Read The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan Online
Authors: Alice Notley
doing but feeling a little better
standing on the hood of a 1953 Buick
with a John Henry type hammer
in his hands, they having a kind of
metric as he adjusts his delivery more and
more to the inevitable banging. Presumes
there is nothing unscientific in
his desire to change the best
proportions of strength and beauty. His
tastes were modest, a piece of bread,
a draught of water, and you were
often sent to drive him out of his
college. “I couldn’t believe you’d
be the one I was looking for,” the poet
says in another city, where he has
a friend he can stay with a day or two.
He flies in watching the lights of the
city, and in a phrase the losses endured
by everyone every day—the negation of
possibility that occurs each time
we pass anyone’s house.
He eats dinner with the writing and the
phrases stay with him when he wakes.
He notes them down and moves on to the
next stop via the bus station. Crossing
the campus on the one path he
knows he keeps reminding himself of
what he is doing. It is ominous that
the only other large institution in
the town is
the state insane asylum. In all, it
is a strangely good occasion.
He leaves that night, paces back and forth.
There is a skull on his table and suddenly
at the sight of it he starts reading.
From the airless close-packed winter bus
station he tries to call his contact at
the noon reading. The tour is to take place that
day and he has four hours to go 40 miles. The
tenuous noise of revolutions and
student demonstrations combine with assembly
lines that will annihilate the miles,
he becoming then an older and more
dependable self, and yet, remembering.
Perhaps though some recent poems about
his children will do the trick. He reads
these quietly and has
inevitable parties given after his
readings, he plays one or two songs,
and then scuttles back into his corner,
realizing now that role-playing is
shameful beside the feelings he
has experienced. Now he has the sensation
that he must calm down and work.
But on the aircraft aimed at last at
his home, he feels also
interested in Yeats’ occult preoccupations,
a curious object to discuss
in good health, far from the poems themselves.
“Just be yourself,” he told himself
in the beginning. Ah, but
what self? The self develops a full-
blown psychosis. Delusions set in,
along with restlessness; a sensation of
suffocation, withdrawal, excitation, satisfaction,
that he has done the something
idiosyncratic that people are expecting and
that much more, too.
It is more than he wants to pay, and, caught
up by a daring all or nothing plan,
he wants to tell, he does tell the driver to
take him to the high car, thinking
of the open road, the dear love of
comrades, Hart Crane. The long trip
back. He is instantly surrounded.
Someone points him in a direction
and he begins walking with students
trailing him as though he is uncomfortable,
even desperate: he is
sure he has not written any poetry that
would turn him around.
It begins to snow. Traffic
slows all around
him for miles. Finally a lucky kind of
exhilaration has come over him
and he sings with
white breath to the passing hours, followed by
complete recovery the next day.
He pulls out the packet of schedules:
something is wrong. He has forgotten
that his after-words are being received almost
as things, and toward the end he comes to
think that the things have the quality of a
college, but cannot reach him. He hails a
cab and asks the fare to the town he is going
to with a certain condescending benevolence,
and begins.
It is over. He relaxes with the
faculty party and goes to bed.
He dreams he is a scarecrow in a field
and writes poems
in his head all night. Some few
believe he is where he is: some place in
Wisconsin, where he has given a
poetry reading at a small college; he
has never been lionized by anyone,
not even his immediate family; but
these small repeated tastes of local
mints continue; he bellows louder and
louder and the flinching
audience is with him to the end of a couple
of things modelled on Walter Benton’s
“This is my Beloved.”
If they were good, and he read them well,
he could collect his money at
each stop with a clear
conscience. An hour goes by. He considers various
alternatives, but they are all
as absurd as the wish to grow
wings. Besides, another hammering is going on.
When an especially loud cheer comes in from
outside he looks up, thinking, “What is wrong
with such and such a concept?” Students
gather round him afterwards, pressing
their manuscripts into his hands,
telling him that the college he is to read in that
night is denominational. He goes up to the
priest, who has been in fact pointing to the right
direction all along. Remember now? He is now standing
alone in the snow, in a strange state, hitch-hiking.
He is 45 years old. For better or for
worse he has been moving and speaking among his kind.
But it is he who is not satisfied with this.
Remember the fragrance of Grandma’s kitchen? It is not
only poetry that is
involved, it is the poet as well. Vastly he resolves
to see if he can work something out
about this later, on the bus, at a reasonable hour.
He rides calmly back to a city within a
city, with a certain flair now, since he has forgotten
to telegraph his arrival. No one meets him at the
airport, he phones a friend in the city for a day
and a night before flying home. He sees the
people who sponsored as much liquor as he is
accustomed to at a party after the reading,
waves his arms wildly about and says, “Anything
amounts to something!” And, looking at his watch, he
turns it one way and another so his thin hands can catch
the keys. He has not played the
guitar for years but feels immediately
all out and looks around for whoever is
supposed to help him. There is no one
but a priest, and finally it happens.
