Nicholas Lanier, 1628
, by Anton van Dyck
his long nose and wary look, cocked
right elbow, left hand casual on a rapier
poking back from the sparkle on its hilt
and the brightest mark? his wide forehead
below an abrupt line where brown curls
shine and announce pride, head's width
of blue sky softly clouded, sun-streak burning
above a background of fake ruins
and the focus? Lanier's lips, straight and stern
ready to sneer, yet showing beneath refinement
how many times he has been bruised
(note the hint of green at the left temple)
hairs on his red moustache curving up above
his pointed beard ready and set to quiver
he sat seven days for van Dyck, and both
clearly relished that wide swath of rich cape
tumbling down from his left and out of which
bulge his arms in red-striped fabric
such a pleasure to paint that the artist
could manage in an afternoon, highlights
of folds easy compared to the eyes some
call cold, others unarmed, the gift of art
to reflect and reveal each viewer accurately
commemorative rooms
Georg Trakl (February 3, 1887, Salzburg to November 3, 1914, Kraków)
not a word in English, yet I understand
yellowing paper holds up faded words
small books plain in design
black and white photographs
light from windows muted (a storm
is building, and later its mountain
violence breaks and drenches
my T-shirt: Salzburg, it says)
from in here I can almost see
the school he attended, still severe
and grand and yet submitting
in this city of churches, it is functional
first and only with time dignified
and perhaps saddened
that many were dead
in the short film a man's voice
intones his poems so tenderly
I am reminded that language
this harsh can be loving â because
back home we'd read translations
but never softly: scenes of the Eastern Front
required at least a twisting
of the jaw so out would come
how he himself may have sounded
gurgling on his deathbed from
an overdose of cocaine, unclear
whether suicide or error
â but forever clear his small
self-portrait: a painted darkness
of reddish hair, green face
makes a mask so unlike
the blond young man in striped trousers
seen sitting, eager not for war
but for his life â and I see
how summer light comes in
and tries its best to tell me
not to believe this possessed glow
here on the wall set to trigger
my dismay but instead to step
back into the street, where
he'd walked, shadows from clouds
falling on him as they fall on me
with sudden heat and thunder â
and did he hear in that rumble
guns that ended more
than an empire swept away
with his twenty-seven years?
what
I
hear has by now
been returned to nature, and I know
enough of this timelessness
spreads ahead, so I continue still
to look upward at stone walls
grateful they had been there
to hear a schoolboy singing
Goethe, Ringstrasse
your green mantle of bronze
rose up on a street new to me
dazed me: this chance wander
and encounter! in my half-
hope to find an age not yet
complete, I saw your girth
x
times larger than in real life
but what's a statue for
if not to magnify, focus, inflate?
and felt unnerved, until I spotted
the double row of buttons marching up
how classically draped your coat
how sturdy your boots, casual
drooping of your hands, your air of
certainty and even, yes, touch of
chagrin at becoming this . . .
immovable icon
earlier I'd passed towering Handel
(or was it Haydn?) I can hardly recall
now you and I are familiar: my third
(or is it fourth?) journey to remove
broken green bottle bits from
the base of your pedestal, its one
word, your name, raised in caps
I ignore traffic swelling behind us
pulse and drone of Mercedes buses
touring among snappy winds this place
has faced since long before you became
yourself, dispensing clarity as if
it were the simplest of languages
more and more you look all inward
as I gaze up, a ritual in which
I've had my umbrella blown out
by wind driving rain, same angle
I felt as a child, and I marvel
standing here, that I am able still
to find a hero in your travelling
toward Italy, in a polymath's
colours, plants â old cosmos
streamed through your mind, alchemized â
arrogance dropped, dross you spun
for us into wise gold, your face here
forever stained from rain running
to catch your down-turned lips
and I wonder if all alloyed eyes
stare into past worlds with such doubt
Galileo . . .
