Read One Thousand Things Worth Knowing Online
Authors: Paul Muldoon
exercising a feudal
droit du seigneur on pavements, parking lots where battery
acid and diesel have bled
into the soil, drive-ins where we're wooed by, and wed
to, the whole kit and caboodle
of empire. As for a priest or padre
laying about him with his holy-water sprinkler, it has me see red
no less than if he wielded a flint ax-head
made by an old-style flint knapper.
That's why I get up from my pillow (filled, as it happens, with buckwheat)
to set my face against the dawn.
As I stride out now across the Institute lawn
I look all the more dapper
for the white handkerchief so firmly lodged in my breast pocket.
ÃLVARO DE CAMPOS: “BELFAST, 1922”
While a great gantry
at the head of the lough
continues to stand sentry
a team of shipyard men rush to caulk
a seam. No dunnock in a choir
of dunnocks will relent
from claiming as its own the gore
of land on which Harland
and Wolff is built. Catching a rivet
in a pair of tongs
and banging it into a rift
will hardly mend it. The dun in
dun
nock
doesn't allow for the dash
of silver in its head and throat feathers.
Because chicks within one clutch
often have different fathers,
dunnocks are at once highly territorial
and likely to go unremarked.
Though they've been known to drill
in Glenavy and Deer Park,
the dunchered shipyard men are no less peaceable
than those of Barrow-in-Furness.
Souped up, staid, swerveless, supple,
they hold in equal reverence
the pennywhistle and the plenilunar
pigskin of a Lambeg drum,
be they sending off a White Star liner
or a little tramp.
Coming to anything late in the day has an allure
all its own. The river plummets here with such aplomb
it brings back Slim Pickens's holler
as he bronco-busts the H-bomb
in
Dr. Strangelove
. We like it when things are stacked
against us, when beavers are showing
initiative at the beaver dam. We take comfort from the fact
that after years of scenery-chewing
Rockets Redglare thoroughly upped
his profile with his role in
Down by Law.
Though the file
is almost certainly corrupt,
we can still hope to salvage something from the raw
footage of the waterfall.
Then we could ride all day and yet
not reach the farthest edge of our demesne,
its slow handclap of grouse
impatient for the mist-wreathed
curtain of the moor
to rise. Remember the beech
where we were filed
under our noms de plume,
the chestnut tree where a soul was known to roost
before it was set in linotype
or its path laid
in herringbone? For a second asterisk
we'd use a dagger, then double daggers
for the third footnote.
There was a time when accountants took into account
our dim view of paying tax.
Now so much else dims
while the phonograph bends its ear
toward the ice trumpet. Yes. The ice trumpet
recorded in the Ice Hotel
that we now favor over Strauss.
An impasto sheep
well used to some rule of thumb
poses with a donkey-easel
against a hemmed-in sky.
Along the fraying torrent
that itself runs along the stage
the deerhounds strut and fret.
Then we had something like free rein
to laugh with the half-crazed maid from
Die Fledermaus
who laughed till her bosom heaved
uncontrollably. The horse manure
smelling of bleach,
how artfully
that
was piled!
I think of the stable groom
turned tour guide who's still known to boost
his minimum wage
by dressing up as a bit of a swell.
They found a credit-card receipt for petrol used to douse
the barn and set fire to a Jeep.
The stable walls were
opus spicatum
.
Everybody knows that teazle
is the prototype of the hook and eye.
It was that stable groom, I'll warrant,
who made a strumpet
of not only Colonel Knipe's
but our own kitchen maidâ
the one with the “slipped disc.”
My gelding once again took the head staggers
just as I was taking a straw vote
as to whether I should mount
a campaign. Someone brought an ax
to bear on why we'd carved our pseudonyms
on a tree. Was it for fear
we might someday be reconciled
to the idea we can maintain
this tumbledown old manor house
only because we've bequeathed
it to the nation? As it is, guided tour after guided tour
brings home to each
of us how we've let
go of all but seven rooms
to which, we overhear, we are “reduced.”
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I'm sure one of the reasons J. J. Astor had been under such duress
was that he recently leaned over to the lady seated next to him at a dinner party
and wiped his hands on her muslin dress â¦
Maybe he'd had a little too much of a Bordeaux
run up by Phelan or Lynch,
two Irish chemists vying for parity
with Boyle and Beaufort. Treacle bread and cheese in cheesecloth, that's the lunch
my father carries as he stands in line
in this predawn dark, waiting for a mower-laden truck to launch
him beyond the realm of the Guatemalans
with whom he tries to keep abreast. Their Igloo coolers are packed with beans and rice
in anticipation of their being hired for the day by Princeton Complete Lawn.
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After a day of shouldering bales of cauliflowers in the pouring rain
my back was itself a broad leaf, rainwater coursing down the groove of its mid-vein.
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A solitary ewe stood guard
like a widow in her mantle
at the entrance to the graveyard.
One line ran all the way from my pommel through my cantle
to the Massey Ferguson baler
while lovers screamed with tumult harsh
and a converted whaler
sank slowly into the alder marsh.
As we cantered across the stubble
we managed to double
back on ourselves like hares
fleeing a primal scene
to which we're bound to repair
as long as yellow + blue = green.
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For “ewe” read “yew.”
