Read Your Name Here: Poems Online
Authors: John Ashbery
Why is that bird ignoring us,
pausing in mid-flight, to take another direction?
Is it feelings of guilt about the spool
it dropped on the bank of a stream,
into which it eventually rolled? Dark spool,
moving oceanward now—what other fate could have been yours?
You could have lived in a drawer
for many years, imprisoned, a ward of the state. Now you are free
to call the shots pretty much as they come.
Poor, bald thing.
You are my most favorite artist. Though I know
very little about your work. Some of your followers I know:
Mattia Preti, who toiled so hard to so little
effect (though it was enough). Luca Giordano, involved
with some of the darkest reds ever painted, and lucent greens,
thought he had discovered the secret of the foxgloves.
But it was too late. They had already disappeared
because they had been planted in some other place.
Someone sent some bread up
along with a flask of wine, to cheer him up,
but the old, old secret of the foxgloves, never
to be divined, won’t ever go away.
I say, if you were toting hay up the side of a stack
of it, that might be Italian. Or then again, not.
We have these things in Iowa,
too, and in the untrained reaches of the eyelid
hung out, at evening, over next to nothing. What was it she had said,
back there, at the beginning? “The flowers
of the lady next door are beginning to take flight,
and what will poor Robin do then?” It’s true, they were blasting off
every two seconds like missiles from a launching pad, and nobody wept, or even cared.
Look out of the window, sometime, though, and you’ll see
where the difference has been made. The song of the shrubbery
can’t drown out the mystery of what we are made of,
of how we go along, first interested by one thing and then another
until we come to a wide avenue whose median
is crowded with trees whose madly peeling bark is the color of a roan,
perhaps, or an Irish setter. One can wait on the curb for the rest
of one’s life, for all anyone cares, or one can cross
when the light changes to green, as in the sapphire folds
of a shot-silk bodice Luca Giordano might have bothered with.
Now
it’s life. But, as Henny Penny said to Turkey Lurkey, something
is hovering over us, wanting to destroy us, but waiting,
though for what, nobody knows.
In the night of the museum, though, some whisper like stars
when the guards have gone home, talking freely to one another.
“Why did that man stare, and stare? All afternoon it seemed he stared
at me, though he obviously saw nothing. Only a fragment of a vision
of a lost love, next to a pool. I couldn’t deal with it
much longer, but luckily I didn’t have to. The experience
is ending. The time for standing to one side is near
now, very near.”
We are constantly running checks.
Quantity control is our concern here, you see.
No batch is allowed to leave the premises
without at least a superficial glance along the tops
of the crates. For who knows how much magic
may be imprisoned there?
Likewise, when the product reaches the market
we like to kind of keep an eye on things there too.
Complaints about the magic
have dwindled to a mere trickle in recent years.
Still you never know if some guy’s going to get funny
and tamper with the equation, causing
apocalyptic sighs to break out in the streets,
barking dogs, skidding vehicles, and the whole consignment
of ruthless consequences. That is why we keep a team of experts
on hand, always awake, alert for the slightest thread of disorder
on someone’s pants. In spring these incidents can double, quadruple, even.
Everything wants to be let out of its box come April or May
and we have to test-drive the final result before it’s been gummed
into the album dark farces regulate. Someone, then, must be constantly
on duty, as well as a relief contingent, for this starry mass
to continue revolving.
Like an apple on the ground
it looks at you. The neighborhood police were kind,
arrested a miscreant, though he was never brought to trial,
which is normal for this type of event.
Meanwhile spring edges inexorably into summer,
where, paradoxically, there is more activity but less to show for it.
The merry-go-rounds begin turning in the carnivals of August.
Best to leave prison till winter, once the honor system has broken down.
A stalemate could pollute new beginnings.
November tells it best, in a whisper almost,
so that there is surprisingly little letdown,
only this new background, a finer needle to thread.
How does one interpret, on this late branch, the unexpected?
—James Tate, “The Horseshoe”
A chance balloon drew these settlers nigh.
It was the year of green honey that sprouts
between the toes of the seated god. “None
can explain it further.” No explanations,
not from me.
I sat in the bakery, rumpled, unshaved,
pondering a theorem. What you said the hotel was.
Someone else’s towel approached me in the laundry.
“Ouch was what I said.” This has been more than I know of,
brimming with indifference, some American in Europe.
He let me off at the corner of some strange country.
The signs were in English. No one cared if
you knew the rubbish was filth.
He carried me from the room in which people were sitting.
They always think they know better, even as they confess
their ignorance blindly, to the first stranger they know.
I see, it’s a market garden, or was
some seasons ago. In this dark stubble I abide.
A messenger came with tidings. I’m sorry,
I’ve had enough tidings.
Giddy with surprise, he crawled upward
toward where I was toasting myself.
A male muse I suppose. I’ve listened to that
before, too. All I want is to be let out
to travel on the gravel. You still don’t
get it, this is a seat. All right, I want my seat,
I said.
That’s no easy manner. The blond moon came untied,
drifted through blue-black wisps
of a woodpile somewhere. Must I follow her too?