lived on this street, so says
a tall handsome woman
whose apartment I'm renting
one thousand years old
with modern plumbing
and beams so huge I think of
Pacific coast giants
I look across the narrow way
of Costa dei Magnoli to where
a church waits with fresh flowers
under a fading madonna's smile
when I open wide the window
and then walk out, locate his home
and high in a circle, his bearded face
a Pisces with Leo rising
hard to see, just another pale
fresco, yet strength to outlast
generations who trudged
this slope back to when
the nearby city wall held
against enemy knives
and where now I meander
pushing up along the stones
May grass high and red with
poppies as if from shed blood
and also a fragrance I catch
and fail to identify until at last
I see small dangling lemons
not quite globes, not quite suns
and think of starry ideas, just begun
his, all earth-changing, my own
no bigger than a brain's sphere
or a handful of this warm soil
to sail home with
onto a cold coast
no new moons to discover there
no orbs to name even as the lenses
I look through rearrange me
daily from fuzzy to clear
in case a heaven swims by
pushing toward the Alps
I can't believe they will open and reveal
passes because from an hour away
though cloud-speckled and so
somehow soft, they're a wall
we keep driving toward, Volvo
unperturbed by the road rising
to where limestone breaks and piles
and leaves white points in the sky
summits subject to the
whap
of a climber's ice axe far above rivers
we roll across, their gravel bottoms
almost white, scoured by rushes
of glacial flood while mountain light
slants into an evening's yellow
and shadows elongate for dusk
as a buttery castle floats past
these peaks remain unfazed
even by Zeus-fuelled lightning bolts
as if their true trick is not to think
not to have any apparatus with which
to think, their solid fame and
eye-glad beauty never knowing
that one who passes below is visited
by the flash of a former motoring
(with frayed parents that Sunday)
buried under massing decades and
arriving with a pang, alive like rain
fleeing the windshield
in Kapfenstein
in Schloss Kapfenstein I discover I have forgotten
how to dance â at my daughter's wedding
under the portrait of a long-nosed Austrian
in blue silk, descendant of Turk fighters
I stumble and step on delicate feet: three women
attempt to lead, and fail, though we enjoy anyway our
pleasure at arms up not in time with lederhosen music
and along the Danube, I find bewilderingly
I have forgotten how to ride a bike, wobbling
wildly, almost running into ambulatory tourists
and those other trim walkers from nearby vineyards
stepping along, catching breezes, in this particular
incarnation watching barges bearing down
under black, red, gold faded German flags
what everyone says cannot be forgotten
I forget and blame being unbalanced on
the hammer of intercontinental flight but know
somehow it's otherwise, as in the dream
night before the wedding: fighting off men
with moustaches and crowbars who are breaking
glass walls of my house, one man among them
attaching explosives so no hope remains
of driving him off when he turns to me and says
âWhy are you so invested in this structure?'
or perhaps more like the dream the night
following, having passed through a father's tears
and into another beginning, when I am hoeing, really
cutting the ground, gruelling work, and then
an even greater effort is required: to wear
a bulky x-ray unit strapped to my chest so everyone
sees what I am feeling, that I've worked hard
at becoming soft with rewards of love's
continuance, joy's release
dislocation
child takes the hand of an older brother
leads him into a house where kind-faced
violinist reaches his instrument down
and before the two boys begin
to sing to his vibrato, the child
turns back to remaining
family members clustered outside
tells them to ready their hankies
so sweet will be the music made
for the father, for whom especially
these songs are sung
my own damp
pillow awakens me in a foreign bed
where I wonder if this dream
arrives only in dislocation, to uncover
how a constancy remains
and requires thought
so that, here, closer to the village
of my forefathers, its dust
might enter me
on this table
peonies eager to open and bless me
with their cut dying â they might have
in incarnations of earlier seeds
graced a meal when my father's father
came home weary
found his family singing not hymns
but rhyming paeans even the youngest
knew were both his own and everyone's
our common dust
lovemaking in Vienna
August night so heavy with damp
all exhaled breaths from the dead
in the Danube are falling upon the city
soggy and hot, and I throw open
casements and hope the famous
Föhn
with its hint of pinewoods will find me
but it does not, I am too hemmed in:
tall stucco walls, windows overlooking a small
courtyard full of green feathery treetops
climbing up in moonlight â and so later
a woman's moaning slides across the leaves
close by, uninterrupted queen of the night
and I'm waking and not waking but awake enough
to wonder out of which window does love fly
and later still, when silence returns, I'm fully
attentive to hearing it, no traffic beyond my bed
to deflect or ignore
â and then we're all
drowsy beyond sad dreams, spines feeling
rare breeze so welcome on wet flesh
that wakefulness grows almost into desire
though sleep is strong and best
on first hearing Mahler's Fifth
first violin throws her blond braid
severely down, then up as if to knock
second violin out of tune, as if possessed
by torrents of rising and falling, mellow and unmelodic
depths that vanish into ears of listeners where nests of
feelings up till then half noted (half unwanted)
fill with formless murmurs from a forgotten life of fury
were I given a chance, a second chance, it is not
her I'd want to be, nor the popinjay-conductor
who kisses her hand held high as her head, nor even
Mahler with his face full of rivulets and futures even he
could not foretell, he with his star in the sidewalk
outside the opera house, but rather let me be
the percussionist who sits serenely
hands in his lap, cymbals tucked away in slots
until slowly he rises, pulls out the glowing alloy discs
crouches slightly, feet placed apart
for grip, legs like a wishbone, hurls his
hands together in a whammo
khurshliiiing!
finishes by opening cymbals upward, mouths
lifted high to eat all other sounds
then he subsides into a kind of sleeping
waiting for the moment he is called upon again
to bring forth a perfect punctuation, an exclamation
for which oboe and French horn, string bass and bassoon
have been mere prelude, his the culmination
of the kind a boy-child makes when in an alley
he clangs the lids of the garbage cans, and above him
a fat matron yells down from overlooking window
into inner courtyard, Italian, German, Dutch
message always the same, to halt, to which the juvenile
replies with one more reverberation rising upward unstoppably
over all commands, obliteration that brings
primal, cup-ringing delight, his heraldic shields
victorious over adulthood's demands for quietness
out of which nothing worthwhile has yet been rung