Authors: Frederick Seidel
Each other's hands with all their love.
The huge scarred Chinaman, a yellow boxing glove
(His neck and head), spreads out his wife's left hand
Just so, and strokes her wedding band,
A lion lapping at a thorn
In his own paw. Alone, I stand
By the wall scribbling with my finger Pound's forlorn
Hymn, “What thou lovest well remains â¦
What thou lov'st well ⦔ They don't allow us pens. Bleak grains
Of sunlight cross the floor, as the sun leans
Inside the tall barred windowscreens,
While the river escalates downtown
On flattening steps of foam. “I cleans
Yo hans, I cleans you fresh blue sunshine,” Chas, his brown
And blue eyes tilting madly, sings.
The gulls, their own white tracers, dip through spumy rings
For rubbers, fish, and rubbish. Pudgy squabs
Peck the yard's pebbles. Each head bobs
Like a cork floater.
From these stones
Give us our bread, Lord
, each craw sobs.
“Shall not be reft from thee”ârose lips and flinty crones'
Lips peck their husbands' lips, the priest
Who came is going. Eyes and tongues and ears, like yeast,
Swell through their sockets as the studded door
Opens and buzzes closed for more
Long hours. When washday's down the drain,
Comes Tuesday, two o'clock to four,
Though some of them won't come if there's a washday rain.
Priests, girls run downâthe hours just run.
No heliotrope, I watch that dead gray door. The sun,
The flexed life-dealing sun's too strong, the sun.
Bottlegreen grass in Central Park,
The early light streams. Lying like
A lover near her boy, a girl,
Pre-Raphaelite in profile, pearl-
Smooth lips, nose and brow, and the passive
Long eyelids and lashes of Melancholy pensiveâ
And when she rises and walks away
A borzoi and its soft sashay
On slender white paws comes to mind.
We lay there like a heart, our mind
Off to our right the blue lagoon,
Free still of sailboats, just free of the moon,
Our south, the red and brown brick zoo.
But that was then. This now is Bellevue,
And God knows where the girl is, a ruined
Wax mask, waist-down a shiftless hot wind.
Dear heart, those times that were sweet milk
For our pale bones, and in the clock spun silk
For our chapped skin, like dice have scattered.
I'm like that lady-killer Bluebeard,
Dead, but to my last wife's dust,
All Bellevue-blue obsessive trust,
Repeating like an old blind cock,
“Dear heart, the light streams down on Central Park.”
It's not my mind. Shouldn't that show
Have gorgeous Desdemona snow
Othello, ax him and then fly,
Black circles under each blue eye,
My dear? And our Miss Liberty,
Lounging beside the door, our trusty p.t.,
Will she be had, will she give in
To the Red Bear and live in sin,
And then Red China break the door?
Divorce, adultery, and war
Thrive. “Let live, sleep late, leave the lark
To cry, The light streams down on Central Park,”
You'd sayâbut some say, “Miss the slut
A little while, poor soiled girl.” What
Else is there butâto liveâto care
For something flashy made of air
And lose it to the wind, and sue
For breach of promise with faked death in Bellevue
Or the sex pen? But I don't know.
The smile that builds the cretin's brow,
The tenderness one gives and gets,
And lives off, with stale cigarettes,
And what old people keep of fleece
And breath, aren't they some help? They give some peace.
One man here said, “Don't play deadâdie!”
But others try life, try dope, try
The fairy bars, join the Reserves,
Or take the wife their life deserves.
He said we're locked together like rhymes,
Us and our loved-ones, in bad times,
And the live whole halves of our heart
Shall, wind or bomb, be smithereened apart.
Like a gray cat tied to the tarred stump of a tree
At night, the hall hides, tries its length, slinks back. It climbs
Piles of back stairs down from the dark street. Finally
The kitchen. Just to waste the steak here would take lifetimes!
There's that much, and all much too gamy to be goodâ
Blue tons braised, baked, broiled, or basted violet. Pie-eyed
Waiters dump it on castered slabs they wheel inside
The banquet room. They breathe here. No one else could.
The air's close as wet wool. On the last door's a hide,
White once, now orange, lettered
GRAEFIN SEIDE'S PRIDE
.
In the room, jet columns lace the floor and balcony
From which low music flickers on the parquet wood
Through massive fuming candelabra. Easily
A dozen colored footmen hum along the walls,
Among them grown men dressed like Philip Morris boys,
Smooth moon-faced fairies, serving trays to him. He stalls
Over each choice untilâthis the fat king enjoysâ
Their hands start shaking, picks some favorite
saignant
dish
He's had prepared, and motioning away the rest,
Pokes it, and slurps his fingertip, and smilesâ“Deeelish â¦
Deeelicious!” Sweating, finished, he sheds his green vest
And rolls his saffron blouse's sleeves up to his armpitsâ
Slowly, because of the stiff spanglesâeven so,
They slip out of his fat gold fingersâand just sits,
Just strokes his lapdog, slowlyâno hour hand's so slow.
The candles huddle, soughing, in the brain-gray gloom,
In their pale light. His gold knuckles gleam. Not a sound.
   Don't make a sound, here's your last chance. Take it
   And run for it down the wrong hallway, the one
   That's never used, and don't look back. You've missed
   The worst of it just barely. You
have
to know!
   Is what you're going to say. Well, things like a girl
   Exposing herself in various poses to
   A vast steel machine and its little red eye
   Which stares and stares and never goes off. Enough?
   Behind her, behind where she spreads herself out
   Nude in her stockings and black garter belt
   On the Persian carpet, its pile the silencer,
   Is another huge heavy machine, this one
   Entirely hooded in black leather except for
   Its appendages, mantis-like chrome arms
   Which operate on her face with silver knives,
   Finally leaving only her eyes. Enough?