For “baler” read “thrasher.”
For “retina” read “retinue.”
For “Ashur” read “Asher.”
For “fathead” read “minnow.”
For “shame” read “Shem.”
For “window” read “winnow.”
For “bract” read “stem.”
For “missile” read “Missal.”
For “darnel“read “thistle.”
For “skewered” read “skewed.”
For “hart” read “chart.”
For “Freud” read “feud.”
For “dirt” read “dart.”
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Now we were galloping across the swamp
showing little or no decorum,
little or no pomp.
This wasn't the first time we'd had three or four jorums
too many. For years the heavens had pummeled
us not only with regulation hail
but blow bolts fledged with the comal
tufts of bulrush or cattail.
It seemed marsh elder still made for a blowgun
that raised itself like its own slogan
while “Bring it on”
was the rallying cry
of the thistles now at daggers drawn
that had once seen eye to eye.
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On the street a boy still mends
a puncture on his bike,
paying out an inner tube
from a tire
and keeping an eye out for a ripple
in the plastic basin.
Like trying to cajole
a red-bellied snake
from the hood of an Oldsmobile
on which it basks.
Jayne's rubberized bathing costume.
How that costume clung.
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It was during the Festival of the Kalends
we'd seen something of a spike
in the ratings when an ice cube
had all but set fire
to Jayne's right nipple.
A pneumatic caisson
was used less for digging coal
than tunnels. Part of my mistake
was that roses and steel
may both be termed “damask.”
Then there's the rose that blooms
on a coal miner's lung.
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A bridge builder will get the bends
if his coworkers hike
him too suddenly. Her trip to Jiffy Lube
had Jayne aspire
to a McDonald's Triple.
A sex game involving asphyxiation
conjured by bubbles from a pinprick hole.
The surface those bubbles break
likely to reveal
itself only in the sense a mask
reveals who's lain with whom.
The tire's black dog. The inner tube's dog tongue.
CAMILLE PISSARRO:
APPLE PICKING AT ERAGNY-SUR-EPTE
Christ may as well have been hanged
for a sheep as a lamb,
given how the so-called panking pole
loosening a dam
of apples lodged between boles
is used by one of the work gang
to pierce his side. His garment
strewn on the grass
is a shadow without a seam.
Two of the women grub in the morass
for anything they might deem
salvageable after attacks by varmints
of various stripes. A third stares at his rib cage,
stifling her gasp
in anticipation of another gush of blood
and water. The centurion grasps
his pole more tightly as if the flash flood
of apples might be about to gauge
its own significance.
That middle-distant horse asleep between the shafts
is at least absolved of the mounting block.
Given the successive grafts
of noble scions upon noble stocks,
when I glance
from my hotel window
even I discern
a possibility
I might too readily have spurnedâ
that any of these rangy, raw-boned trees
is the one I will turn into.
The bog is fenced up there on Slieve Gullion, Slieve Gullion where the bracken leaf
still lies behind the Celto-Iberian sword design
adopted by the Romans. Pontius Pilate's poised with his handkerchief
at the parting spine
where the contestants snort and stamp.
That's right, Lew, the dealing
men from Crossmaglen put whiskey in our piñon tea. A hurricane lamp
shines from a shieling
like an undercover star. The goshawk nests in lodgepole and ponderosa pine
while a Mescalero girl twists
osiers into a basket that does indeed imitate
what passes for life, given how ring wants nothing more than to intertwine
with ring. The mountain's covered in heavy schists.
The streams themselves are muddied.
The dog is tense. The dog is tense the day Ben Hourihane
falls fuel of the new Roman turbine,
Little Miss Sally hisself, tense enough to set off a chain
of events that will see Ben mine
warehouse after warehouse of schlock
and link him via a Roman warship
to a hell-for-leather chariot race at Antioch.
Sooner or later Messala will need a lot more than a double hip
replacement while Ben will barely chafe
at the bit. That's right, Messala, an
amputation
saw!
The doctor is cocking an ear to your chest's tumble-de-drum
like a man trying to open a safe.
To add to the confusion, Ben's still trying to crack a lobster claw
with a lobster claw made of titanium.
Ben has somehow been playing scuffle on his washboard abs
while eating all that treif.
It looks like 1961. Or '65. No time before a few squatters from the prefabs
in Dungannon morph into the crowd the paratroopers strafe
on Bloody Sunday. A golden dolphin marks the lap run by each new
Roman tribune. Whitelaw. Pym. Rees. Mason.
Atkins. Prior. Hurd. King. Brooke. Mayhew.
Dense, too, the fog when each Halloween Ben ducks in an enamel basin
for an enamel apple
and comes up with a botched job.
Such is the integrity of their kraal the horses will find no slot
in the funeral cortege of Winston Churchill from the Royal Chapel
to Woodstock. As his carriage passes the dolphins bob
for a commoner's mere 19- rather than a no-stops-pulled 21-gun salute.
Along the Thames, meanwhile, even the cranes will bow
and scrape as the coffin passes the Isle of Dogs and the citizenry grapple
with their sense of loss. The
Havengore
's prow
will no more shake off a water dapple
than we'll concede we've been excluded from a race.
It looks as if Little Miss Messala, played by a Belfast boy, will clutch
at the idea he might drive a tea-chest bass