Read The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan Online
Authors: Alice Notley
Bigger windows, & a panorama—light, buildings & people in street air
Wish my teeth were white and sparkled
Wish my legs were not where they are—where they are
I wish the days warmly cool & clothes I like to be inside of
Wish I were walking around in Chelsea (NY) & it was 5:15 a.m., the
sun coming up, alone, you asleep at home
I wish red rage came easier
I wish death, but not just now
I wish I were driving alone across America in a gold Cadillac
toward California, & my best friend
I wish I were in love, & you here
ripped
out of her mind
a marvelous construction
thinking
no place; & you
not once properly handled
Ophelia
&
you can’t handle yourself
feeling
no inclination
toward that
solitude,
love
by yourself
Ophelia
& feeling free you drift
far more beautifully
than we
As one now understands
He never did see you
you moving so while talking flashed
& failed
to let you go
Ophelia
FOR PAT
November, dancing, or
Going to the store in the country,
Where green changes itself into
LIFE
,
MOVING ON
, Jockey Shorts, Katzenmiaou
A Chesterfield King & the blue book
IN OLD SOUTHAMPTON
,
you make my days special
You do Jimmy’s, & Alice’s,
Phoebe’s, Linda’s,
Lewis’ & Joanne’s, too. . .
& Kathy’s (a friend who is new). . .
& Gram’s . . .
who loved you,
like I do
once . . .
& who surely does so since
that 4th of July last,
a Saturday,
a day that left her free
to be with & love you
(& me)
(all of us)
just purely;
clean;
& selflessly;
no thoughts
Just, It’s true. As I would be
& as I am, to you
this
November.
Crash
Take Valium Sleep
Dream &,
forget it.
Wake up now & strange
displaced
at home.
Read The Providence Evening Bulletin
No one you knew
got married
had children
got divorced
died
got born
tho many familiar names flicker &
disappear.
Sit
watch TV
draw blanks
swallow
pepsi
meatballs
. . .
give yourself the needle:
“Shit! There’s gotta be something
to do
here!”
JOURNEY
to Seven young men on horses, leaving Texas.
SHILOH
: They’ve got to do what’s right! So, after
a long trip, they’ll fight for the South in the War.
No war in Texas, but they’ve heard about it, & they want
to fight for their country. Have some adventures & make
their folks proud! Two hours later all are dead;
one by one they died, stupidly, & they never did find out
why! There were no niggers in South Texas! Only
the leader,
with one arm shot off, survives to head back for Texas:
all his friends behind him, dead. What will happen?
Watching him, I cry big tears. His friends
were beautiful, with boyish American good manners,
cowboys!
Telephone New York: “hello!”
“Hello! I’m drunk! &
I have no clothes on!”
“My goodness,” I say.
“See you tomorrow.”
Wide awake all night reading:
The Life of Turner
(“He first saw the light in Maiden Lane”)
A. C. Becker: Wholesale Jewels
Catalogue 1912
The Book of Marvels, 1934:
The year I was born.
No mention of my birth in here. Hmmm.
Saturday The Rabbi Stayed Home
(that way he got to solve the murder)
LIFE
on the Moon by
LIFE
Magazine.
My mother wakes up, 4 a.m.: Someone to talk with!
Over coffee we chat, two grownups
I have two children, I’m an adult now, too.
Now we are two people talking who have known each other
a long time,
Like Edwin & Rudy. Our talk is a great pleasure: my mother
a spunky woman. Her name was Peggy Dugan when she was young.
Now, 61 years old, she blushes to tell me I was conceived
before the wedding! “I’ve always been embarrassed about telling you
til now,” she says. “I didn’t know what you might think!”
“I think it’s really sweet,” I say. “It means I’m really
a love child.” She too was conceived before her mother’s wedding,
I know. We talk, daylight comes, & the Providence Morning Journal.
My mother leaves for work. I’m still here.