   Well, like the room where priests walk on the ceiling,
   Nuns on the floor, looking for each other
   In pitch-darkness with great blind eyes on stalks,
   Like dandelions. With their charcoals they scrawl
   Messages they of course can't know the others
   Can't see, all being deaf-mutes, on the damp walls.
   Enough? One last thing, then, and the worst.
   In about an hour the Royal Servitors
   Of the Commode come in and fold a silk screen,
  Â
Tall and lavender, with various seals
   And names sewn into it, like Eurydice, Gandhi,
   Nietzsche, Troilus, Dulles, Pola Negri,
   And othersâthey fold this screen around the fat king,
   Who is seated. Under it you can see
   The pairs of slippers, the Servitors at attention
   On triangle bases. Then they emerge, the screen
   Is folded back, and in the pot are gold bees,
   Honeybees, millions of them, which rise and join
   The millions and millions of them on the ceiling
   That you thought were highly overwrought
   Gold work. They made the low music that you heard.
   No one eats honey hereâit drips down the walls
   And columns, it hangs in the airâso it happens
   Sometimes that a live man is selected
   For his weakness to come and gorge, to swell up
   Half dead on the sweetness that famishes,
   And all the while he dies the honeybees feed
   On him with their stingers, until in ecstasy
   He does die. You were lured here for this purpose.
   Get outside. It is morning on Eighty-sixth Street
   Where you live. The painted clock outside
   The jeweler's window happens to have the right time,
   Six o'clock. A girl with crooked stockings
   Walks on the feet of a goddess to the bus stop.
   An opening window flashes light out over
   The street like a big white bird. Coming home,
   After a rainy night in Central Park,
   Behind his old friend, his old suffering mare,
   A horse-cab driver, looking straight ahead,
   Smiles quietly, just because it is morning.
After the Party
AIDS Days
American
Americans in Rome
Another Muse
Anyone with the Wish
April
At a Factory in Italy
At Gracie Mansion
At New York Hospital
August
Autumn
Bali
Ballad of La Palette, The
Barbados
Bathroom Door, The
“Beast Is in Chains, The,”
Beautiful Day Outside, A
Beyond the Event Horizon
Big Golconda Diamond, The
Big Jet, The
Bipolar November
Birth of the Universe, The
Black-Eyed Virgins, The
Black Stovepipe Hat
Blood
Blue and Pink
Blue-Eyed Doe, The
Bologna
Boys
Breast Cancer
Broadway Melody
Burkina Faso
Bush Administration, The
Casanova Getting Older
Castle in the Mountains, The
Chartres
Childhood Sunlight, The
Chiquita Gregory
Christmas
Christmas
Climbing Everest
Cloclo
Coalman, The
Coconut
Complete Works of Anton Webern, The
Contents Under Pressure
Cosmopolitans at the Paradise
Dante's Beatrice
Darkening in the Dark
Das Kapital
Dayley Island
Death
Death of Anton Webern, The
Death of Meta Burden in an Avalanche, The
Death of the Shah, The
Death Valley
December
De Sade
Descent into the Underworld
Dick and Fred
Dido with Dildo
Dimpled Cloud, A
Doctor Love
Downtown
Do You Doha?
Drill, The
Drinking in the Daytime
Drinks at the Carlyle
Dune Road, Southampton
Early Sunday Morning in the Cher
Easter
East Hampton Airport
Edward Witten
Eisenhower Years
Eleven Dimensions, The
Elms
E-mail from an Owl
Empire
Empress Rialto, The
Erato
Eternity
Eurostar
Evening Man
Everything
Faint Galaxy
Fall Snowfall
Fall
February
Feminists in Space
Fever
Fever
Final Hour, The
Finals
Flame
Fog
Forever
Forever
Forever
For Holly Andersen
Former Governor of California, The
France for Boys
Frederick Seidel
Freedom Bombs for Vietnam (1967)
French Polynesia
Fresh Stick of Chewing Gum, A
From a High Floor
From Nijinsky's Diary
Fucking
Future, The
Galaxies
Gallop to Farewell, A
Getaway
Gethsemane
Girl in the Mirror, The
Glory
God Exploding
Going Fast
Goodness
Grandson Born Dead
Great Depression, The
Green Dress, 1999
Hair in a Net
Hamlet
Hamlet
Happiness
Hart Crane Near the End
Heart Art
Heart Attack, The
Her Song
Holly Andersen
Homage to Cicero
Homage to Pessoa
Home
Hotel Carlyle, New York
Hot Night, Lightning
Hour, The
Hugh Jeremy Chisholm
I Am Siam
I Do
Il Duce
I'm Here This
In a Previous Life
In Cap Ferrat
Infinite, The
In Memoriam
In Spite of Everything
In the Green Mountains
In the Mirror
Into the Emptiness
Invisible Dark Matter
I Own Nothing
Italian Girl, The
Italy
It Is the Morning of the Universe
James Baldwin in Paris
Jane Canfield (1897â1984)
January
Joan of Arc
July
June
June Allyson and Mae West
Kill Poem
Last Entries in Mayakovsky's Notebook, The
Last Poem in the Book, The
Last Remaining Angel, The
Laudatio
Letter to the Editors of
Vogue
Life After Death
Lighting of the Candles, The
Little Song
Little White Dog, The
Lorraine Motel, Memphis
Lover, The
Love Song
March
Marriage
Master Jeweler Joel Rosenthal, The
May
Men and Woman
Miami in the Arctic Circle