crying in the Belvedere
young woman quite near
presses against young man
black hair dishevelled
ragged mouth twisted in tears
pushed open on his chest â is she
reseeing
The Kiss
, the way it pulsed
(so unlike kitschy postcard's gold message)
or was it Napoleon on his silver
steed, crimson cape twirling over
forward thrust of conquered soil?
did a different draft of history
creep near and enter her?
in upper rooms von Ribbentrop
forced two men from Belgrade
to capitulate, sign Axis papers
in presence of Italian and Japanese
government men supercilious
in their self-regard and disrespect
for two seized Slavs, whose people
would repudiate their signing and fight
fully knowing they must die
I look as closely as a furtive glance
allows: her luxurious hair flames,
face now not completely crumpled
though wet, shining â the man?
stares over her head into
futures not perfectly free, lips pursed
perhaps praying for rescue by
regiments under the command of
hero-warrior rewarded with
this mansion, Eugene of Savoy
whose iron statue dominates
entry to another palace safely far
from here, with other trysts
Vindobona
along the river I sniff out traces of you
of the Roman legions, emperor, philosopher-king
the term best suiting you, smell stones older
even than you, blank odour of rock
still hard and striated, rounded
not at all diminished since you arrived
with your phalanxes, here
determined to keep back un-order, a requirement
I recognize as necessary in myself although
my forebears fought against you, in the curled wood
their wild hair filled with light from gods (less rational
than yours) that you never doubted
walked among forest foes
at this place where the river bends, guards posted
at night, you writing Greek
shards of illumination that help when I wander
now by our Danube, my eye returning to
dip of wave repeating against stony shore
coming to announce an endless way like wind
among shoreline poplars, wooded hills
dropping down to water where vineyards crowd
and where across the river under the trees
once lurked a strength you pitched yourself
against, taking in its chthonic politics and fighting
for a different border between here and hereafter
four workers
two short women in green uniforms
cross the street with me, their talk
pleasurable in the cozy way they bend
to and from one another, dirt
on their knees as we walk past flower
patches and quivery shrubs
summer leaves wearing
clear droplet pearls
now two men in neon
orange overalls push wheelbarrows
of trash the city has offered them
both gaunt giants snarling into smoke
swirling up from lips as they scan
gutters in a silence marked by
glowering neither notices in the other
the way they talk and signal
by placing rake at an angle
amidst our common dust
a moment of missing bells
rugby in the seventeenth district
young men ram, thrust, brace against
one another, pass the ball backwards, kick it
high and out of bounds, squirm along
grass and stain their shorts and knees
with mud â yet how they run, ignoring
strain because of what lies ahead:
the flash of victory or (too raw to consider)
its counterpoint, a fiasco bringing tears
and incrimination in post-game review
in the stands, fans, two kinds only:
for favourite and for underdog
each with colours and erupting into
roars and monster chants though
rooters sit side by side on wooden slats
many smoking, then leaping to cheer a rush
a scrum, groaning when a critical kick
goes wide and linesman's orange flag
does not flash up to announce a triumph
and so famous local beer is downed
those tall green cans of yellow brew
that help enliven even a limp game, which this
championship is not, the golden cup waiting
medals glinting, eager to grace sweating necks
of victors â and women wave, not themselves
just now, catapulted into those who lean
out to touch heroes of the plastered hair
while ignoring around them the handsome men
though steady partners they may otherwise be
and who themselves bask in the gusto of
their fellow paladins, their sex's zest
confirmed at a remove they appreciate more
than the contact and knock admired
in the moment by their wives
armoury at Graz
âgoose belly' they called the breastplate
that presented a 16th-century foot soldier
to his enemy as someone rich and fat
and thus a victor in any battle with mace
and halberd, and all soldiers of any side
short then, a grown man's foot
no bigger than a child's now
only horse soldiers slightly larger
each with two pistols, two shots
to pierce opposing helmeted heads
about flank height
their mounts also small and tough
though not so they would jump
rows of upraised pikes, chest level
I wander these floors of weaponry
the cannons decorated, their cannonballs
plain and larger than a schoolboy's globe
I try on a helmet and feel its weight
bend my neck, crest of grey metal
reaching up to give an ego advantage
and even an hour after I hefted a sabre
the smell of iron clings to my fingers
while smoke from front-loaders blows
and men and horses scream as they fall
on blood-and-piss-soaked earth that a duke
determines worth defending or gaining, borders
always a line no one dying could be sure of
another threshold requiring crossing instead
I come to noticing last the small windows
their original panes rippling and wavy
so I see imperfectly the world beyond
and this one so remote it holds no fear
the long-barrelled guns needing
hardly any light except what little
we might throw their way in our thinking
of what creatures we once were
and still remain in our claiming
of ground â my own country like this too
far enough away that I do not feel
its grasp upon me though I know if pressed
I would find its war-light flickering within
Anton Bruckner
the fabled musicians perform Mozart
as if it were mere play, but when they move
to Bruckner, the violinists sit up like cats
ready for lunch, first violinist
first among favourites, black hair
a heap upon a gleaming brow
raked by fingers of supple power
earlier, at intermission
the second violinist had stepped out
for a cigarette needed not for nerves
but for air outside the hall, walls
golden as the secured waves in his curls
and returning late to the stage, apologized
profusely but quietly (but profusely)
to the conductor whose sharp forgiveness
for tardiness runs through the horns
like a charge, shock
perhaps all the better (thinks
the conductor) for the Bruckner
from the second row, I admire
these working faces, the bending
and near lifting-off of backbones
from stiff chairs, and though I admit
little know-how with such sound
I hear with my heart
the undulant green landscape
the brook, near, below a bridge
roving melancholy never far
and as sometimes happens
I fall under a spell partly
of my own making and awake
only when the clapping and bravos
ignite around me, uniting us with
the magicians who beam and bow
each effortlessly convinced
that their music was intended
as its composer intended
to speak of polyphonic God
Central Cemetery
. . . we arrive at the graveyard, one of mankind's most underrated symbols of civilization.
