Authors: C. K. Williams
our families still
sleeping, the night’s breezes
barely waned, the foliage
already motionless
in the heat-scorched scrub
across the desert hills,
the wary cactus wrens
and cardinals just
gathering at the feeder;
and one last long walk
out across the ranch,
your paint and brushes
in their beat-up case,
the sheet of
Arches
paper tacked to its board;
out past your studio,
the wash, the cottonwoods
I helped you plant it seems
months not decades ago,
the sagging barbed-wire fence,
the cow and deer trails
worn through the brush; past
mesquite, paloverde,
saguaro, out to
the boulder-strewn canyon
where I loved to watch
as in that harsh, nearly
mineral glare
you’d labor to transfigure
the world before you
to the luminous
distillations of
yourself your paintings were.
* * *
Then past there, too, past
world and light and art,
past this sadness from which
I speak now, past speech
and the desire to speak,
into that clear place
of effortlessly
welcoming ardor
that being with you
always was, for me
and all who loved you —
(so many loved you);
past everything except
this single moment
of your presence. Not
that anything’s missing
from our time together —
we had much together —
and not because I need
anything you haven’t
already given me,
or believe the sum
of your life might want
or lack in any way,
nor because I can’t bring
myself to let you go,
can’t bring myself to offer
a definitive farewell,
but because my sadness
still feels incomplete,
and it’s come to me
I need you to help
me grieve for you, as I
needed you to share
all the good and ill
my life has brought me.
* * *
But isn’t this just what
grief always makes us think?
Isn’t this what grief
is,
this feeling of a final
salutation that might
link a past that’s finished
with an affection
and a spiritual
companionship ever
in effect, though no
longer generating
matter for remembrance?
But knowing doesn’t
help: so much of
who we are is memory,
and anticipation
of memories to come.
How really believe
there’ll be no more strolls
through cities, no museum
afternoons with you
explaining to me
what the painters meant
to do, and what they did,
no stoppings in cafés,
like that evening in
a barrio in Spain
when an old singer
keened an older song
that almost made us cry
with the awful rawness
of its lamentation:
beyond conception then,
to imagine either
of us ever grieving
that way for the other.
4.
STILL
(
A year
)
But I do grieve, grieve still;
a continent, an
ocean and a year
removed from you, I still
find it impossible
to think of you as
past,
and I know too well
by now there’ll never
be anything like
a persuasive
reconciliation
for your having gone.
What there is instead
is knowing that at least
we had you for a time,
and that we still have
evidence of you, in
your work and in the love
which eternally
informs the work, that
one love which never ends.
And to be able
to tell oneself that once
one knew a man wholly
unsusceptible
to triviality,
bitterness or rancor,
who’d fashioned himself
with such dedication
and integrity
that he’d been released
from those resentments
and envies that can make
the fullest life seem mean:
your life was never mean,
never not inspiring.
* * *
A year, summer again,
warm, my window open
on the courtyard where
for a good half hour
an oboe has been
practicing scales. Above
the tangle of voices,
clanging pans, a plumber’s
compressor hectically
intensifying,
it goes on and on,
single-minded, patient
and implacable,
its tempo never
faltering, always
resolutely focused
on the turn above,
the turn below,
goes on as the world
goes on, and beauty,
and the passion for it.
Much of knowing you
was knowing that, knowing
that our consolations,
if there are such things,
dwell in our conviction
that always somewhere
painters will concoct
their colors, poets sing,
and a single oboe
dutifully repeat
its lesson, then repeat
it again, serenely
mounting and descending
the stairway it itself
unfurls before itself.
IV
War
September–October 2001
1.
I keep rereading an article I found recently about how Mayan scribes,
who also were historians, polemicists and probably poets as well,
when their side lost a war, not a rare occurrence apparently,
there having been a number of belligerent kingdoms
struggling for supremacy, would be disgraced and tortured,
their fingers broken and the nails torn out, and then be sacrificed.
Poor things — the reproduction from a mural shows three:
one sprawls in slack despair, gingerly cradling his left hand with his right,
another gazes at his injuries with furious incomprehension,
while the last lifts his mutilated fingers to the conquering warriors
as though to elicit compassion for what’s been done to him: they,
elaborately armored, glowering at one another, don’t bother to look.
2.
Like bomber pilots in our day, one might think, with their radar
and their infallible infrared, who soar, unheard, unseen, over generalized,
digital targets that mystically ignite, billowing out from vaporized cores.
Or like the Greek and Trojan gods, when they’d tire of their creatures,
“flesh ripped by the ruthless bronze,” and wander off, or like the god
we think of as ours, who found mouths to speak for him, then left.
They fought until nothing remained but rock and dust and shattered bone,
Troy’s walls a waste, the stupendous Mesoamerican cities abandoned
to devouring jungle, tumbling on themselves like children’s blocks.
And we, alone again under an oblivious sky, were quick to learn
how our best construals of divinity, our
Do unto, Love, Don’t kill,
could easily be garbled to canticles of vengeance and battle-prayers.
3.
