Authors: Frederick Seidel
If only he could be von Schrader or
Deloges, a beautiful athlete or a complete
Shit. God, von Schrader lazily shagging flies,
The beautiful flat trajectory of his throw.
Instead of seeking power, being it!
Tomorrow Deloges will lead the school in prayer,
Not that the autist would want to take his place.
Naked boys are yelling and snapping wet towels
At each other in the locker room,
Like a big swordfighting scene from
The Three Musketeers
,
Parry and thrust, roars of laughter and rage,
Lush Turkish steam billowing from the showers.
The showers hiss, the air is silver fox.
Hot breath, flashes of swords, the ravishing fur!â
Swashbuckling boys brandishing their towels!
Depression, aggression, elationâand acne creamâ
The ecosystem of a boy his age.
He combs his wet hair straight, he hates his curls,
He checks his pimples. Only the biggest ones show,
Or rather the ointment on them caked like mud,
Supposedly skin-color, invisible; dabs
Of peanut butter that have dried to fossils,
That even a shower won't wash away, like flaws
Of character expressed by their concealmentâ
Secrets holding up signsâO adolescence!
O silence not really hidden by the words,
Which are not true, the words, the words, the wordsâ
Unless you scrub, will not wash away.
But how sweetly they strive to outreach these shortcomings,
These boys who call each other by their last names,
Copying older boys and mastersâit's why
He isn't wearing his glasses, though he can't see.
That fiend Deloges notices but says nothing.
Butting rams, each looks at the other sincerely,
And doesn't look away, blue eyes that lie.
He follows his astigmatism toward
The schoolbuses lined up to take everyone home,
But which are empty still, which have that smiling,
Sweet-natured blur of the retarded, oafs
In clothes too small, too wrong, too red and white,
And
painfully
eager to please a sadist so cruel
He wouldn't even hurt a masochist.
The sadistic eye of the autist shapes the world
Into a sort of, call it innocence,
Ready to be wronged, ready to
Be tortured into power and beauty, into
Words his phonographic memory
Will store on silence like particles of oil
On waterâthe rainbow of polarity
Which made this poem. I put my glasses on,
And shut my eyes. O adolescence, sing!
All the bus windows are open because it's warm.
I blindly face a breeze almost too sweet
To bear. I hear a hazy drone and floatâ
A dimpled cloudâabove the poor white and poorer
Black neighborhoods which surround the small airfield.
Â
I look at Broadway in the bitter cold,
The center strip benches empty like today,
And see St. Louis. I am often old
Enough to leave my childhood, but I stay.
A winter sky as total as repression
Above a street the color of the sky;
A sky the same gray as a deep depression;
A boulevard the color of a sigh:
Where Waterman and Union met was the
Apartment building I'm regressing to.
My key is in the door; I am the key;
I'm opening the door. I think it's true
Childhood is your mother even if
Your mother is in hospitals for years
And then lobotomized, like mine. A whiff
Of her perfume; behind her veil, her tears.
She wasn't crying anymore. Oh try.
No afterward she wasn't anymore.
But yes she will, she is. Oh try to cry.
I'm hereâright now I'm walking through the door.
The pond was quite wide, but the happy dog
Swam back and forth called by the boy, then by
His sister on the other side, a log
Of love putt-putting back and forth from fry
To freeze, from freeze to fry, a normal pair
Of the extremes of normal, on and on.
The dog was getting tired; the children stareâ
Their childhood's over. Everyone is gone,
Forest Park's deserted; still they call.
It's very cold. Soprano puffs of breath,
Small voices calling in the dusk is all
We ever are, pale speech balloons. One death,
Two ghosts ⦠white children playing in a park
At dusk foreverâbut we must get home.
The mica sidewalk sparkles in the dark
And starts to freezeâor fryâand turns to foam.
At once the streetlights in the park go on.
Gas hisses from the treesâbut it's the wind.
The real world vanishes behind the fawn
That leaps to safety while the doe is skinned.
The statue of Saint Louis on Art Hill,
In front of the museum, turns into
A blue-eyed doe. Next it will breathe. Soon will
Be sighing, dripping tears as thick as glue.
Stags do that when the hunt has cornered them.
The horn is blown. Bah-ooo. Her mind a doe
Which will be crying soon at bay. The stem
Between the autumn leaf and branch lets go.
My mother suddenly began to sob.
If only she could do that now. Oh try.
I feel the lock unlock. Now try the knob.
Sobbed uncontrollably. Oh try to cry.
How easily I can erase an error,
The typos my recalling this will cause,
But no correcting key erases terror.
One ambulance attendant flashed his claws,
The other plunged the needle in. They squeeze
The plunger down, the brainwash out. Bah-ooo.
Calm deepened in her slowly. There, they ease
Her to her feet. White Goddess, blond, eyes blueâ
Even from two rooms away I see
The blue, if that is possible! Bright white
Of the attendants; and the mystery
And calm of the madonna; and my fright.
I flee, but to a mirror. In it, they
Are rooms behind me in our entrance hall
About to leaveâthe image that will stay
With me. My future was behind me. All
The future is a mirror in which they
Are still behind me in the entrance hall,
About to leaveâand if I look away
She'll vanish. Once upon a time, a fall
So long ago that they were burning leaves,
Which wasn't yet against the law, I looked
Away. I watched the slowly flowing sleeves
Of smoke, the blood-raw leaf piles being cooked,
Sweet-smelling scenes of mellow preparation
Around a bloodstained altar, but instead
Of human sacrifice, a separation.
My blue-eyed doe! The severed blue-eyed head!
