Authors: Frederick Seidel
Sympathized with, it comes off on your hands.
Or is it a mind too generous, too deep for her,
Always in the clouds, straining to rain?
Outside, he is passing by,
His eyes on the ground, on his way home.
Greeting the opening door,
Drafts dash around the room,
Like a terrier sprinting in circles
Around its home-from-work owner.
The lampshades bow like tutus.
Fresh airâbut freshened where?
The lace curtains billow like the Graces' nightgowns,
Then split and kick the cancanâ
Higher! Nearerâ
No, farther away, farther:
The click of heels.
The air has stopped, stands still.
Across the way, a light goes on and off,
But a girl with a chiffon scarf
Was standing by the window.
Not a cloud, not a thought of rain.
The great night is pacing the slot above the street,
And down into the street, back and forth â¦
Like Hamlet sweltering in velvet Elizabethan mourning.
His head is in the sheer, temperatureless stratosphere;
His heart is smothering.
The dark is clear.
Still, some of his thoughts connect,
And are stars.
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Below the window wine-washed Rome
Is drying and the concrete lane
Weaves in the rose direction home
Southwestward. I'll take her off to Ischia and Spain
And marry her, and make her love
Her rashness. Then we pauseâwe stay where they smile clove
And garlic in the earthy air. We'll stay,
We'll mend the bedsheets when they fray
Ourselves, and seize the hours and work
Them into full-lipped ovened clay
Vessels of content. Her shy, bare fingers jerk
The satin ribbons and unbox
My saved-up present to her, a snakeskin purse which locks
Inside it the love poem I want to read.
“Only I don't intend to plead
With you to listen. Don't I know
The Fathers say I'll never lead
You to the altar? Let them goâand even so,
You love them, don't you? And you dare
Not love me just for wanting you alone? Then swear
You couldn't love the others and be true
To meâswear something or we're through.”
But that's not all. You were so shy
A girl, a child. Where is she? You
Have lost her here. How can I convalesce what I
Corrupted when infection struts
Around this city whose street lights are sidewalk sluts?
She sits there glowering at the shadow-moths
Her thumbs twiddle around the oilcloths
Soiling the walls. The curtain's sleeves
Of mellow vespertine blue sloths
Of air are all my twenty-two years of life receives
From life, besides a wobbly bed
And tabletop and chairs. The poor are richer dead â¦
Yet my starved spider dangling from the wall,
My seeing-eye, wants nothing at all
Except what gives itself away
By moving, and only wants what's small
Enough to count as riches. Where's the charm to lay
Between our pillows? It's not grace,
Not the unspoken tendernessâor in the place
Of tenderness a tepidarium.
You venture so much and you come
To loathe life's honey on your handsâ
And once love worked like a green thumb
In the hot weather. And she longed for Rome. Rome stands
For hopeâpocked, wired, original,
Electric as a honeycomb or a staked skull.
And all those blue-eyed souls blinded by thorns,
All the poor souls loving suborns
And scales down to the irony
Of middle age, can kiss the corns
Of gold from Peter's toe, can give to piety
Their ego, for amnesia.
That jet plane's vapor trail is time's aphasia
Coiled over St. Peter'sâbut that tail will crack
The silence. Then it all comes back:
The glaring doorway and the door
Open, her husbandâand the black
Missal the priest held: “
Paid?
She's
paid?
And you're some whore?”
There is no God. They taught her wrong,
The smooth-faced Sisters. Depilation kept them strong,
But lessons can't fit Spellman's corpulence
Through the bright groove the penitents'
Blue knees carved to an altar rail
In stone Trastevere, where rents
Split with indulgences, where love hangs on its nail.
I turn the light out ⦠I am sure
Of nothingâjust the moon, brassiered and soap-sleek, pure
Perfumed Spellman, stinking with allure.
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As he approaches each tree goes on,
And the girls one by one
Glance down at their blouses. A nun,
Then six or seven, hop in
A cream station wagon,
White-beaked blackbirds baked in a pie.
In his mind is
The lid of an eye
The dark dilated closing behind him.
Levy. Arched eyebrows and shadowed
Moist eyes. An El Greco. Swart, slim.
He's late to her. He thinks of her, waiting,
Limb by limb.
Her defenselessness and childlike trust!
Smiling to be combed out
And partedâand her lust
Touching the comb like a lyre.
To have been told by her not to trust her!
And he distrusts her.
And everywhere he sees
Hunchbacks and addicts and sadists
In braces in the cities,
Roosting in their filth,
Or plucking the trees,
In New York for true love,
In Boston for constancy.
You can be needed by someone,
Or needy, thinks Levy.
They clutch their loves like addicts
Embracing when they see
Hot May put out her flowers.
Or clutch themselves. They can't shake free.
He thinks of the time
He lived by her calendar
When she missed her time.
She gave the child a name.
When she bled, she laughed and gasped
Tears warm as pablum
On his wrists. But that is past.
Levy feels his body
Moving in front of his last
Step. He sweats, and thinks
Of the rubble massed
On Creusa behind Aeneas's
White-hot shoulders and neck.
Addresses
And clothesline laundry swelled
Like pseudocyesisâ
That's what he has to pass through.
His tie is her blue,
And a new lotion gives him an air
Of coolness. He combs his hair,
And tries to smooth his hair.
He'll
be there,
The husband. She'll have left him asleepâ
A nap, beyond the top stair,
In darkness.