Must I follow her too?
Whatever it says you must do.
You had calm days in store, now they have come undone.
Worries stretch before you into the distance.
Perhaps distance is what you had,
once, and must now drink. Only forty years ago
early skyscrapers arched their backs, waiting to be fed.
And still the feeling comes on.
Swan filets and straw wine,
an emphatic look to the driveway
whose golf clubs are scattered feelingly.
You can undress and sit down
on the corduroy doormat blowing
and when the Weird Sisters come calling
pretend to be talking to yourself.
Trouble is they don’t come calling,
suffering as they do from terminal agoraphobia.
A frog juts from a pinecone.
My goodness was that you back there?
You sure know
how to give a feller a good scare.
I’d thought it was just bats
dripping tar on the heads of the guests and the footmen.
You see so little live action in this town
and then everybody wants to cooperate
or celebrate, sort of. I can do that too.
Always. Have a good time.
Something might come out in group therapy:
your velvet soul as I just realized it.
Please come back. I liked you so much.
Thistles, dandelions, what do we care?
The
ghoulish
resonance
of
a
cello
resonates in a neighbor’s cabana.
What do I know of this?
I
am
sitting
on a pile of dirt in a neighbor’s back yard.
Was there something else to do?
Long ago we crept for candy
through the neighbor’s gutter
but found only candy wrappers
of an unknown species: “Sycamores,”
“Chocolate Spit,” “Slate-Gray Fluids,”
“Anamorphic Portraits of Old Goriot.”
The way a piece of candy seems to flutter
in the prismatic light above a clothesline, stops,
removes all its clothes.
There was a bucket
of water
to wash in,
fingerposts pointing the way to the next phenomenon:
sugar falling gently on strawberries, snow on a pile of red eggs.
None of us was really satisfied,
but none of us wanted to go away, either.
The shadows of an industrial park loomed below us,
the brass sky above.
“Get off your duff,” Reuel commanded.
(He was our commander.)
“You are like the poet Lenz, who ran from house to forest
to rosy firmament and back
and nobody ever saw his legs move.”
Ah,
it is good
to be back
in the muck.
I flee from those who are gifted with understanding, fearing that all their great and illuminating invasions of my being still won’t satisfy me.
—Robert Walser, “The One of Fairy Tales”
Massachusetts rests its feet
in Rhode Island,
as crows rest in cowslips
and cows slip in crowshit.
I may have been called upon to write
a poem different from this one.
OK, let’s go. I want to please everybody
and this is my song:
In Beethoven Street I handed you a melon.
Round and pronged it was, and full of secret juice.
You, in turn, handed me over to the police
who thought (correctly) that I was the spy
they had been looking for these past seven months.
They led me down to their station, you need to know,
where they questioned me for days on end.
But my answers were always questions, and so they let me go,
exasperated by their inability to answer.
I was a free man!
I walked up Rilke Street
chattering a little hymn to myself.
It went something like this:
“Beware the monsters, but take care
that you are not yourself one.
Time is kind to them
and will take care of you,
asleep on your grandmother’s couch, sipping cherry juice.”
How did the pigs get through the window screens at night?
By morning it was all over.
I had never sung to you, you never coaxed me to
from your balcony, and all trains run into night
that collects them like paper streamers, and lays them in a drawer.
Unable to leave the sight of you
I draw little crow’s feet in my notebook, in the sunlight
that comes at the end of a sudden day of tears
waiting to be reconciled to the fascinating madness of the dark.
My mistress’ hands are nothing like these,
collecting silken cords for a day when the wet wind plunges
through colossal apertures.
Suddenly I was out of hope. I crawled out on the ledge.
The air there was frank and pure,
not like the frayed December night.
Waste time on these riddles?
Because what would I lecture on then?
The master that comes after, after all,
brushes them aside or burns them.
Am I therefore not very strong?
Will my arch be built, strung along the sand
within sight of olive trees? No,
I am cut of plainer cloth, but it dazzles me
in the evening by the moonlight.
L’heureuse,
they called her.
Day after day she gazed at the blue gazing globe
in her sunlit garden, saying nothing.
Noticing this, the old stump said nothing too.
Finally it couldn’t stand it any longer:
“Can’t you
be
something? You have the required manners
and your dress is a shifting of pea-green shot with sea-foam.”
I know I shall one day come to the reason
for manners and intercourse with persons.
Therefore I launch my hat on this peg.
Here, there are two of us. Take two.
Turning and turning in the demented sky,
the sugar-mill gushes forth poems and plainer twists.
It can’t account for the roses in our furnace.
A motherly chimp leads us away
to a table overflowing with silverware and crystal,
crystal smudgepots so the old man could see through tears:
He is the one you ought to have invited.
Once upon a time there were two brothers.
Then there was only one: myself.
I grew up fast, before learning to drive,
even. There was I: a stinking adult.
I thought of developing interests
someone might take an interest in. No soap.
I became very weepy for what had seemed
like the pleasant early years. As I aged