Authors: Frederick Seidel
In an upper gallery of the castle,
A young woman curtsied to the king and said: “Sire,
You are a beautiful day outside.”
The king stuck his stick down her throat to shut her up.
Children, of all things bad, the best is to kill a king.
Next best: to kill yourself out of fear of death.
Next best: to grovel and beg. I took for my own motto
I rot before I ripen
.
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Seeing you again.
Your glide, your gaze.
Your very quiet voice.
Your terror. Your quiet eyes.
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Oh never to be yourself,
Never to let be
And simply be there.
The same
Morning ink blot in the mirror
Making a face up,
Making up a face. You need
All your strength
Never to be yourself.
Skirt, boots, and sweater
Green as a stem.
I'll wear them.
Take me down from the shelf.
Oh never to be yourself
And always to be the same.
Like the air and the wind,
The wind and the air.
I hear a very quiet voice,
Emphatic like a flower,
Saying
It is I.
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The soft street canyon was silent. In silence the new snow
Layered a rolling swell. The greatest evening
Tilted and rose against the tiny window:
Like her juggled soaking fishbowl swinging
A wave that burst into suds. A feeler of ice,
See-through and frail, scaled the whitening lace
Of the window guard, now more visible,
As if a vine were growing its own trellis.
The warm room watched it whiten, counting the minutes.
Think fast! (Still dreaming?) The boy had caught his friend
Flush with a lobbed cannonball of snow.
But then they crossed the closed street hand in hand.
Their dog sprinted in zigzags like a minnow,
Or wallowing in too deep, leapt out like a deer,
Folded forepaws leaping, then his rear.
From two floors up, two floors below is deep.
They don't know it, but sometime someone will come
And take her hand and feed her to the moon.
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Suddenly the pace
Quickens, chill air dusts the air.
The leaves shrink
To a fawn color, held by their tails like mice,
The color of twine.
The fifty o'clock moon
Laid its cheek against the window,
Lay like snow on the carpet.
Outside the window,
Harlem in moonlight.
You walked outside.
Everyone knows
About the would-be suicide: you walkâ
A step, a heartbeatâ
Heartbeats. Sobsob, in the noon park,
The nannies were white,
Seated like napkins on the benches,
Starched and folded to sit up.
The babies did not choose the carriages,
Limousine coffers, blackly London;
They did not choose the rayless Tartar sun,
Sterile as the infected
Industrial steppes of Calvinâof
Bayonne. The reservoir banks were a purple socket
Like a black tulip.
Anything
would do now
That inspired you
Below the Ninth Sphere, below the fixed stars
With fall, the electric cattle prod,
The cold juice that shocked you from your sleep
Lovelorn: slight,
Frizzy, sweating animal with feelings.
For fall, dawn rises in combers
Above the radiator shield's metal caning,
The sill flows like a pennant.
You smell the back-to-school,
Steam and rain on wool,
The tears not learning
And learning to write
With the sharp new chalk
Jacobean black and white,
The fantastic wrong and right, now dissolving
In Jamesian gray. You want to be a childâ
You want to find the way
To either more or less than you are.
If you could choose.
Everywhere changes or fades.
Her hair streams like a willow's
As it leans to the river
When she leans toward you
Her anodyne, her healing face,
Eurasian, gypsy ease
(You have your memories),
Lovely lost love;
Erato's dark hair.
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So now you've fettered that sweet bride,
The boy you've toyed with awhile and gelded,
And still not come, wretched sod.
Suck yourself off, like in your dream.
Innocents, white and fresh, bless 'em,
They belonged down in your love grotto;
They hiccup and honk on the slick flags
Looped with turds and the squashed-flat intestine.
Nothing helps, Marquis. Oh try
The scaffold again, with your bald pregnant nun.
The hired child caresses the ripped breasts;
She fingers herself, and releases the pretend-dropâ
Nothing helps! At least, at leastâ
Sade save our republican mistress, France.
Kiss the Courrèges boot, de Sade,
The stockingful up to the stocking top.
Beyond you lies the shrine, between
The slopes of Zion, past the alehouse.
Refresh yourself, drink deep. The brine!
The salt and gall, your honey and wine!
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Never again to wake up in the blond
Hush and gauze of that Hyannis sunrise.
Bliss was it
In that dawn to be alive
With our Kool as breakfast,
Make-do pioneers. Like politicians
Headed for a back room,
Each minute lived when it arrived,
And was the future. To be our age
Was very heaven. The fresh print
On the leaves dabbed
The windowscreen leaf-green;
A nestling's wing of a breeze that
Could not have stirred a cobweb
Eased through the air
And swept the room clean.
We could love politics for its mind!
All seemed possible,
Though it was barely a breeze.
The spirey steel-wool tuft in the map
Spreading apart, the city's
Wild wire and grease-rot,
Must be redeemed. When we returned
We would begin.
The city was our faithâ
Ah we knew now the world need not end.
The flagpole out on the common actually
Seemed to tense,
Attentive as a compass needle,
Seemed caught in the open
Sniffing the breeze,
The little flag quivering like a sprig.
Alas. We could almost see
Cloth milk flying in place of blood and stars:
A nationless white flag colorlessly
Compounded of all colors, for peace.
But the pitcher and turned-down tumbler
On their doily summed up
The trim smell of dill,
We would begin.
It was new Eden.
