all the sun long troubled
by the difficulty of the lure, the fly, the hook that holds
inside what appetite any of them might imagine,
still he knows, come night, come the water’s icy vapors
upward, that he will hold her as he might, lucky under the moon
and near the trout—its beautiful meat and bone, its edible skin—
where they sleep, on the round of the river’s cold lip.