â Josephine Hart,
The Truth About Love
we walk through the walled place
admiring the quietness of the dead
the often tidy commemorations
of the three million who stopped here
some in crypts, or in fresh graves, a few
decorated wildly, rightly â Beethoven's
bones hum there beneath the stone
and there, someone not so famous (though
to his daughters perhaps more notable)
lid of the crypt lifted off, its iron
handles handled once more before
bones are lowered and added to an older
layer of familial skeletons waiting
meanwhile wind pushes at us
and at the trees, squirrels (one red
chasing the black) fling themselves
up trunks â it's then we enter old
Jewish grounds where 60,000 lie buried
and paths narrow, overgrown
ivy triumphing over headstones
of Hirsch and Epstein, nettles reaching out
from graves to brush our ankles
and bird calls seem to intensify
as if to compensate for what the shrunken
community cannot manage: to keep visible
these hidden markers and toppling
indicators, this jumble history's way
of leaving behind an unexpected scene
and yet how perfect an example of
what Freud (whose ashes repose not here
but in London) affirms: the animate
triumphs over the inanimate â and we
find in the amassing of grass and tendrils
a tenderness cool with natural shade
not so evident in trimmed lawns
below crosses, mounds, carefully
tended flowers brightly coloured just
across the road, closer to the centre
where a building with cement saints
and bulging green dome points up beyond
any name undergoing erasure whether etched
recently in marble or already eaten by seasons
of leaves, roots, leaves, roots, leaves
Sigmund Freud Museum . . .
I avoid and then its attraction
overcomes my aversion
and what's unconscious in me
begins to walk up Berggasse
wind blowing trash and sand
in my teeth, telling me to sidestep
into a second-hand store across
from #19, an easy diversion
then in his former rooms I watch
old home movies: his white head
wobbles, his clacking jaw says
even a giant turns frail, fails
needs a blanket over the knees
in some flower garden far from here
strong grandsons near his cane
the look-alike visitors: eager, studious
whereas I'm in the toilet wishing
I had the nerve to scrawl a joke
on white walls, one to make him laugh
but I have no marker and no
wit either, just a bit of
bratty vile-and-bile I can't express
though, believe me, I know it's there
what remains? the ratty maroon
furniture (the couch left with him
when he fled), not the Nazis
who hung their flag in his doorway
maybe some sentences, the few
I have read, but greater than these
this image of agedness: perhaps
paltry, not tattered, in tie and suit,
near enough to death to be hallowed
which grieves me, that he who said
all was drive and fatality would
himself be required to turn and face
what came next, as if I were thinking
â wildly, strangely, wrought by dust â
that someone among us might be exempt
from the final exit out of flesh
knowing of course it wouldn't be me
the one still talking, hoping for a cure
James Joyce / Italo Svevo Museum
on via Madonna del Mare
I take the stairs up to discover letters
he wrote, his daughter Lucia recording
his words though omitting the essential
recovered
: âI am dictating this, and
in English, as I have not sufficiently
from a fresh eye attack to be able to read
or write,' which draws me back
to photos of the man with his obscuring
glasses as if his imagined worlds
were of such vividness he could not
look both out and in, and the fates knew
in
would be the greater view
this letter written to console
the widow of Italo Svevo, dead
nine years after a sepia print presents
him and his wife on their anniversary
(30 July 1919) watching fondly
their daughter Letizia whose husband
Antonio Fonda Savio gazes at his
beloved, and she broadly smiling
in her receiving of pure adoration
on my way down the steps to the street
a student comes up, frowning, occupied
by his worries, not quite seeing
though we manage not to collide
and something of
his
blindness comes
into me, I grasp he is wanting
to fill the holes he feels, or perhaps
he desires a brother to rescue him
the way Stanislaus helped James
before war tore Trieste beyond aid
later in another nearby museum I
stare at Greek statuary and reflect how time
is tough on noses, each one here broken or
shattered, how sad these features appear
staring from blank eyes, and I am grateful
that photographs and phrases bring me close
allow my eye and imagination to believe in life
even if some pieces now and then are missing