One of them, a girl, not the one he would
have picked to pen such a thing, is already
half an hour late. They all reach
the college, then the building, a crowd-raising
scheme by some clod or other.
All through the reading all sorts of new and
poetic things happen to him. Each time he carries
it to another campus. At a turn he gets off
his freeway; they are not so far from the
college as they thought but he
was not gracefully but disgracefully
drunk, who is now halfway into a new frankness.
“I couldn’t believe in you, either,” says the
priest with candor. Riveting him with
astonishment, directly in front of the
building, a lanky student comes out of the
building and talks to him an hour or two before
dinner. He lies down on a bed, then gets up,
is finished. He finds his poems,
usually rather loose in rhythm, taking
on a thumping thunderment and
incoherent babbling. These symptoms lasted
several decades. Actually they have been
responded to to a degree he has come to
consider excessive and even manic, but he
suspects that attendance at college seems to
be all but inaccessible. There are no
buses or trains until after time confers her
particular favors on a stranger she
will never see again, one who last night
grew more emotional, more harried, more
impulsive. Yet he knows that these qualities
will die out, take a wrong turn somewhere.
On a highway complex as big as this one
it is hard to get tween his touring self and
his usual self. He has definitely been
another person.
TO ANNE KEPLER & FRANK O’HARA
FOR SANDY
Winter crisp and the brittleness of snow
as like make me tired as not. I go my
myriad ways blundering, bombastic, dragged
by a self that can never be still, pushed
by my surging blood, my reasoning mind.
I am in love with poetry. Every way I turn
this, my weakness, smites me. A glass
of chocolate milk, head of lettuce, darkness
of clouds at one o’clock obsess me.
I weep for all of these or laugh.
By day I sleep, an obscurantist, lost
in dreams of lists, compiled by my self
for reassurance. Jackson Pollock René
Rilke Benedict Arnold I watch
my psyche, smile, dream wet dreams, and sigh.
At night, awake, high on poems, or pills
or simple awe that loveliness exists, my lists
flow differently. Of words bright red
and black, and blue. Bosky. Oubliette. Dissevered.
And O, alas
Time disturbs me. Always minute detail
fills me up. It is 12:10 in New York. In Houston
it is 2 p.m. It is time to steal books. It’s
time to go mad. It is the day of the apocalypse
the year of parrot fever! What am I saying?
Only this. My poems do contain
wilde beestes. I write for my Lady
of the Lake. My god is immense, and lonely
but uncowed. I trust my sanity, and I am proud. If
I sometimes grow weary, and seem still, nevertheless
my heart still loves, will break.
I wake up 11:30 back aching from soft bed Pat
gone to work Ron to class (I never heard a sound)
it’s my birthday. 27. I put on birthday
pants birthday shirt go to
ADAM
’s buy a Pepsi for
breakfast come home drink it take a pill
I’m high!
I do three Greek lessons to make
up for cutting class. I read birthday book
(from Joe) on Juan Gris real name: José
Vittoriano Gonzalez stop in the middle read
all my poems gloat a little over new ballad
quickly skip old sonnets imitations of Shakespeare.
Back to books. I read poems by Auden Spenser Stevens
Pound and Frank O’Hara. I hate books.
I wonder
if Jan or Helen or Babe ever think about me. I
wonder if David Bearden still dislikes me. I wonder
if people talk about me secretly. I wonder if
I’m too old. I wonder if I’m fooling myself
about pills. I wonder what’s in the icebox.
I wonder if Ron or Pat bought any toilet paper
this morning
FOR JOHN STANTON
It is 7:53 Friday morning in the Universe
New York City to be somewhat exact
I’m in my room wife gone working Gallup
fucking in the room below
had 17½ milligrams desoxyn
last night 1 Miltown, read Paterson, parts
1 & 2, poems by Wallace Stevens & How Much Longer
Shall I Be Able To Inhabit The Divine Sepulchre
(John Ashbery). Made lists of lines to
steal, words to look up (didn’t). Had steak & eggs
with Dick while Sandy sweetly slept.
At 6:30 woke Sandy
fucked til 7 now she’s late to work & I’m still
high. Guess I’ll write to Bernie today
and Tom. And call Tony. And go out at 9 (with Dick)
to steal books to sell, so we can go
to see
A NIGHT AT THE OPERA
It’s 5:03 a.m. on the 11th of July this morning
and the day is bright gray turning green I can’t stop
loving you says Ray Charles and I know exactly
what he means because the Swedish policeman in the
next room is beating on my door demanding sleep
and not Ray Charles and bluegrass does he know
that in three hours I go to court to see if the world
will let me have a wife he doesn’t of course it wouldn’t
occur to him nor would it occur to him to write
“scotch-tape body” in a notebook but it did occur to
John Stanton alias The Knife Fighter age 18 so why
are my hands shaking I should know better