Fall’s first freshness, strange; the seasons’ ceaseless wheel,
starlings starting south, the annealed leaves ready to release,
yet still those columns of nothingness rise from their own ruins,
their twisted carcasses of steel and ash still fume, and still,
one by one, tacked up by hopeful lovers, husbands, wives,
the absent faces wait, already tattering, fading, going out.
These things that happen in the particle of time we have to be alive,
these violations which almost more than any ark or altar
embody sanctity by enacting so precisely sanctity’s desecration.
These broken voices of bereavement asking of us what isn’t to be given.
These suddenly smudged images of consonance and peace.
These fearful burdens to be borne, complicity, contrition, grief.
Fear
September 2001–August 2002
1.
At almost the very moment an exterminator’s panel truck,
the blowup of a cockroach airbrushed on its side,
pulls up at a house across from our neighborhood park,
a battalion of transient grackles invades the picnic ground,
and the odd thought comes to me how much in their rich sheen,
their sheer abundance, their hunger without end, if I let them
they can seem akin to roaches; even their curt, coarse cry:
mightn’t those subversive voices beneath us sound like that?
Roaches, though … Last year, our apartment house was overrun,
insecticides didn’t work, there’d be roaches on our toothbrushes and combs.
The widower downstairs — this is awful — who’d gone through deportation
and the camps and was close to dying now and would sometimes faint,
was found one morning lying wedged between his toilet and a wall,
naked, barely breathing, the entire surface of his skin alive
with the insolent, impervious brutes, who were no longer daunted
by the light, or us — the Samaritan neighbor had to scrape them off.
2.
Vermin, poison, atrocious death: what different resonance they have
in our age of suicide as armament, anthrax, resurrected pox.
Every other week brings new warnings, new false alarms;
it’s hard to know how much to be afraid, or even how.
Once I knew, too well; I was of the generation of the bomb —
Hiroshima, the broiling bubble at Bikini, ICBMs.
The second world war was barely over, in annihilated cities
children just my age still foraged for scraps of bread,
and we were being taught that our war would be nuclear,
that if we weren’t incinerated, the flesh would rot from our bones.
By the time Kennedy and Khrushchev faced off over Cuba,
rockets primed and aimed, we were sick with it, insane.
And now these bewildering times, when those whose interest is
to consternate us hardly bother to conceal their purposes.
Yes, we have antagonists, and some of their grievances are just,
but is no one blameless, are we all to be combatants, prey?
3.
We have offended very grievously, and been most tyrannous,
wrote Coleridge, invasion imminent from radical France;
the wretched plead against us
… Then,
Father and God,
spare us,
he begged, as I suppose one day I will as well.
I still want to believe we’ll cure the human heart, heal it
of its anxieties, and the mistrust and barbarousness they spawn,
but hasn’t that metaphorical heart been slashed, dissected,
cauterized and slashed again, and has the carnage relented, ever?
Night nearly, the exterminator’s gone, the park deserted,
the swings and slides my grandsons play on forsaken.
In the windows all around, the flicker of the television news:
more politics of terror; war, threats of war, war without end.
A half-chorus of grackles still ransacks the trash;
in their intricate iridescence they seem eerily otherworldly,
negative celestials, risen from some counter-realm to rescue us.
But now, scattering towards the deepening shadows, they go, too.
Chaos
I saw a spider on a library cornice snatch a plump,
brightly lacquered as-a-yellow-pepper beetle
and dash — that was the word — across its system of webs
until it came to a dark lair where it let itself fall,
settle, and avidly, methodically, with evident delectation,
devour its still so sadly brilliantly hued prey.
All this took place in a dream, but even when I woke,
my revulsion wouldn’t abate, nor my dread,
because when I followed the associative tracks
that had brought me to engender such harshness in myself,
I kept being driven further than I wanted to go,
arriving at conclusions I’d never usually entertain.
The beetle, I thought, was the generalized human person,
gullible, malleable, impotent, self-destructive —
gullible, above all, is what kept coming to me;
how the prospect of living without anxiety renders us
ever more anxious, more ready to accede
to interests which clearly contradict ours.
The spider was power, plus limitless greed,
plus an abstraction, not God, but something like God,
which perpetrates something like Babel on us,
within us, though, in our genes; that twist of something
which keeps us with only this many words, and no more,
leaving us all but incoherent to ourselves, thus easily misled.
But why, even in dreams, must I dwell on the dark,
the dire, the
drek?
A foal in a dappling field,
I might have dreamed, a child trailing after with a rope,
but no, the sense, the scent nearly, the dream-scent,
was wild frustration; not pity but some insane collision
with greed, and power, and credulity, above all.
Perhaps I slept then, perhaps I dreamed my muse,
to whom when she appears I too often say,
“You’re not as seemly as I believed, nor as pure,”
and my muse forsakes me. But perhaps the spider is muse,
or the beetle, or Babel; no wonder she’d betray me,
no wonder, bending her languorous note, she’d forsake me.
The Future
That was the future I came back from
vomiting the taste of the sulfur of my lowest