The windows were wide-open through which I
Could flee to nowhereânowhere meaning how
The past is portable, and therefore why
The future of the past was always now
A treeless Art Hill gleaming in the snow,
The statue of Saint Louis at the top
On horseback, blessing everything below,
Tobogganing the bald pate into slop.
Warm sun, blue sky; blond hair, blue eyes; of course
They'll shave her head for the lobotomy,
They'll cut her brain, they'll kill her at the source.
When she's wheeled out, blue eyes are all I see.
The bandagesâdown to her eyesâgive her
A turbaned twenties look, but I'm confused.
There were no bandages. I saw a blur.
They didn't touch a hairâbut I'm confused.
I breathe mist on the mirror ⦠I am hereâ
Blond hair I pray will darken till it does,
Blue eyes that will need glasses in a yearâ
I'm here and disappear, the boy I was â¦
The son who lifts his sword above Art Hill;
Who holds it almost like a dagger but
In blessing, handle up, and not to kill;
Who holds it by the blade that cannot cut.
Â
I could only dream, I could never draw,
In Art with the terrifying Mrs. Jaspar
Whom I would have done anything to please.
Aquiline and aloof in the land of the button nose, her smile
Made her seem a witch, my goddess,
Too cool, too cold. She was my muse
Because she hardly spoke a word.
We used to pronounce her name to rhyme with Casbah,
Mimicking her fahncy Locust Valley lockjaw.
Say Christ through your nose!
Part of her allure and majesty and
Wonderful strange music for St. Louis certainly,
Though not as musical as her silence was. Casbah,
White flannels on a summer evening, Jasbah,
Endless lawn down to the sea. The accent
Was preposterous, the voice beautiful
Green running down to the sea nine hundred miles inland,
Preposterous. The accent
Was preposterous, her beautiful voice a
Bassoon, slow velvet cadence of the sound,
Shy but deep. Shy but deep. Clangs / The bell. Eliot.
The lips are drawn back slightly;
As if it had been hinged that way, the jaw doesn't quite closeâ
Actually, the opposite of lockjaw since it
Moves, and it doesn't close.
The very back of the throat without the use of the lips
Produces the bloated drawl of the upper class.
You hear it in a certain set, you see it in a certain scene,
Which has equivalents abroad who sound incredibly the same,
And bong the same aristocrat gong in their own languages.
The stag hunting gang in France who hunt on horseback.
Most aquiline being the honorary hunt servants
In livery and wearing tricorns, always
Dukes and such and others who
The very back of the throat without using the lips much.
It is an accent you can
see
â
That you could hear through soundproof glass from what you saw.
It is a sound you see in the Sologne when
The huntsman blows his haunting horn.
The hounds open their mouths. Silence. The servants in their
White breeches and long blue coats dismount. The
Stag stands in the water dropping tears of terror and exhaustion.
They do that when the hunt has them at bay.
The king is in his counting-house counting out his money.
His head will be hacked off and saved;
The carcass goes to the dogsâafter the servants drink the blood
And defecate. There is another accent, that goes to Harvard,
That anyone who does can have. My babysitter
Harold Brodkey will. One day I, too, I will.
The servants dip their fingers in
The blood and paint themselves, and smear each other's blouses,
With all the time in the world apparently until it's time. It's time
To pass the chalice and drink. They defecate
In their breeches, but their coats are quite long,
The flecks on their boots are only mud,
Everything I've written here is lies.
The flecks could be flecks of blood,
But the coattails completely hide the other. There's a smell.
Though there's the smell rising in silence
From the page, but that's a lie. Brodkey knows. Lies that rise.
Now my unseen neighbor in New York four blocks away.
He is finishing the novel, he knows
Il miglior fabbro means a bigger liar. Lies that rise.
Ab lo dolchor qu'al cor mi vai
Pound catches the thermals in every language, and soars.
Eliot rises in the pew to kneel.
When he opens his mouth it is a choir.
Les souvenirs sont cors de chasse
Dont meurt le bruit parmi les vents.
The cockpit voice recorder in its crashproof case remembers and sings.
Flesh and juice of the refreshing and delicious.
Inside a crashproof housing. But I don't recognize the voice.
This is your captain. In the unisex soprano of children his age.
We are trying to restart the engines
On wings of song. The pilot giggles posthumouslyâ
“You may kiss my hond,” he drawls, for the last time
Holding a hond out to be kissed from this page. (Sound of crash.)
Â
What hasn't happened isn't everything
Until in middle age it starts to be.
Night-blooming jasmine, dreamsâand when they bring
You out on stage there's silence. Now I see,
You tell the darkness which is watching you.
Applause. Then instantly a hush, a cough.
It was another darkness once you knew
You had a blindfold on. You took it off,
But this is darkerâdown an unlit street,
An unmarked street, the three blocks to the shore.
They call it Banyan Street, night air so sweet.
Too much increasingly turns into moreâ
This is the martyr's grove on Banyan Street.
You breathe a perfumed darkness, numberless
Perfumes. The glistening as wet as meat
Deliciousness of sinking in. The S
OS of it. But it's too late. You reach
The can't stop trembling yes oh yes of itâ
Already when you're two blocks from the beach
You start to drown. Love ruled your White House. Sit,
You named your dog. Come, Sit;
sit
, Sit; was love.
Your head explodes although you hear a shot.
Then archaeology ⦠below aboveâ
Beneath amnesia, Troy. But you forgot.
Â
It sang without a sound: music that
The naive elm trees loved. They were alive.
Oh silky music no elm tree could survive.
The head low slither of a stalking cat,
Black panther darkness pouring to the kill,
Entered every elmâthey drank it in.