And there was the young light,
There the feathery saplingâour tree priest,
Let us say, stuck with glued leaves.
Eden's one anthill bred
A commune honey pallor on the lawn
Uncurbed, yet innocent
Of any metaphor.
A pipe snaking around the baseboard rose
And stood silent in the corner like a birch.
Perhaps only innocence was keeping
The common still asleep
While we overreached, and touched so easily
What we were. We were
Awake while the world slept.
We overweened. Yes, yes,
We opened the patched screen
And plucked a leaf and stem,
And chewed the stem,
And tasted its green.
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The trees breathe in like show dogs, stiffening
Under the silver leashes of light rain
To spines. A Cyclone fence that guards the moire
Embankment of the shrunken reservoir
Bristles with rain barbs, each a milk tooth, sting
Of stings, where fall began. The park's a stain,
The black paths shimmer under cellophane.
It is so real. Shy ghosts of taxis sniff
And worry in the empty park streets, lost
And misted lights, and down Fifth Avenue:
The flags soak at half-staff, bloodshed and blue;
Bloodletting stripes repeating their mute riff;
Gray stars, wet Union sky of stars, crisscrossed
With petrifying folds and sparks of frost.
The rain points prick the lake and touch the drought,
The dusk blue of a sterile needletip.
The brightness and the light has been struck down.
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The bald still head is filled with that grayish milkâ
It's a dentist's glass door. It turns heavilyâ
There may be a weight in it. It weighs one ton.
Very even light diffuses through the globe.
But this surprise: life-squiggles, fishhooks,
Minnowhooks, surround the mineral eyes.
Someone like Muzak is burbling slant rhymesâ
-om
and
-am
,
-om
and
-am
âand holds up a telltale map
Of rice swimming in blood like white flies.
Ears almost as large as the president's
And more eloquent than lips,
That swallow toothlessly like polyps.
A spit glob and naked flashbulbs pop in Rusk's ear
And go down with whole heads, whole fields of heads
Of human hair, jagged necks attached.
Tangled unwashed bangs lengthening and cut, lengthening and cut,
The civilian population knows no more
Than a cellar of pocked Georgia potatoes.
This Press Talk is like a ham discussing pigsâ
They need our help. He's a cracker showing the kids
The funny human shapes his potatoes have.
They must be scrubbed and eaten in their skins.
That's the nourishment. Rusk sets no other condition.
Rusk's private smile that looks like incest.
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I turn from Yeats to sleep, and dream of Robert Kennedy,
Assassinated ten years ago tomorrow.
Ten years ago he was aliveâ
Asleep and dreaming at this hour, dreaming
His wish-fulfilling dreams.
He reaches from the grave.
Shirtsleeves rolled up, a boy's brown hair, ice eyes
Softened by the suffering of others, and doomed;
Younger brother of a murdered president,
Senator and candidate for president;
Shy, compassionate and fierce
Like a figure out of Yeats;
The only politician I have loved says
You're dreaming
and says
The gun is mightier than the word.
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“Have the bristles at an angle and gently
Work them in between the tooth and gum
Back and forth,” a woman says.
Her breast is next to my ear.
She moves a set of teeth four inches high
And a foot-long toothbrush.
Breast; and then the teeth; and then
The window without a shade or curtainsâthen the day,
Twelve floors above the street;
And the empty lighted office windows always
On the other side of a street
From the drill,
Since childhood,
The obsolete slow drill that now only polishes.
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Alive. Yes and awake. Flowers
Fall through his mind, in one slant, like snow.
The electric toothbrush flames in his hand.
Mozart sweetens the small room.
LSD tears he wept all night,
One hundred for a dead father.
LSD tears, they roll heavy
And burn like molten metal drops.
Now as the drug wears off he waits.
For a mother has remarried.
Oh the man swelled, supple bitch,
And smiled as if he might give birth.
Completely to be shut of both,
Purged pure and bare to all in one's fate,
The drug makes possible at last
[
The curtain stirs
], out of the shell,
The old self, new and neat as a chick.
This dew, haze softness on waking has opened
His window on the street a crack.
Midnight tolls. The curtain stirs.
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Fifth Avenue has the flickers, heat
Lightning lit. A voodoo doll's
Whey little bursts of breath stare,
And fits of fluttering like an eye;
A Haitian nurse at her window altar
Tutoyers the hatpin. The terrified trees'
Bursts of breath stare, as though Fifth
Were lined with dandelion clocks.
Scree in the void, Sinai is snuffed,
Half re-created. Parting the black:
Arrow one-way signs plunged through,
The twitched buildings dancing and chalk-white.
It is too late for people but
A rag barfs on a curb. But it's
A sandwich board mouldering there
Draws the nose of his tetchy chow:
Seen in a sheet-flap of sight just now
And gone now. In the blinded dark;
Streetlights, stars sappedârepeated blows
That leave unstirred the humid silence.
Silence ⦠Even Harlem is stillâ
Harlem is near. The galaxies,
The brainstorms of zero, gasp the fainter
And fainter last breaths of the future.
This time we may go out for good.
Blacked out after the zillionth stroke.
This may be a good time not to wake.
Fifth Ave. The white man's night-light, the future.
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Pictures of violins in the Wurlitzer collection
Were my bedroom's one decoration,
Besides a blue horse and childish tan maiden by Gauguinâ
Backs, bellies, and scrolls,
Stradivarius, Guarnerius, Amati,