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112 pages, Paperback
First published March 8, 2005
Is it the song of nevertheless,
or of the empire of our heart? We carry
language as our mind, but are we
the dead whale that sinks grandly
for years to reach the bottom of us?
- What Song Should We Sing? (pg. 6)
It reminds me how mutable language is. Keats
would leave blank places in his drafts to hold on
to his passion, spaces for the right words to come.
- The Butternut Tree At Fort Juniper (pg. 41)
It started when he was a young man
and went to Italy. He climbed mountains,
wanting to be a poet. But was troubled
by what Dorothy Wordsworth wrote in
her journal about William having worn
himself out searching all day to find
a simile for nightingale....
- Less Being More (pg. 39)
I feel so bad today
that I don't want to write a poem.
I don't care: any poem, this
poem.
- Richard Brautigan, "April 7, 1969" (from Rommel Drives On Deep Into Egypt)
Poem, you sonofabitch, it's bad enough
that I embarrass myself working so hard
to get it right even a little,
and that little grudging and awkward.
But it's afterwards I resent, when
the sweet sure should hold me like
a trout in the bright summer stream.
- Doing Poetry
There is a wren sitting in the branches
of my spirit and it chooses not to sing.
It is listening to learn its song.
- Trying To Write Poetry (pg. 46)
The glare of the Greek sun
on our stone house
is not so white
as the pale moonlight on it.
- Truth (pg. 23)
I remember how I'd lie on my roof
listening to the fat violinist
below in the sleeping village
play Schubert so badly, so well.
- The Reinvention Of Happiness (pg. 72)
The Greek fishermen do not
play on the beach and I don't
write funny poems.
- Metier (pg. 89)
Only you and I still stand in the snow on Highland Avenue
in Pittsburgh waiting for the blundering iron streetcars
that never came. Only you know how the immense storms
over the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers were the scale
I wanted. Nobody but you remembers Peabody High School.
You shared my youth in Paris and the hills above Como.
And later, in Seattle. It was you playing the aria from
Don Giovanni over and over, filling the forest of Puget
Sound with the music. You in the front room and me
upstairs with your discarded wife in my bed. The sound
of your loneliness pouring over our happy bodies.
You were with your third wife when I was in Perugia
six months later, but in love with somebody else.
We searched for her in Munich, the snow falling again.
You trying to decide when to kill yourself. All of it
finally bringing us to San Francisco. To the vast
decaying white house. No sound of Mozart coming up
from there. No alleluias in you anymore. No longer
will you waltz under the chandeliers in Paris salons
drunk with champagne and the Greek girl as the others
stand along the mirrored walls. The men watching
with fury, the eyes of the women inscrutable. No one
else speaks the language of those years. No one
remembers you as the Baron. The streetcars have
finished the last run, and I am walking home. Thinking
love is not refuted because it comes to an end.
- Elegy For Bob (Jean McLean) (pg. 11)
There were a hundred wild people in Allen's
three-story house. He was sitting at a small
table in the kitchen quietly eating something.
Alone, except for Orlovsky's little brother
who was asleep with his face against the wall.
- Halloween (pg. 10)
Ginsberg came to my house one afternoon
and said he was giving up poetry
because it told lies, that language distorts.
I agreed, but asked what we have
that gets it right even that much.
- The Lost Hotels Of Paris (pg. 53)
Ken Kesey sitting in the woods,
beyond his fence of whitewashed motorcycles, said when
he was writing on acid he was not writing about it.
- Beyond Pleasure (pg. 75)
We are given the trees so we can know
what God looks like. And rivers
so we might understand Him. We are allowed
women so we can get into bed with the Lord,
however partial and momentary that is.
- Moreover (pg. 65)
Told me of heavy birds that flew after dark
croaking, "Feathers or lead, stone or fire?"
- Feathers Or Lead (pg. 54)
In the morning, he watches the two nuthatches,
the pair of finches with their new son.
And the chickadees....
- The Garden (pg. 57)
I lie awake remembering the birds of Kyoto
calling No No, unh unh. No No, unh unh. And you
saying yes all night....
- A Kind Of Decorum (pg. 66)
He wakes up in the silence of the winter woods,
the silence of birds not singing, knowing he will
not hear his voice all day....
- Not The Happiness But The Consequence Of Happiness (pg. 70)
Loneliness...
"And," she said, "you must talk no more
about ecstasy. It is a loneliness."
- Naked Except For The Jewelry (pg. 4)
Can you understand being alone so long
you would go out in the middle of the night
and put a bucket into the well
so you could feel something down there
tug at the other end of the rope?
- The Abandoned Valley (pg. 25)
We come from a deep forest of years
into a valley of an unknown country
called loneliness....
- The Garden (pg. 57)
We make a harvest of loneliness
and desiring in the blank wasteland of the cosmos.
- The Manger Of Incidentals (pg. 83)
I walked hungry through the vacant streets at night
with the snow falling wordlessly in the dark like petals
on the last of the nineteenth century....
- How Much Of That Is Left In Me? (pg. 29)
The painting of a pipe is not a pipe
regardless of what the title claims. An intelligent
poet in Iowa is frightened because she thinks
we are made of electrons....
- 'Tis Here! 'Tis Here! 'Tis Gone! (The Nature Of Presence) (pg. 30)
She came into his life like arriving halfway
through a novel, with bits of two earlier lives
snagged in her....
- "My Eyes Adored You" (pg. 74)
We are surrounded by the absurd excess of the universe.
By meaningless bulk, vastness without size,
power without consequence. The stubborn iteration
that is present without being felt.
Nothing the spirit can marry. Merely phenomenon
and its physics. An endless, endless of going on.
No habitat where the brain can recognize itself.
- The Manger Of Incidentals (pg. 83)