Poems 1962-2012 (37 page)

Read Poems 1962-2012 Online

Authors: Louise Glück

BOOK: Poems 1962-2012
6.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She looks at her hands—how old they are. It's not the beginning, it's the end.

And the adults, they're all dead now.

Only the children are left, alone, growing old.

BURNING LEAVES

The dead leaves catch fire quickly.

And they burn quickly; in no time at all,

they change from something to nothing.

Midday. The sky is cold, blue;

under the fire, there's gray earth.

How fast it all goes, how fast the smoke clears.

And where the pile of leaves was,

an emptiness that suddenly seems vast.

Across the road, a boy's watching.

He stays a long time, watching the leaves burn.

Maybe this is how you'll know when the earth is dead—

it will ignite.

CROSSROADS

My body, now that we will not be traveling together much longer

I begin to feel a new tenderness toward you, very raw and unfamiliar,

like what I remember of love when I was young—

love that was so often foolish in its objectives

but never in its choices, its intensities.

Too much demanded in advance, too much that could not be promised—

My soul has been so fearful, so violent:

forgive its brutality.

As though it were that soul, my hand moves over you cautiously,

not wishing to give offense

but eager, finally, to achieve expression as substance:

it is not the earth I will miss,

it is you I will miss.

BATS

—
for Ellen Pinsky

Concerning death, one might observe

that those with authority to speak remain silent:

others force their way to the pulpit or

center stage—experience

being always preferable to theory, they are rarely

true clairvoyants, nor is conviction

the common aspect of insight. Look up into the night:

if distraction through the senses is the essence of life

what you see now appears to be a simulation of death, bats

whirling in darkness— But man knows

nothing of death. If how we behave is how you feel,

this is not what death is like, this is what life is like.

You too are blind. You too flail in darkness.

A terrible solitude surrounds all beings who

confront mortality. As Margulies says: death

terrifies us all into silence.

ABUNDANCE

A cool wind blows on summer evenings, stirring the wheat.

The wheat bends, the leaves of the peach trees

rustle in the night ahead.

In the dark, a boy's crossing the field:

for the first time, he's touched a girl

so he walks home a man, with a man's hungers.

Slowly the fruit ripens—

baskets and baskets from a single tree

so some rots every year

and for a few weeks there's too much:

before and after, nothing.

Between the rows of wheat

you can see the mice, flashing and scurrying

across the earth, though the wheat towers above them,

churning as the summer wind blows.

The moon is full. A strange sound

comes from the field—maybe the wind.

But for the mice it's a night like any summer night.

Fruit and grain: a time of abundance.

Nobody dies, nobody goes hungry.

No sound except the roar of the wheat.

MIDSUMMER

On nights like this we used to swim in the quarry,

the boys making up games requiring them to tear off the girls' clothes

and the girls cooperating, because they had new bodies since last summer

and they wanted to exhibit them, the brave ones

leaping off the high rocks—bodies crowding the water.

The nights were humid, still. The stone was cool and wet,

marble for graveyards, for buildings that we never saw,

buildings in cities far away.

On cloudy nights, you were blind. Those nights the rocks were dangerous,

but in another way it was all dangerous, that was what we were after.

The summer started. Then the boys and girls began to pair off

but always there were a few left at the end—sometimes they'd keep watch,

sometimes they'd pretend to go off with each other like the rest,

but what could they do there, in the woods? No one wanted to be them.

But they'd show up anyway, as though some night their luck would change,

fate would be a different fate.

At the beginning and at the end, though, we were all together.

After the evening chores, after the smaller children were in bed,

then we were free. Nobody said anything, but we knew the nights we'd meet

and the nights we wouldn't. Once or twice, at the end of summer,

we could see a baby was going to come out of all that kissing.

And for those two, it was terrible, as terrible as being alone.

The game was over. We'd sit on the rocks smoking cigarettes,

worrying about the ones who weren't there.

And then finally walk home through the fields,

because there was always work the next day.

And the next day, we were kids again, sitting on the front steps in the morning,

eating a peach. Just that, but it seemed an honor to have a mouth.

And then going to work, which meant helping out in the fields.

One boy worked for an old lady, building shelves.

The house was very old, maybe built when the mountain was built.

And then the day faded. We were dreaming, waiting for night.

Standing at the front door at twilight, watching the shadows lengthen.

And a voice in the kitchen was always complaining about the heat,

wanting the heat to break.

Then the heat broke, the night was clear.

And you thought of the boy or girl you'd be meeting later.

And you thought of walking into the woods and lying down,

practicing all those things you were learning in the water.

And though sometimes you couldn't see the person you were with,

there was no substitute for that person.

The summer night glowed; in the field, fireflies were glinting.

And for those who understood such things, the stars were sending messages:

You will leave the village where you were born

and in another country you'll become very rich, very powerful,

but always you will mourn something you left behind, even though you can't say what it was,

and eventually you will return to seek it.

THRESHING

The sky's light behind the mountain

though the sun is gone—this light

is like the sun's shadow, passing over the earth.

Before, when the sun was high,

you couldn't look at the sky or you'd go blind.

That time of day, the men don't work.

They lie in the shade, waiting, resting;

their undershirts are stained with sweat.