Light, light is in the trees
Pizzicato, and mica
Sizzles up to his knees.
A dozen traffic lights
Swallow and freeze
And one by one relay red red
Like runners with a blank message.
I hate her, I hate her, he said
A minute ago. Curls cluster
Levy's dark head.
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Now the green leaves of Irish Boston fly or wither
Into bloodred Hebrew, Cotton Mather's fall.
When this morning the end-of-it-all
Siren, out of its head,
Turned inside out, hell-red,
Anne, you touched my wrist, you touched your cross,
The Fine Arts' reproduction. It must have brokenâ
On and on and on sang the siren,
Like a hebephrenic
Bleeding noise from each second's pinprick.
Our hearts stopped. The cars zombied on
Through the synchronized lights;
Monosyllabic shapes,
Devoid of intonation as ghosts, deaf to melody,
Like melodic dysprody.
One more terrible redeemed day is risen!
A siren wails that it is noon.
You who are ill, Anne, soon
Will withdraw to your therapy,
Vainly again to seek succor:
Passing the trees, the fall smells in their war paint
And feathersâthe statue of Mather,
The marble head bent seeming to ponder
The leaves on Moses' tablets like a shroud;
He wears his curls
Like a lion in a sampler,
And hungers to be president of Harvardâ
But his hand is gently raised to heaven
Where his late wife is
Whose soul was pleasant as a rose:
Passing a nailless printed finger
(It asks, Do you know about Christian Science?),
Anne, passing a mother on a billboard
(She asks, Have you called Mother
This week long distance?).
Your breath stops ⦠glued to the black leather,
Staring off into no hope, into space:
The way a fiancée
Stares past the left hand she holds up
At a distance from her face,
And the plastic groom figure
On the cake, the way he stares
When the bride begins to cut!
Between the unreal and the next world, stretched taut,
Anne, you are trying to talk, wide-eyed and hollow-eyed,
Bright starving eyes! Like sections
Of a tapeworm, the anacoluthons
Break offâfed
On your daily bread
Dread.
Yet you wear the cross,
The red saltire x,
And a Ban the Bomb button
On your blouse.
Said Endicott at the trial of your namesake:
“She saith she now suffers and let us do what we will
She shall be delivered by a miracle.
I hope the court takes notice
Of the vanity of it
And heat of her spirit.”
You hear the helicopter:
The moth wingsâagainst-a-window purr
Of a cat squinting with pleasure.
It hovers nearby,
A winking red eye.
Green helicopters patrol the mushroom-colored sky.
The sunstruck State House dome is ringing
The thin air with gold quoits. The end is winging
Nearer. Your lips part;
As if I, your one friend, might be late.
You are drunk
With being loved, the demands!
Drunk that night, while your husband slept in a stupor,
Your red-hot cigarette marked and marked and marked
His palms and the backs of his hands!
Over your bed is tacked the little print of Mather.
His wig is white as a lamb,
But evilly parted in the middle,
His flesh shines like marble or cold tallow.
He has anosognosia, he is incapable
Of knowing he is ill.
Aspiring to be less
Magnalia
and more direct,
He sees the witches' moist red and black parts
Joined mutually to infect;
Championing inoculation, he dreams of wet warm hearts,
Their extinction! Their annihilation!
You say he dreams of Mistress Hutchinson,
When the Bomb had descended and was in her heart,
That “peculiar indwelling of the Holy Ghost,”
When the Voice was in her ear,
When, all soul, without soul-space
Left for sanctification,
“At last she was so full she could not contain
And vented her revelations â¦
That she should come into New England
And should here be persecuted,
And that God would ruin us
And our posterity and the whole state
For the same.” Banished as one seditious,
Indians stretched her apart piece by piece.
Even her shade has disappeared.
She is revered
Only by you alone,
Anne, no one even knows that she was here.
Her sweet heart and sweet mind and sweet flesh and soul are one,
Like the air with the wind, as if she had never been born!
You walk through the burning Common,
Past the low terror of the Ether Dome,
You walk over the rooftops of Charlestown,
You walk over the Mystic River, and think of the One!
The Voice! It speaks of a wordless converse
Between airy, sweetly singing
Silent invisibles interminglingâ
In bliss! within a sunbeam!
Within a single atom!
The mind stops ⦠mind and body
Longing for order and mystery,
To be as a cloud, pure as a Taj Mahal
Of grief for a cherished soul,
Floating over beautiful wine-colored October.
Â
A window sighs.
The row of houses stipples and sways
As if seen through a windshield after a downpour.
A brownstone tries to say something:
But the chimney is too small,
Is intimidated by the dark,
Its fireplaces never used.
Under the street light,
I take out the booklet
Of shadowless photographs
Drained soft beiges by reproduction:
Slave-bangles, kohl eyesâthe partner,
With cracked patent-leather hair, in his socks and garters,
All aloofness, good posture, chin in the air,
Forty years ago. My glasses bite
The bridge of my nose
As I stare into the dustless room.
Is he her lover? But cheats on her â¦
And she's had others.
Her veil-gray fingertips brush my eyelids, my lips.
And will have more.
The cathedral clock has just struck three, or four;
A car parks in the piles of leaves.
I think of the flower-fresh wide-eyed gaze of Greeceâ
Garlanding what it sees.
Convinced life is meaningless,
I lack the courage of my conviction.
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The way a child's hands stare through glass
Under the frost, pining so much
They lag behind the child, they pass
Their two hours, patients and their visitors, and touch