But under the trees it's cool,

like the flask of water that gets passed around.

A green awning's over their heads, blocking the sun.

No talk, just the leaves rustling in the heat,

the sound of the water moving from hand to hand.

This hour or two is the best time of day.

Not asleep, not awake, not drunk,

and the women far away

so that the day becomes suddenly calm, quiet and expansive,

without the women's turbulence.

The men lie under their canopy, apart from the heat,

as though the work were done.

Beyond the fields, the river's soundless, motionless—

scum mottles the surface.

To a man, they know when the hour's gone.

The flask gets put away, the bread, if there's bread.

The leaves darken a little, the shadows change.

The sun's moving again, taking the men along,

regardless of their preferences.

Above the fields, the heat's fierce still, even in decline.

The machines stand where they were left,

patient, waiting for the men's return.

The sky's bright, but twilight is coming.

The wheat has to be threshed; many hours remain

before the work is finished.

And afterward, walking home through the fields,

dealing with the evening.

So much time best forgotten.

Tense, unable to sleep, the woman's soft body

always shifting closer—

That time in the woods: that was reality.

This is the dream.

A VILLAGE LIFE

The death and uncertainty that await me

as they await all men, the shadows evaluating me

because it can take time to destroy a human being,

the element of suspense

needs to be preserved—

On Sundays I walk my neighbor's dog

so she can go to church to pray for her sick mother.

The dog waits for me in the doorway. Summer and winter

we walk the same road, early morning, at the base of the escarpment.

Sometimes the dog gets away from me—for a moment or two,

I can't see him behind some trees. He's very proud of this,

this trick he brings out occasionally, and gives up again

as a favor to me—

Afterward, I go back to my house to gather firewood.

I keep in my mind images from each walk:

monarda growing by the roadside;

in early spring, the dog chasing the little gray mice,

so for a while it seems possible

not to think of the hold of the body weakening, the ratio

of the body to the void shifting,

and the prayers becoming prayers for the dead.

Midday, the church bells finished. Light in excess:

still, fog blankets the meadow, so you can't see

the mountain in the distance, covered with snow and ice.

When it appears again, my neighbor thinks

her prayers are answered. So much light she can't control her happiness—

it has to burst out in language.
Hello,
she yells, as though

that is her best translation.

She believes in the Virgin the way I believe in the mountain,

though in one case the fog never lifts.

But each person stores his hope in a different place.

I make my soup, I pour my glass of wine.

I'm tense, like a child approaching adolescence.

Soon it will be decided for certain what you are,

one thing, a boy or girl. Not both any longer.

And the child thinks: I want to have a say in what happens.

But the child has no say whatsoever.

When I was a child, I did not foresee this.

Later, the sun sets, the shadows gather,

rustling the low bushes like animals just awake for the night.

Inside, there's only firelight. It fades slowly;

now only the heaviest wood's still

flickering across the shelves of instruments.

I hear music coming from them sometimes,

even locked in their cases.

When I was a bird, I believed I would be a man.

That's the flute. And the horn answers,

when I was a man, I cried out to be a bird.

Then the music vanishes. And the secret it confides in me

vanishes also.

In the window, the moon is hanging over the earth,

meaningless but full of messages.

It's dead, it's always been dead,

but it pretends to be something else,

burning like a star, and convincingly, so that you feel sometimes

it could actually make something grow on earth.

If there's an image of the soul, I think that's what it is.

I move through the dark as though it were natural to me,

as though I were already a factor in it.

Tranquil and still, the day dawns.

On market day, I go to the market with my lettuces.

INDEX OF TITLES

The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

Abishag

Abundance

Adult Grief

All Hallows

Amazons

Ancient Text

Animals

Anniversary

Aphrodite

Appearances

Apple Trees, The

April

Arboretum

Archaic Fragment

Archipelago

At the Dance

At the River

Aubade:

There was one summer

The world was very large. Then

Today above the gull's call

August

Autumnal

Averno

Balcony, The

Baskets

Bats:

Concerning death, one might observe

There are two kinds of vision:

Before the Storm

Birthday:

Amazingly, I can look back

Every year, on her birthday, my mother got twelve roses

Blue Rotunda

Brennende Liebe

Bridal Piece

Brooding Likeness

Brown Circle

Burning Heart, The

Burning Leaves:

Not far from the house and barn

The dead leaves catch fire quickly.

The fire burns up into the clear sky

Butterfly, The

Cana

Castile

Celestial Music

Cell, The

Ceremony

Chicago Train, The

Child Crying Out

Children Coming Home from School:

If you live in a city, it's different: someone has to meet

The year I started school, my sister couldn't walk long distances.

Circe's Grief

Circe's Power

Circe's Torment

Civilization

Clear Morning

Clover

Condo

Confession:

He steals sometimes, because they don't have their own tree

To say I'm without fear—

Other books

Beyond The Door by Phaedra Weldon
Geek Chic by Lesli Richardson
Suicide Med by Freida McFadden
Defiance by Behan, Tom
War To The Knife by Grant, Peter
Vow to Protect by Ann Voss Peterson
Whale Music by Paul Quarrington
Stonehenge by Rosemary Hill
Agent Storm: My Life Inside al-Qaeda by Morten Storm, Paul Cruickshank, Tim Lister